Which states will be "right-to-work" in 2025? (user search)
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  Which states will be "right-to-work" in 2025? (search mode)
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Author Topic: Which states will be "right-to-work" in 2025?  (Read 7534 times)
Kraxner
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« on: December 13, 2014, 11:50:58 PM »
« edited: December 14, 2014, 01:17:25 AM by Kraxner »



What do you think that map will look like in 2025?





Hopefully all of them by 2025. But most realistic is that the rest of the mid-west will become right to work states while there will be holdouts in the west coast and northeast which take time to become right to work states, perhaps even years past 2025.
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Kraxner
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Posts: 179


« Reply #1 on: December 14, 2014, 02:40:08 PM »

The Master Class simply wants all but themselves to suffer for their unrestrained greed. More profit through longer hours for less under brutal working conditions -- that's the fascist way. Don't fool yourself: fascism will be no better in America because it is American than a tornado will be better than one that strikes outside of America because it is an American tornado.

It's adorable that your inflated sense of self-importance makes you believe that US plutocrats care enough to spend their short lives controlling us.

In general, Democrats are actually begging for more attention from the Master Class because they have no idea what's holding down the lower-middle class, but somehow they've convinced themselves that the Master Class can fix the problem. Master Class votes don't outnumber the masses of dumb Democratic voters who demand more poverty, and the Master Class isn't about to spend their political war chest to liberate people who enslave themselves for no reason.

When you see a bunch of Miserables throwing themselves in the gutter for sport, what are you supposed to do, besides ask them to stop?



http://www.mercurynews.com/opinion/ci_27094248/minimum-wage-dissent-san-joses-law-resulted-lost?source=infinite



They done a good job against their own in San Jose.


Hours cut for workers, while progressives claimed that san jose was booming due to a higher minimum wage. While ignoring that San Jose's economic turnaround was due a revived tech sector. As it was in the past.


Besides, progressives now that their cheerleading for more illegal immigrants and giving amensty just to get future votes should convince the rest that they have NO moral authority to claim they are for the poor.
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Kraxner
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Posts: 179


« Reply #2 on: December 14, 2014, 11:42:03 PM »

Nobody in America cares enough to do a "revolution" over anything. They'd get mad, write some angry comments on the internet, maybe do a protest, then go back to eating McDonalds/watching Honey Boo Boo and will forget about it within a month.

I don't forget.

If only the rest of Kentucky was as wise as you, Bandit. Tongue

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Senate_election_in_Kentucky,_2014



Beautiful



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Kraxner
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Posts: 179


« Reply #3 on: December 17, 2014, 12:21:36 AM »

Are there any states where "right-to-work" is actually popular?

While I'm sure it's popular to prohibit mandatory union membership, I know it's wildly unpopular to require unions to provide services to employees who won't pay fair share fees.


73% of americans which probably translates to "nearly all of them"

http://www.gallup.com/poll/175556/americans-approve-unions-support-right-work.aspx
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