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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mr. Whist who wrote (301013)9/26/2002 1:39:36 AM
From: Raymond Duray  Respond to of 769670
 
Operation 911 Update:

Message 18037020



To: Mr. Whist who wrote (301013)9/26/2002 2:03:09 AM
From: RON BL  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Flap its to bad that we characterize the worst of a group as the norm of the group isn't it ?

Even worse is how the worst of the group often rises to the top. How the hell that happens I don't know but it must be they have the drive and getting to the top means you are prepared to step over and crush those in your way.



To: Mr. Whist who wrote (301013)9/26/2002 7:26:21 AM
From: GROUND ZERO™  Respond to of 769670
 
>>make sure the dispatcher knows not to send any union firefighters to your address. <<

Typical union threat tactics, that's the only way you can have anyone join your organized crime mob, is to make threats and scare the little guy into paying up... you really are stupid... you're a tiny piece of dirt in a big mob game you know nothing about... you're union day's are numbered, little guy... clearly numbered... better check your calendar...

GZ



To: Mr. Whist who wrote (301013)9/27/2002 3:09:40 PM
From: jlallen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
September 26, 2002
======================================================
COURT UPHOLDS WORKER’S SUIT AGAINST UNION
HIERARCHY FOR VICIOUS STRIKE-RELATED BEATING

Worker fights on despite unions’ legal
immunities from prosecution for violence
......................................................
nrtw.org
......................................................
Los Angeles, Calif. (September 26, 2002) — On the eve
of Congressional hearings into the national epidemic
of union violence, the Los Angeles County Superior
Court rejected an attempt by union lawyers to block a
worker’s civil suit that was filed after a vicious
union beating following a 2001 strike at Hollander
Home Fashions.

Issuing its ruling from the bench on Wednesday, the
court rejected an attempt by lawyers for the Union of
Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees (UNITE)
to dismiss Matthew Kahn’s suit. This will allow the
victim’s claims of civil conspiracy, assault and
battery, and intentional infliction of emotional
distress to proceed without delay. The court also
declined to limit Kahn’s ability to collect civil
damages resulting from the union assault and will
allow full discovery into the union’s role in the
beating.

“This ruling is a small first step toward forcing
UNITE to account for its role in this cowardly assault
on an innocent man,” said Stefan Gleason, Vice
President of the National Right to Work Foundation.
“However, because of the numerous special exemptions
for union violence enshrined in federal and state
criminal and civil laws, Matthew Kahn still faces an
uphill battle.”

With the help of attorneys provided by the National
Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, Kahn, an
employee of Labor Ready, filed suit against UNITE for
damages incurred in May 2001 resulting from an
apparently premeditated attack by UNITE Organizing
Director Ramiro Hernandez and several other union
militants that left Kahn with several head lacerations
and other injuries. According to the complaint, the
union bailed Hernandez out of jail after the assault
and continued to employ him. Later investigation
showed that Hernandez possesses an extensive arrest
record for union-related misconduct.

In United States v. Enmons (1973), the U.S. Supreme
Court held that strike-related violence cannot be
prosecuted under the Hobbs Act, which criminalizes the
obstruction of interstate commerce through violence,
threat, or coercion. Numerous other states have
enacted similar special exemptions for enforcement of
criminal laws during strikes. As a result, thousands
of acts of violence (usually directed against
non-striking workers) have gone unpunished. In 1999,
Governor Gray Davis signed a bill limiting civil
liability for unions and union officers that commit
acts of violence.

Unfortunately, the vicious union beating of Matthew
Kahn is not an isolated incident. The National
Institute for Labor Relations Research has recorded
almost 10,000 media-reported incidents of union
violence since 1975. Experts on labor- and
strike-related violence estimate that unreported acts
of harassment, vandalism, and violence could swell
that figure to 100,000 or more.