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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: i-node who wrote (448515)1/19/2009 10:04:13 AM
From: SARMAN3 Recommendations  Respond to of 1574260
 
Holy crap man/woman are you blind or do you refuse to see. When the number that came out of Gaza show that one third of the Israel victims are children and one third is women, it is hard to say that Israel is not targeting women and children.
(Arnon Soffer, a prominent Israeli demographer who also advised Sharon, elaborated on what that pressure would look like. “When 2.5 million people live in a closed-off Gaza, it’s going to be a human catastrophe. Those people will become even bigger animals than they are today, with the aid of an insane fundamentalist Islam. The pressure at the border will be awful. It’s going to be a terrible war. So, if we want to remain alive, we will have to kill and kill and kill. All day, every day.”)
Message 25335122



To: i-node who wrote (448515)1/19/2009 10:07:13 AM
From: jlallen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574260
 
Excellent piece on card check...




Bill would allow unions to expand at all costs
By Patrick J. Bannon | January 18, 2009

BLAMING its lack of appeal with private-sector workers on employer intimidation and trickery, organized labor is pushing Congress and President-elect Obama to pass the "Employee Free Choice Act." A more accurate title would be the "Union Expansion at All Costs Act." In the name of strengthening unions, the bill would jettison two bedrock principles that workers and management should both defend.

First, the bill would actually make it harder for employees to choose freely whether to have a labor union negotiate their employment terms. For 60 years, with few exceptions, employees have made that choice by secret ballot. The federal National Labor Relations Board enforces fair campaigning, sets up voting booths, and counts ballots.

If the Employee Free Choice Act becomes law, unions need only collect signed authorization cards from over 50 percent of a group of employees to be certified as representing the group. Union organizers could visit employees at their homes, take them out for drinks, or ask them to sign cards in front of co-workers. They could publish lists of who signed and who refused. The National Labor Relations Board would be prohibited from holding an election to determine whether the cards reflected the employees' true preferences.

Today, employees feeling pressure can publicly appease the union (or management!) and then vote their conscience in the privacy of the ballot booth. The Employees Free Choice Act would eliminate that protection. No less a friend to labor than former Democratic presidential nominee George McGovern calls the bill "a disturbing and undemocratic overreach" that could cost workers "the right to make a decision without anyone peering over their shoulder, free from fear of reprisal."

What about union claims that employers monopolize the flow of information and intimidate employees? Given the resources unions bring to organizing campaigns, and the many protections they've secured over six decades from the National Labor Relations Board and federal courts, these complaints are hard to swallow. Indeed, many union talking points count each accusation and settled complaint as an instance of wrongdoing.

But even if union criticisms were valid, how does eliminating secret ballots help unions communicate with employees? Under the bill's card-check alternative, how are employees protected against intimidation? These criticisms are camouflage for the bill's real logic: it would help union organizers succeed more often, so who cares how?

A second feature of the bill is more disturbing than the loss of secret ballots. For decades, so long as a labor union and a business owner negotiate in good faith, the end result of their negotiations has been up to them. Under the bill, if an employer fails to sign a contract with a new union within 130 days, a panel of labor arbitrators would dictate contract terms binding for two years.

Suppose, for example, the United Auto Workers obtained authorization cards from 51 percent of assembly line workers at a formerly nonunion Toyota plant and insisted that the labor contract for the plant mirror its standard Detroit Three contracts. If Toyota refused to agree within 130 days, a panel of labor arbitrators would impose an agreement. For two years, pay and benefits, work rules, and use of subcontractors at the plant would be decided not by Toyota but by the arbitrators.

Saddling businesses with obligations imposed by labor arbitrators makes no more sense than taking secret ballots away from workers. Congress and Obama should not sacrifice core principles of American labor relations to promote union expansion at all costs.

Patrick J. Bannon is a labor and employment law partner in the Boston office of McCarter & English.


© Copyright var crYear = new Date(); document.write(crYear.getFullYear()); 2009 The New York Times Company




To: i-node who wrote (448515)1/19/2009 10:20:38 AM
From: SARMAN  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574260
 
Exchange Between Bill Moyers and Abraham Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League

pbs.org

Following Bill Moyers' reflections on the events in Gaza on the JOURNAL last week, Anti-Defamation League National Director Abraham Foxman sent him this letter:

Mr. Moyers,

In less than a thousand words, you managed to fit into your January 9 commentary: (1) moral equivalency between Hamas, a radical Islamic terrorist group whose anti-Semitic charter cites the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, and Israel, the only democracy in the Middle East and perhaps America’s greatest ally in the world; (2) historical revisionism, asserting that Canaanites were Arabs; (3) anti-Semitism, declaring that Jews are “genetically coded” for violence; (4) ignorance of the terrorist threat against Israel, claiming that checkpoints, the security fence, and the Gaza operation are tactics of humiliation rather than counter-terrorism; and (5) promotion of an individual, the Norwegian doctor in Gaza, who has publicly expressed support for the September 11 attacks.

I have seen and read serious critiques of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, and I have disagreed with many of them. Your commentary, however, is different, consisting mostly of intellectually and morally faulty claims that do a great disservice to the PBS audience. It invites not disagreement, but rebuke.

On one point you are correct – “America has officially chosen sides.” And rightly so. Fortunately for our nation, very few of our citizens engage in the same moral equivalency, racism, historical revisionism, and indifference to terrorism as you. If the reverse held, it would not be a country that any decent person would want to live in.

Sincerely,

Abraham H. Foxman
National Director
Anti-Defamation League

In response, Bill Moyers sent Mr. Foxman the following message:

Dear Mr. Foxman:

You made several errors in your letter to me of January 13 and I am writing to correct them.

First, to call someone a racist for lamenting the slaughter of civilians by the Israeli military offensive in Gaza is a slur unworthy of the tragedy unfolding there. Your resort to such a tactic is reprehensible.

Earlier this week it was widely reported that the International Red Cross “was so outraged it broke its usual silence over an attack in which the Israeli army herded a Palestinian family into a building and then shelled it, killing 30 people and leaving the surviving children clinging to the bodies of their dead mothers. The army prevented rescuers from reaching the survivors for four days.”

When American troops committed a similar atrocity in Vietnam, it was called My Lai and Lt. Calley went to prison for it. As the publisher of a large newspaper at the time, I instructed our editorial staff to cover the atrocity fully because Americans should know what our military was doing in our name and with our funding. To say “my country right or wrong” is like saying “my mother drunk or sober.” Patriots owe their country more than that, whether their government and their taxes are supporting atrocities in Vietnam, Iraq, or, in this case, Gaza.

Contrary to your claim, I made no reference whatsoever to “moral equivalency” between Hamas and Israel. That is an old canard often resorted to by propagandists trying to divert attention from facts on the ground, and, it, too, is unworthy of the slaughter in Gaza. Contrary to imputing “moral equivalency” between Hamas and Israel, I said that “Hamas would like to see every Jew in Israel dead.” I said that “a radical stream of Islam now seeks to eliminate Israel from the face of the earth.” And I described the new spate of anti-Semitism across the continent of Europe. I am curious as to why you ignored remarks which clearly counter the notion of “moral equivalency.”

And although I specifically referred to “the rockets from Hamas” falling on Israel and said that “every nation has the right to defend itself, and Israel is no exception,” you nonetheless accuse me of “ignorance of the terrorist threat against Israel.” Once again, you are quite selective in your reading of my essay.

Your claim that “the checkpoints, the security fence and the Gaza operation” [I used the more accurate “onslaught”] are not humiliating of the Palestinians is lamentable. I did not claim that these were, as you write, “tactics of humiliation rather [emphasis mine] than counter-terrorism,” but perhaps it is overly simplistic to think they are one and not the other, when they are both. Also lamentable is your description of my “promotion” of the Norwegian doctor in Gaza when in fact I was simply quoting what he told CBS News: “It’s like Dante’s Inferno. They are bombing one and a half million people in a cage.” The whole world has been able to see for itself what he was talking about, and as one major news organization after another has been reporting, is reeling from the sight.

And, to your claim that I was “declaring Jews are ‘genetically coded’ for violence,” you are mistaken. My comment – obviously not sufficiently precise – was not directed at a specific people but to the fact that the human race has violence in its DNA, as the biblical stories so strongly affirm. I also had in mind the relationship between all the descendents of Abraham who love the same biblical land and come to such grief over it.

From my days in President Johnson’s White House forward, I have defended Israel’s right to defend itself, and still do. But sometimes an honest critic is a government’s best friend, and I am appalled by Israel’s devastation of innocent civilians in this battle, all the more so because, as I said in my column, it is exactly what Hamas wanted to happen. To be so indifferent to that suffering is, sadly, to be as blind in Gaza as Samson.

Sincerely,

Bill Moyers



To: i-node who wrote (448515)1/19/2009 10:48:41 AM
From: bentway2 Recommendations  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1574260
 
"What evidence is there that Israel has ever targeted women or children?"

That Israel has the most precise weapons on Earth, OURS, and that there are hundreds of dead and wounded women and children?



To: i-node who wrote (448515)1/19/2009 2:21:23 PM
From: tejek1 Recommendation  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1574260
 
when Israel targets women and children

What evidence is there that Israel has ever targeted women or children?


Six hundred women and children dead, and many more thousands wounded.