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#21
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On Saturday, 11 July 2015 20:31:36 UTC+1, Recliner wrote:
Paul Cummins wrote: In article , (Paul Corfield) wrote: If the day ever comes when the job genuinely is deskilled to "pressing a button" as so many dull people seem to believe it consists of then a genuine argument about paying peanuts to employ monkeys might be warranted. all I'm going to say is that I still can't master driving a train or tube, after much more emulator practise than I needed to learn to fly a plane. And that really can be reduced to "press a button" I see it takes about six months of training; not trivial, but a lot less than a professional pilot. From https://www.how2become.com/careers/l...-train-driver/ [snip Internet hearsay] I don't really understand your point, or the relevance of pilots, or why you copy+pasted all of that from some random site (a link would have been enough!) You're ranting on about drivers even after it's been pointed out that it's been an age since ASLEF have gone on strike. That's why this strike resulted in a shutdown rather than the minuscule service that's happened a few times over the last few years. You can run some service when you have reduced staff of different types, but when they all have a grievance they agree on... I don't work on the Underground, but if you're so jealous of people who do (that's surely what it comes down to?) there's surely an easy way to get on the button-pushing gravy train yourself? Apply! It's really odd how if you work in a bank in the City you're creating wealth for the nation, but not if you're someone transporting thousands of them to their office. |
#23
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Mark wrote:
On Saturday, 11 July 2015 20:31:36 UTC+1, Recliner wrote: Paul Cummins wrote: In article , (Paul Corfield) wrote: If the day ever comes when the job genuinely is deskilled to "pressing a button" as so many dull people seem to believe it consists of then a genuine argument about paying peanuts to employ monkeys might be warranted. all I'm going to say is that I still can't master driving a train or tube, after much more emulator practise than I needed to learn to fly a plane. And that really can be reduced to "press a button" I see it takes about six months of training; not trivial, but a lot less than a professional pilot. From https://www.how2become.com/careers/l...-train-driver/ [snip Internet hearsay] I don't really understand your point, or the relevance of pilots, or why you copy+pasted all of that from some random site (a link would have been enough!) Lots of people, it seems, don't read posted links, and it's in any case polite to quote relevant extracts. Not everyone is online when reading usenet. It also wasn't a random link. The relevance of pilots would be evident if you had read the post I was replying to. You're ranting on about drivers even after it's been pointed out that it's been an age since ASLEF have gone on strike. Perhaps you aren't aware that almost 40% of Tube drivers are RMT members, and they're the ones who frequently go on strike, sometimes to defend the indefensible. Perhaps you'd be so kind as to quote any rants of mine? I suspect you're confusing me with other posters. That's why this strike resulted in a shutdown rather than the minuscule service that's happened a few times over the last few years. You can run some service when you have reduced staff of different types, but when they all have a grievance they agree on... I don't work on the Underground, but if you're so jealous of people who do (that's surely what it comes down to?) there's surely an easy way to get on the button-pushing gravy train yourself? Apply! Why should I be jealous? Have I ever suggested I was? I just don't think that relatively well-paid people should subject millions of people to such disruption every time they have any sort of grievance. I spent a *lot* more than six months in higher education, never joined a union in my career, almost all of which was in organisations with no unions, and never even contemplated going on strike in my entire working life. Being well qualified, I was also well paid. Neither the work, nor the pay, of driving a tube train or a plane was ever attractive to me. It's really odd how if you work in a bank in the City you're creating wealth for the nation, but not if you're someone transporting thousands of them to their office. How many times have City workers ever gone on strike? And they aren't all as well paid as tube drivers. A very small proportion of investment bankers and top managers do earn huge sums, but most City workers don't. And, before you start accusing me of being a banker, no I wasn't, and nor did I ever work in the City. |
#24
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On Sat, 11 Jul 2015 13:52:25 +0100, Paul Corfield
wrote: On Sat, 11 Jul 2015 11:22:48 +0100, Recliner wrote: On Fri, 10 Jul 2015 21:14:05 +0200, Robin9 wrote: 'Recliner[_3_ Wrote: ;149299']Robin9 wrote:- 'Recliner[_3_ Wrote: - ;149283']http://tinyurl.com/nf6grll- I heard that all LU workers were on strike, not just the train drivers. How much do the other members of staff earn?- Perhaps you didn't actually read the linked article? It said, "Tube drivers are also much better paid than some of their other colleagues who'll be joining them on strike. Station staff get around £30,000, according to TfI, with others closer to £20,000, while supervisors earn around £40,000 - still markedly less than what tube drivers get." No, I didn't read the linked article. I rarely follow links. So, most other members of staff earn far less than train drivers. Why then is all the attention on drivers' earnings and none on the £20,000 or so earned by the unspecified "others? Is this that famous politics-of-envy I keep hearing about? People think Tube drivers are very overpaid for the jobs they do. They don't think the other staff are. And yet it's most often the drivers who go on strike. No it isn't. It's station staff and people in specialised control positions that the RMT have called out. Some RMT train drivers have been called out but ASLEF rarely strikes. There have only been two ASLEF disputes - Boxing Day payments and the current Night Tube - in recent years. The Boxing Day issue is resolved. There are also line specific disputes - again nearly always called by the RMT. Yes, I know these days it's the RMT that's militant. In years gone by, it was ASLEF rather than the NUR that tended to call the strikes. Compare Tube drivers with bus drivers. By almost any measure, the latter have a much more difficult job, and yet they earn much less. Also, operating Tube trains is getting easier and easier, as the trains get more automated, and yet that de-skilling hasn't resulted in lower Tube driver pay. However the formal job requirements haven't been deskilled have they? Drivers have to learn to operate to a new set of operating procedures and rules, still need to know the entire route but how it works under degraded conditions with ATO kit and to still be able to drive the trains. Care of passengers, fault management and detection on the stock and safety & evacuation knowledge requirements haven't changed one jot as far as I know. When driving automatic trains manually, presumably they are driven much more slowly than when in full automatic mode? Do the trains still have protection? If the day ever comes when the job genuinely is deskilled to "pressing a button" as so many dull people seem to believe it consists of then a genuine argument about paying peanuts to employ monkeys might be warranted. I wonder if the travelling public would really be content to have relatively poorly qualified staff looking after technically complex assets in what will always be a confined environment underground? Lower paid, and often very young, cabin crew have similar responsibilities on airliners, and it seems to work pretty well. Planes no longer carry flight engineers, and the pilots seldom emerge from the flight deck other than to visit the loo or the galley. The cabin crew have to look after safety equipment, the doors, luggage stowage, broken seats, screaming kids, medical and emergency procedures, safety briefings, the entertainment system, etc on their own, quite apart from heating up and delivering the food and drink. On long haul flights, those responsibilities might last for up to 15 years (with rest breaks). They also have to monitor the flight deck, visiting it regularly to ensure that the pilots aren't all asleep. They need to be alert for possible hijackers, and stop passengers clustering round the cockpit door. They also have to deal with drunks. |
#25
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On 2015-07-11 18:28:00 +0000, Paul Cummins said:
all I'm going to say is that I still can't master driving a train or tube, Interesting as I've driven a Class 101 DMU (which involves a bit more than a modern one, given the semi-manual transmission and vacuum brake) and didn't actually find it all that difficult. Indeed, I was OK enough with it that at one point the instructor decided it was OK to wander off to the van to chat with his mate who was acting as the guard and leave me to it! OK, it was on a preserved line, so far fewer challenges, but in terms of the mechanics of driving the train (rather than all the other stuff drivers have to learn for the mainline and Tube) it wasn't hard. The PC based simulators are actually a bit harder than the real thing because you don't have the kind of feedback (feeling of acceleration and braking etc) that you do with the real thing. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the @ to reply. |
#26
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#27
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On Sunday, July 12, 2015 at 1:29:21 AM UTC+1, Mark wrote:
On Saturday, 11 July 2015 20:31:36 UTC+1, Recliner wrote: Paul Cummins wrote: In article , (Paul Corfield) wrote: If the day ever comes when the job genuinely is deskilled to "pressing a button" as so many dull people seem to believe it consists of then a genuine argument about paying peanuts to employ monkeys might be warranted. all I'm going to say is that I still can't master driving a train or tube, after much more emulator practise than I needed to learn to fly a plane. And that really can be reduced to "press a button" I see it takes about six months of training; not trivial, but a lot less than a professional pilot. From https://www.how2become.com/careers/l...-train-driver/ [snip Internet hearsay] I don't really understand your point, or the relevance of pilots, or why you copy+pasted all of that from some random site (a link would have been enough!) You're ranting on about drivers even after it's been pointed out that it's been an age since ASLEF have gone on strike. That's why this strike resulted in a shutdown rather than the minuscule service that's happened a few times over the last few years. You can run some service when you have reduced staff of different types, but when they all have a grievance they agree on... I don't work on the Underground, but if you're so jealous of people who do (that's surely what it comes down to?) there's surely an easy way to get on the button-pushing gravy train yourself? Apply! It's really odd how if you work in a bank in the City you're creating wealth for the nation, but not if you're someone transporting thousands of them to their office. In Nigel's case it is not jealousy. It is a case of "I'm alright Jack". He has made his money, sod the workers trying to make a decent living. He lacks a moral compass. |
#28
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![]() Quote:
(suburban) in London. He had changed jobs because he couldn't make a good living as a suburban driver. He said it had not taken long to be trained up as a driver and he was making far more money too. |
#29
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![]() Quote:
You seem very pleased with the way your career has developed, and the above passage is not the first instance of your regaling us with details of your success. Yet you seem eager to suggest that well-paid tube drivers are somehow unworthy of their hire. I too have never aspired to work on London Underground but I'm glad that those who do are well paid. Having lived through the pre-Thatcher period when securing decent pay was normal and having seen what happens when the vast majority of jobs are badly paid, I am delighted when normal people with not more than normal levels of education, self-confidence and energy receive handsome renumeration. |
#30
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On Saturday, July 11, 2015 at 11:59:01 PM UTC+5:30, Paul Cummins wrote:
In article , (Paul Corfield) wrote: If the day ever comes when the job genuinely is deskilled to "pressing a button" as so many dull people seem to believe it consists of then a genuine argument about paying peanuts to employ monkeys might be warranted. website designing company in tirunelveli, webdesign company in tirunelveli, web designer in tirunelveli , web site design tirunelveli,tamilnadu web designing company, web designing companies in tamilnadu, web designing in tirunelveli, web design tirunelveli, web designing in tuticorin, web design in tuticorin, web design tamilnadu, web design company tirunelveli, web designing in tamilnadu, web hosting in tirunelveli, cheap web hosting in tamil nadu, low cost web designing and hosting in tamilnadu, low cost domain registration in tamilnadu, web design india, website design india, web design company, web design chennai, web development company, website designers chennai, web design in tamilnadu web designer Tirunelveli, ecommerce developer in tamilnadu, moodle developer in tamilnadu, cms portal developer in tamilnadu, web design company in tamilnadu, web design tuticorin, web design tamilnadu,Website Designers tirunelveli India, e-Commerce web design company, Website Design Company tirunelveli, India, e-Commerce Web Development, Web Design tirunelveli, Website Design, India, Web Design, Website, Web Design, Web Design Agency, Web Design Firm, SEO, Ecommerce, Web Development",affordable website design, create a website design,e-commerce website designing, flash, flash templates, flash web designing usa, free web templates, free website templates, html, need a website, sivaramasamy, web design, web design services, web designer, web designers, web designers in Tamilnadu, web designers india, web designing, web designing india, web designing services, web developer, web developers, web development, web development company, web development services, web site design, web site design services, web site designing company, web site development, web site development services, website design, website design company, website design services, website design usa, website designer, website designers, website designing india, website developer, website development company, website development services,web design company in chennai,web design companies in chennai,bamstechnologies,bamstechnologies tirunelveli, http://www.bamstechnologies.com/ all I'm going to say is that I still can't master driving a train or tube, after much more emulator practise than I needed to learn to fly a plane. And that really can be reduced to "press a button" -- Paul Cummins - Always a NetHead Wasting Bandwidth since 1981 Please Help us dispose of unwanted virtual currency: Bitcoin: 1LzAJBqzoaEudhsZ14W7YrdYSmLZ5m1seZ tamilnadu web designing company| bamstechnologies tirunelveli|tirunelveli software company |
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