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#31
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![]() "Edward Cowling London UK" wrote in message ... In message , Boltar writes .. with a Bob Crowe here and a dodgy ballot there , hey ho hey ho etc etc Mr Bobbys performance related bonus must be due soon. Obviously the strike quota hasn't been met this year so something needs to be done! He does seem like a drunk on a Saturday night strutting up the street with his medallion swinging and shouting "who you looking at" at the passers by. Just out to cause trouble !! According to the BBC he's got them a better off which he's recommending be accepted... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7571141.stm Paul S |
#32
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On Aug 19, 10:55*pm, "Paul Scott"
wrote: "Edward Cowling London UK" wrote in . .. In message , Boltar writes .. with a Bob Crowe here and a dodgy ballot there , hey ho hey ho etc etc Mr Bobbys performance related bonus must be due soon. Obviously the strike quota hasn't been met this year so something needs to be done! He does seem like a drunk on a Saturday night strutting up the street with his medallion swinging and shouting "who you looking at" at the passers by. Just out to cause trouble !! According to the BBC he's got them a better off which he's recommending be accepted... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7571141.stm It's very unfair of you to use facts like this to spoil everyone's game of coming up with non-sequiturs for the gratuitous abuse of Bob Crow. |
#33
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On Aug 19, 10:27*pm, Edward Cowling London UK
wrote: In message , Boltar writes.. with a Bob Crowe here and a dodgy ballot there , hey ho hey ho etc etc Mr Bobbys performance related bonus must be due soon. Obviously the strike quota hasn't been met this year so something needs to be done! He does seem like a drunk on a Saturday night strutting up the street with his medallion swinging and shouting "who you looking at" at the passers by. Just out to cause trouble !! No he doesn't. |
#34
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On Aug 19, 11:28�pm, MIG wrote:
On Aug 19, 10:27�pm, Edward Cowling London UK wrote: In message , Boltar writes.. with a Bob Crowe here and a dodgy ballot there , hey ho hey ho etc etc Mr Bobbys performance related bonus must be due soon. Obviously the strike quota hasn't been met this year so something needs to be done! He does seem like a drunk on a Saturday night strutting up the street with his medallion swinging and shouting "who you looking at" at the passers by. Just out to cause trouble !! No he doesn't. Oh yes he does! |
#35
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On Aug 20, 12:05*am, " wrote:
On Aug 19, 11:28 pm, MIG wrote: On Aug 19, 10:27 pm, Edward Cowling London UK wrote: In message , Boltar writes.. with a Bob Crowe here and a dodgy ballot there , hey ho hey ho etc etc Mr Bobbys performance related bonus must be due soon. Obviously the strike quota hasn't been met this year so something needs to be done! He does seem like a drunk on a Saturday night strutting up the street with his medallion swinging and shouting "who you looking at" at the passers by. Just out to cause trouble !! No he doesn't. Oh yes he does! I like chips. |
#36
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On Tue, 19 Aug 2008 15:25:36 -0700 (PDT), MIG
wrote: On Aug 19, 10:55*pm, "Paul Scott" wrote: "Edward Cowling London UK" wrote in . .. In message , Boltar writes .. with a Bob Crowe here and a dodgy ballot there , hey ho hey ho etc etc Mr Bobbys performance related bonus must be due soon. Obviously the strike quota hasn't been met this year so something needs to be done! He does seem like a drunk on a Saturday night strutting up the street with his medallion swinging and shouting "who you looking at" at the passers by. Just out to cause trouble !! According to the BBC he's got them a better off which he's recommending be accepted... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7571141.stm It's very unfair of you to use facts like this to spoil everyone's game of coming up with non-sequiturs for the gratuitous abuse of Bob Crow. Abuse of Crow is never gratuitous. |
#37
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On Aug 20, 9:16*am, James Farrar wrote:
On Tue, 19 Aug 2008 15:25:36 -0700 (PDT), MIG wrote: On Aug 19, 10:55*pm, "Paul Scott" wrote: "Edward Cowling London UK" wrote in . .. In message , Boltar writes .. with a Bob Crowe here and a dodgy ballot there , hey ho hey ho etc etc Mr Bobbys performance related bonus must be due soon. Obviously the strike quota hasn't been met this year so something needs to be done! He does seem like a drunk on a Saturday night strutting up the street with his medallion swinging and shouting "who you looking at" at the passers by. Just out to cause trouble !! According to the BBC he's got them a better off which he's recommending be accepted... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7571141.stm It's very unfair of you to use facts like this to spoil everyone's game of coming up with non-sequiturs for the gratuitous abuse of Bob Crow. Abuse of Crow is never gratuitous.- He is a rare example of a union leader who actually does his job instead of chasing a knighthood. Obviously, a lot of people wish that union leaders wouldn't ever do their job, and have political reasons for disagreeing with their aims. But their inability to come up with reasoned arguments when faced with a union leader who actually supports his members, and constant resort to random personal abuse, is not very impressive. I'd be interested to know what the arguments against Bob Crow's position on supporting his members might be, but no such reasoned argument seems to be forthcoming. |
#38
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On Aug 20, 9:25�am, MIG wrote:
On Aug 20, 9:16�am, James Farrar wrote: On Tue, 19 Aug 2008 15:25:36 -0700 (PDT), MIG wrote: On Aug 19, 10:55�pm, "Paul Scott" wrote: "Edward Cowling London UK" wrote in . .. In message , Boltar writes .. with a Bob Crowe here and a dodgy ballot there , hey ho hey ho etc etc Mr Bobbys performance related bonus must be due soon. Obviously the strike quota hasn't been met this year so something needs to be done! He does seem like a drunk on a Saturday night strutting up the street with his medallion swinging and shouting "who you looking at" at the passers by. Just out to cause trouble !! According to the BBC he's got them a better off which he's recommending be accepted... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7571141.stm It's very unfair of you to use facts like this to spoil everyone's game of coming up with non-sequiturs for the gratuitous abuse of Bob Crow. Abuse of Crow is never gratuitous.- He is a rare example of a union leader who actually does his job instead of chasing a knighthood. Obviously, a lot of people wish that union leaders wouldn't ever do their job, and have political reasons for disagreeing with their aims. But their inability to come up with reasoned arguments when faced with a union leader who actually supports his members, and constant resort to random personal abuse, is not very impressive. I'd be interested to know what the arguments against Bob Crow's position on supporting his members might be, but no such reasoned argument seems to be forthcoming.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I'll give you a reason: some people get paid more for doing the same job that others do. It's not a vast conspiracy by the "bosses". It's called life. Maybe it's unfair: that's also called life. Every time Crow's members feel they want a bit more money, or to work a bit less, or get some other incentive or whatever is NO excuse for Crow to support their unworthy cause by causing panic amongst the travelling public by threatening strikes every time they feel like flexing their muscles. Where in Crow's job description does it say he must support each and every strike threat however moronic the claims may be? If they don't like their pay, conditions etc., the answer is simple: get another job. If there are no other jobs, that's sad but it's also called life. Marc. |
#39
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On Aug 20, 9:33*am, " wrote:
On Aug 20, 9:25 am, MIG wrote: On Aug 20, 9:16 am, James Farrar wrote: On Tue, 19 Aug 2008 15:25:36 -0700 (PDT), MIG wrote: On Aug 19, 10:55 pm, "Paul Scott" wrote: "Edward Cowling London UK" wrote in . .. In message , Boltar writes .. with a Bob Crowe here and a dodgy ballot there , hey ho hey ho etc etc Mr Bobbys performance related bonus must be due soon. Obviously the strike quota hasn't been met this year so something needs to be done! He does seem like a drunk on a Saturday night strutting up the street with his medallion swinging and shouting "who you looking at" at the passers by. Just out to cause trouble !! According to the BBC he's got them a better off which he's recommending be accepted... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7571141.stm It's very unfair of you to use facts like this to spoil everyone's game of coming up with non-sequiturs for the gratuitous abuse of Bob Crow. Abuse of Crow is never gratuitous.- He is a rare example of a union leader who actually does his job instead of chasing a knighthood. Obviously, a lot of people wish that union leaders wouldn't ever do their job, and have political reasons for disagreeing with their aims. But their inability to come up with reasoned arguments when faced with a union leader who actually supports his members, and constant resort to random personal abuse, is not very impressive. I'd be interested to know what the arguments against Bob Crow's position on supporting his members might be, but no such reasoned argument seems to be forthcoming.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I'll give you a reason: some people get paid more for doing the same job that others do. It's not a vast conspiracy by the "bosses". It's called life. Maybe it's unfair: that's also called life. *Every time Crow's members feel they want a bit more money, or to work a bit less, or get some other incentive or whatever is NO excuse for Crow to support their unworthy cause by *causing panic amongst the travelling public by threatening strikes every time they feel like flexing their muscles. Where in Crow's job description does it say he must support each and every strike threat however moronic the claims may be? * If they don't like their pay, conditions etc., the answer is simple: get another job. If there are no other jobs, that's sad but it's also called life. Everyone has a "right" to be representated and get the best deal that they can. That's why there are defence lawyers for murderers. It's been established over many centuries that this sort of system works out better for everyone. Tubelines workers are not necessarily as bad as murderers (or maybe they are, to read some of the discussion), but they still have representation. Attacking their representatives for doing their job is like accusing defence lawyers of murder (which some people do). |
#40
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On Aug 20, 9:25 am, MIG wrote:
I'd be interested to know what the arguments against Bob Crow's position on supporting his members might be, but no such reasoned argument seems to be forthcoming. British union leaders traditionally behaved like Crow. Understandably, companies sought to replace their workforce with machines, foreigners employed abroad, and foreigners employed here. As a result of that, although plenty of British-designed goods are still manufactured, many by British companies and quite a few in the UK, manufacturing employment is at its lowest since the Industrial Revolution. German union leaders traditionally behaved like the guys you accuse of 'chasing a knighthood', working co-operatively with companies to maximise efficiency and share the benefits. As a result, Germany still has a great deal of highly skilled domestic manufacturing industry employing a great many people. Fast forward to now. If I were in charge of long-term strategic transport planning in London, the fact that the unions are entirely uncooperative despite transport workers' high wages and good job conditions would lead me to eliminate as many highly-skilled manual jobs as possible from the network, using as much automation as possible. It would also encourage me to ensure that any network expansion plans were handled separately from LU, relying on private-sector employers who're slightly less under the thumb (both inherently, and because if each line is run by a separate private sector organisation then only that company's staff can go on strike over a particular dispute). While it would take a long time for these changes to work through (the peak of striking in UK industry was 1973 I think, with the trough in 2005), the end result would be to render Crow's men completely obsolete, destroying a set of well-paid working class jobs that - if he weren't such an obstreferous tool - both sides of the dispute would sooner they continued to exist. I'm not in charge of long-term strategic transport planning in London. However, the people who are have decided to eliminate as many highly- skilled manual jobs as possible from the network, using as much automation as possible, and have ensured that all network expansion plans (since 1987, with the exception of JLE and T5) are handled separately from LU relying on discrete private sector organisations. -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org |
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