I have been pasting this article in all the various Internet arguments I see where ignoramuses are still claiming that this strike is about greedy teachers wanting money.
You write: “Many see them as standing up for teachers and their right to bargain collectively, a right that was settled—or so it seemed—during the Depression with the passage of the Wagner Act of 1935, which protected the right of workers to join unions.”
Are you getting the history correct? What is your understanding of the history of public sector collective bargaining in the 30’s, 40’s, and early 50’s?
Wonderful! Keep up the good fight!
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I have been pasting this article in all the various Internet arguments I see where ignoramuses are still claiming that this strike is about greedy teachers wanting money.
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Thank you for reminding me why I voted for Hillary.
I hope I get a chance to do so again.
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Diane,
You write: “Many see them as standing up for teachers and their right to bargain collectively, a right that was settled—or so it seemed—during the Depression with the passage of the Wagner Act of 1935, which protected the right of workers to join unions.”
Are you getting the history correct? What is your understanding of the history of public sector collective bargaining in the 30’s, 40’s, and early 50’s?
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