WHNT in Huntsville ran a story of a guy who started a website for tourists to boycott the state of Alabama, even though the guy lives here in North Alabama. The reason why.....because Alabama Senators and Congressman, such as Richard Shelby, voted against the bailout package. Can you guess who he works for? Seems this guy would rather see the economy of the state he lives in suffer, making us all suffer, rather then his employers get their way.
Look, I know a lot of good, hardworking people that work in the industry are going to lose their jobs. I feel bad for them. However, the government can't go bailing out every damn industry because the executives and the unions screwed it up. Those people that lose their jobs need to be mad at the people running, and ruining, their business, not the legislators that are actually listening to the will of large majority of their constituents by voting against these bailouts.
Executives are not the only ones to blame. My father-in-law is a Michigan transplant that moved here to Decatur when the Saginaw plant opened. He was a maintenance supervisor, so he was usually caught in the middle between union and management issues. The union negotiated the same hourly rate for everybody, regardless of what part of the country you lived in and what the cost of living was. The cost of living in Michigan was much higher than in Alabama, but the Decatur, Alabama employees got paid as if they lived in Michigan. That is why for years people in this area would give their left arm to have gotten a job at the local Saginaw plant, because the hourly production rate was 3-4 times higher the the highest paying production job at most other plants. Heck, even the paid holidays negotiated was ridiculous. The Alabama employees got a paid holiday for the opening of deer hunting season in Michigan, because the union had negotiated the contract to cover all plants with no respect to location.
Speaking of unions, this is quite interesting:
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,472304,00.htmlThe UAW owns a $33 million retreat, with a $6 million golf course. Unfreakin'-believable.