ger147
Tour Winner
I have no faith whatsoever in Scottish Union leaders, they are trapped in a 1960's mindset.
Calling the owners bluff went well didn't it? :mmm:
I have no faith whatsoever in Scottish Union leaders, they are trapped in a 1960's mindset.
The way things are going, there could be a few more verses added.Can they get another line in The Proclaimers....Letter from America.
Grangemouth no more.
Scottish Car industry, mining, shipbuilding all destroyed by the union movement [and the lemmings who followed it]
Unscrupulous bosses around the country rubbing their hands together with glee - if UNITE can be cowed into submission and accepting the management plans 100% then all bets are off.
Come on, does anyone really think that the full plant would have been allowed to be completely closed. No way , its the only direct pipeline feed from the northern offshore oil fields.
I suppose in the context of next October one question is whether an independent Scottish government would have been more likely to prevent complete closure than the a post-independent Westminster government. Certainly the existing political arrangements appeared toothless in the face of management wishes over a workforce essentially powerless to protect their pensions, salaries and ultimately their jobs. I think that that was why labour organised itself into unions to fight bosses who did whatever they wanted with little or no concern or responsibility for the people and communities dependent upon the work.
Oh Brave New World!
So allowing for the fact that the site was losing vast amounts of money and needed another very large cash injection to upgrade facilities it was unreasonable for the workforce to make these changes to secure their jobs?
Same old World really, no such thing as a free lunch! Animal Farm comes to mind.
The "Ragged Trousered Philanthropist" springs to mind.sad days.So you are completely accepting of the management line and that workersd should get real and stop trying to preserve their employment conditions - and if in doing so management decide to shut the place then that is OK - notwithstanding the disasterpous effect it would have on the local economy and problems that would result for the UK as a whole - given much North Sea oil flows through the plant to elsewhere in the UK.
And remember that the workers were not on strike when the owners decided to shut the place - the workers just did not accept what the management was saying and the management were unwilling to go to acas to negotiate.
So we are left with an owner who can hold the lives and livelihoods of thousands in the palm of his hands - to be crushed in his fist if he so wishes. An owner who can hold the local and wider national (Scotland and UK) economies to ransom. And that is a good thing? It may be how it currently is but are you telling me that it is a good thing and that is how it is going to be - really?
So you are completely accepting of the management line and that workersd should get real and stop trying to preserve their employment conditions - and if in doing so management decide to shut the place then that is OK - notwithstanding the disasterpous effect it would have on the local economy and problems that would result for the UK as a whole - given much North Sea oil flows through the plant to elsewhere in the UK.
And remember that the workers were not on strike when the owners decided to shut the place - the workers just did not accept what the management was saying and the management were unwilling to go to acas to negotiate.
So we are left with an owner who can hold the lives and livelihoods of thousands in the palm of his hands - to be crushed in his fist if he so wishes. An owner who can hold the local and wider national (Scotland and UK) economies to ransom. And that is a good thing? It may be how it currently is but are you telling me that it is a good thing and that is how it is going to be - really?
So you are completely accepting of the management line and that workersd should get real and stop trying to preserve their employment conditions - and if in doing so management decide to shut the place then that is OK - notwithstanding the disasterpous effect it would have on the local economy and problems that would result for the UK as a whole - given much North Sea oil flows through the plant to elsewhere in the UK.
And remember that the workers were not on strike when the owners decided to shut the place - the workers just did not accept what the management was saying and the management were unwilling to go to acas to negotiate.
So we are left with an owner who can hold the lives and livelihoods of thousands in the palm of his hands - to be crushed in his fist if he so wishes. An owner who can hold the local and wider national (Scotland and UK) economies to ransom. And that is a good thing? It may be how it currently is but are you telling me that it is a good thing and that is how it is going to be - really?
Their ball, their game.
Money doesn't grow on trees and if these people want someone else's money to give them a better life then they should be grateful for it. If they don't like it then they can always create a workers cooperative and start a business of their own but Unions are only good at telling others how to spend their money, a bit like all Socialists really.