QUOTE: Originally posted by BaltACD QUOTE: Originally posted by JOdom Ever heard the old saying, "Your rights stop at the end of my nose"? You nose stops at the entrance to my life and my wallet!
QUOTE: Originally posted by JOdom Ever heard the old saying, "Your rights stop at the end of my nose"?
"I like my Pullman Standards & Budds in Stainless Steel flavors, thank you!"
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
QUOTE: Originally posted by JOdom There's a lot about my job that is miserable. I've made the decision to stick with it and retire at the first opportunity. Apparently most railroaders have made the same or similar decision. If it's that terrible, leave. If the pay makes the misery bearable, stay and quit whining. Too many people are like a dog whining because he's lying on a sharp rock; he keeps whining because he's too lazy to get up. If the dispatchers want to strike to get management's attention, that's fine with me - AS LONG AS THEIR ACTION DOESN'T ADD MISERY TO MY LIFE. Ever heard the old saying, "Your rights stop at the end of my nose"?
QUOTE: Originally posted by coborn35 QUOTE: Originally posted by JOdom The striking dispatchers should be locked into a large room with the commuters they delayed. No future dispatchers would repeat that nonsense, because none of the strikers would survive. Hey, buddy, their just fighting for their rights and trying to get a decent salary and good hours, come on. That was really harsh. I take it you are a commuter and dont work on a freight railroad. I can tell because you obviously have a crappy attitude about people who work on freight railroads and want fair pay and fair working hours. Not trying to p.o. any body but those are my feelings.
QUOTE: Originally posted by JOdom The striking dispatchers should be locked into a large room with the commuters they delayed. No future dispatchers would repeat that nonsense, because none of the strikers would survive.
Living nearby to MP 186 of the UPRR Austin TX Sub
QUOTE: Originally posted by eolafan I've said it before and I will say it yet again...NOBODY FORCED THEM TO TAKE THEIR JOBS AND THEIR SALARIES, AND IF THEY WANT TO QUIT AND GO ON TO A "BETTER" JOB SOMEWHERE ELSE...GO FOR IT! I have gotten tired of former jobs that I did not feel were paying a fair wage, and I quit and moved on, but I did not strike and screw things up for my (former) employer, I SIMPLY QUIT, and these folks have that right as well...I DON'T KNOW WHY THEY WON'T EXERCISE THAT RIGHT...perhaps it's because they really like their jobs????
QUOTE: Frankly folks I personally have no toleracne for what seems here to be a "WORK LESS, GET PAID MORE" attitude and that same attitude of the unions in general (oh, boy am I going to stir up a hornets nest here). The way I was raised by my parents (my Dad was a union member in a blue collar profession by the way), was that you got paid a fair wage for a fair days work and if you didn't like what you were getting paid, YOU WERE FREE TO QUITE YOUR JOB AND FIND A NEW ONE AT ANY TIME.
QUOTE: Originally posted by eolafan I can' t help but wonder if these dispatchers were getting off of work and had to be at a family outing, pick their kids up from school, etc. and found that the sand truck/snow plow drivers had gone on strike that afternoon and there was a big ice storm (yes, they do get such storms in the DFW area), and the dispatchers could not get home, wonder what they would think and say...THEY NEED TO WALK IN THE OTHER GUYS SHOES FOR A WHILE.
QUOTE: Originally posted by amtrak-tom Simply quit and move on? To where in today's economy? Unrealistic!! I wish I could just find another job, frankly, a mortgage and child support and everything else in life that "aren't free" stops me. If you're not a railroader, then, you wouldn't and couldn't begin to understand! How about 5 years without a raise and being held in limbo because a fair agreement cannot be negoitiated, and, 4 years without a raise before that! No more retro-active pay either after being held out all of these years. It's just reaching that retirement age is all that keeps me where I'm at. It's a trap. I like what I do, no doubt, but there are many, many labor issues and rules that the typical rail fan doesn't see or hear about. You have to live it.
Mechanical Department "No no that's fine shove that 20 pound set all around the yard... those shoes aren't hell and a half to change..."
The Missabe Road: Safety First
QUOTE: Originally posted by BNSF railfan. Money is "POWER".
Our community is FREE to join. To participate you must either login or register for an account.