I'm for limited government, not anarchy. You have me mistaken for someone else.
It's possible.
That's only part of the picture. You're not calculating what damage is done to the company. Unionized companies can't be as efficient, so they can't be as competitive. Who knows how many jobs were lost because companies wanted to minimize the number of jobs subject to unions. Not to mention the wages lost due to strikes.
You are changing the subject here. I was responding to your comment that the union workers pay large amounts of dues. Of course dues aren't the only aspect of unionism. But they were the only aspect that you mentioned in the comment I was responding to.
I can't imagine it would be much fun to dance with a gun to your head.
You can't imagine it would be much fun to be out-negotiated, you mean? The companies were not without power, they just were too willing to believe in their own rosy predictions of growth and take the easy path. They screwed up.
If you were selling me a commercial building worth $100 million, and you asked me for $300 million, and I agreed to that, whose fault would it be that I overpaid? Yours?
Actually, it is investors that reward companies for running efficient operations and consumers who reward companies for offering good value.
Exactly. Americans caused the jobs to move overseas. If we are willing to buy products made in China for $1/hour, does it really matter what union wages in the US are?
You can't stop progress. You have to adapt. Disintermediation of the value chain has been the defining issue of our time for corporations. Many have adapted. Others have died.
Correct. I thought you were complaining about the ones that had died. You said that union greed had killed the auto, steel, textile industries. But in truth, those industries didn't/couldn't adapt to low-wage foreign competition [except autos, which couldn't adapt to high-wage foreign competition]. It wasn't the unions primarily. The unions didn't help, but the train was leaving the station no matter what the unions did.
Ask WalMart or Nucor or Honda or Toyota about their competitive stature in the face of unionization by their competitors. They have thrived in the US while their competitors have withered.
Walmart is retail, you can't very well move retail jobs offshore. Honda and Toyota built better products for many years. Had nothing really to do with being unionized or not (hell, Japanese workers, while maybe not being literally union members, might as well be for all the protections they have). Nucor - pause here while I google Nucor - I don't know enough about Nucor to comment, and their website is too slow/cheesy to deal with.
barfo