PearlWatson
Well-Known Member
Or we could just address these issues.
Or you could start by actually answering questions instead of creating a new thread every 10 minutes.
The best thing would be if you could stop dropping liberal turds all over my thread.
I'll stick to the examples of the destructive power of public employee unions you demanded:
Here are 2 articles about what they have done to California:
Pension Time Bomb
https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/09/10/AR2008091002726.html
California's $500-billion pension time bomb
The state of California's real unfunded pension debt clocks in at more than $500 billion, nearly eight times greater than officially reported.
That's the finding from a study released Monday (last April) by Stanford University's public policy program, confirming a recent report with similar, stunning findings from Northwestern University and the University of Chicago.
How did we get here? The answer is simple: For decades -- and without voter consent -- state leaders have been issuing billions of dollars of debt in the form of unfunded pension and healthcare promises, then gaming accounting rules in order to understate the size of those promises.
Because legislators are unwilling to raise issues that might offend that constituency(public employee unions), they have effectively turned the peroration of Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address on its head: Instead of a government of the people, by the people and for the people, we have become a government of its employees, by its employees and for its employees.
https://articles.latimes.com/2010/apr/06/opinion/la-oe-crane6-2010apr06
What happened in Indiana when the new Governor eliminated collective bargaining power of the PEU?
The public employees got to keep $1K they didn't have to pay to unions. The good empoyees got raises while the bad ones got fired, rather than having to treat the good and bad workers the same.
Like California the problem in Wisconsin is the pensions and benefits:
Average MPS Teacher Compensation Tops $100k/year
https://maciverinstitute.com/2010/03/average-mps-teacher-compensation-tops-100kyear/
The average salary for an MPS teacher is $56,500. When fringe benefits are factored in, the annual compensation will be $100,005 in 2011.
Like Walker said, he could either fire a bunch of public employees or the workers can chip in to pay a small portion of it, like those in the private sector have to.
"For decades now, the Democrats have had a good gig buying the votes of government workers with outrageous salaries, benefits and work rules -- and then sticking productive earners with the bill. But, now, we're out of money, no matter how long Wisconsin Democrats hide out in Illinois."