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Sunday, November 18, 2012

Hostess blames unions.

So the media is flogging the sad idea that unions caused another business to fold...

Another load of dingoes kidneys.

As economist Dean Baker of the Center for Economic and Policy Research put it in his CEPR post yesterday (with background information provided by his colleagues Eileen Appelbaum and Mark Weisbrot:

It is not clear that [the workers] had a better route available to them. It is important to understand a bit about the history of Hostess in assessing whether the workers and their union made the right call.
Dean looked first at how Hostess wound up in bankruptcy originally.
Hostess has been relying on pretty much the same mix of products for decades. While other companies have sought to adjust to changing consumer tastes, Hostess still gets the vast majority of its revenue from a relatively small number of products that it has been selling in largely the same form since the sixties. This failure to innovate was the main reason that the company first went into bankruptcy in 2004.
There doesn't seem any question that Hostess needed new leadership. Instead, after five years in  bankruptcy, it got the private equity company Ripplewood Holdings, which took over in February 2009.
Remarkably, [Hostesss] exited bankruptcy with nearly $670 million in debt, almost 50 percent more than the $450 million it owed when it went into bankruptcy. Usually companies use bankruptcy to shed debt. With Hostess the opposite was true.

This meant that Ripplewood was taking a heavily leveraged gamble. If the company survived, it would get a very high return on its investment. However there was a strong likelihood that the company would not be able to make it given its extraordinary debt burden and the weakness of the economy.

Ripplewood first asked workers for concessions in August of 2011. The workers refused since they had made substantial concessions in 2008 to facilitate the exit from bankruptcy. The concessions did not prevent layoffs of close to 20 percent of the workforce. The company also had stopped making payment to the pension fund in July of 2011 and is now more than $160 million in arrears.

Ripplewood took the company back into bankruptcy in January of this year, owing close to $1 billion. It has used bankruptcy to impose new contract terms on workers. This is the immediate cause of the current impasse, with the bakery workers’ union refusing to accept the reductions in pay and benefits and changes in work rules demanded by management.

Workers had several important issues to consider beyond just the prospect of working for less pay and under worse conditions. First, and most importantly, there was little reason to have much confidence in the current management team. They had done nothing to turn the company around in the three years since the last bankruptcy and there was little reason to believe that they would do any better going forward.

Accepting new concessions would provide no guarantee of job security. In fact, management wanted the unions to agree to the closure of 10-12 plants (of its choosing) as part of a new contract. This means that many of the company’s 18,000 workers would soon have been laid off even if the workers had accepted management’s terms.

Second, management was not shy about rewarding itself in spite of the company’s poor financial condition. The CEO upped his annual pay to $2.25 million and other top executives got raises of 35-80 percent. This doesn’t seem like the behavior of management that puts the survival of the company first.

Third, the financial situation of the pension has to be a top concern for workers. While the pension is guaranteed by the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation, the guarantee for multi-employer plans like the one at Hostess is limited. If the plan were to become insolvent then many workers would see large cuts in benefits.

From this standpoint, if Hostess were to continue to put off contributions to the pension and allow it to become badly underfunded, then workers could be looking at sharply reduced pensions in retirement. Workers who are approaching retirement age may view this prospect as a far greater danger than the risk of losing their job at this stage in their career.

Whether or not it was good judgment for the workers and their unions to refuse the concessions demanded by management is not clear. At this point, it’s still possible that the company was bluffing and will keep some of its plants open or that another buyer will come in and keep some of the plants operating.

However it is hard to blame workers for not putting their trust in a management team that shows little competence and is rapidly stuffing its pockets at the company’s expense. It is bad news for workers and the economy as a whole when such people gain control of major corporations!

Monday, November 5, 2012

GO VOTE!!!

Today is your day to be heard, too many people have fought and even died to secure our right to vote, and now a group of 17 billionaires think that their money will buy the government they want.

If you did not plan to vote, I respect that, but if you allow one of these slimy suppression tactics to prevent you from exercising your right, then you are giving in to someone else's agenda, following some oligarch's plan.

Be patient, be calm, be safe and VOTE!

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Randall Terry is America's Osama Bin Laden

This guy is preaching the same message as the Taliban!

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/31/randall-terry-obama-ad_n_2050133.html?utm_hp_ref=politics


This is the same guy who's organization gave Scott Roeder Dr. Tiller's address, employs as senior policy adviser, Cheryl Sullenger, who  in 1988 was convicted of conspiring to bomb a California abortion clinic.
The website of Operation Rescue released a statement condemning the assassination of Dr. George Tiller 45 minutes before the news was actually reported nationally. Linked to terrorist organization "Army of God" Aryan Nation and "Lambs of Christ".

Some Randall Terry's Talibangelical quotes:

"Let a wave of intolerance wash over you. I want you to let a wave of hatred wash over you. Yes, hate is good.... If a Christian voted for Clinton, he sinned against God. It's that simple.... Our goal is a Christian Nation... we have a biblical duty, we are called by God to conquer this country. We don't want equal time. We don't want Pluralism. We want theocracy. Theocracy means God rules. [from The News Sentinel, Fort Wayne, Indiana, Aug 15, 1993]

How about:

"When I, or people like me, are running the country, you'd better flee, because we will find you, we will try you, and we will execute you. I mean every word of it. I will make it part of my mission to see to it that they are tried and executed... If we're going to have true reformation in America, it is because men once again, if I may use a worn out expression, have righteous testoserone flowing through their veins. They are not afraid of contempt for their contemporaries. They are not even here to get along. They are here to take over... Somebody like Susan Smith should be dead. She should be dead now.
[at the Aug 8, 1995 U.S. Taxpayers Alliance Banquet in Washington DC, talking about doctors who perform abortions and volunteer escorts]

This anal fistula is just the same as the Taliban, Bin Laden, or any other radical zealot trying to foist Sharia law, or the Levi Jewish equivalent, onto secular Americans.... Promoter of fear, hatred and violence, this used car salesman (Really) is just another freedom hating, religious fascist.

Fuck him, and everyone that thinks like him.