Hint: We already dominate the rest of America when it comes to food, beautiful women, college football, and outward religious displays of piety.
Thirteen (or fourteen, depending on how Oklahoma is classified in your mind) states tend to steer the dialogue of where the United States has come from and where its perceived future lies. Those thirteen states: Arkansas, Florida, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia, North and South Carolina, Kentucky, Virginia, and Missouri – and it’s not always a social issue.
Which battle did the South win?
Labor.
The states in green are considered right-to-work states. |
What are right-to-work laws and “at-will” employment, you wonder?
Right-to-work laws allow nonunion employees to benefit from union contracts. This means everyone in a company gets the same benefits (i.e. health insurance and pensions) that a few have vigorously fought for if they choose to join the local union or decline its membership. At-will employment is a status that allows the termination of your employment for any time and for any reason. This policy protects employers, not employees by allowing them the freedom to fire you for reasons of their own without fear of legal action. In other words, you can work thirty years at a job as a strong performer and unceremoniously be canned one day because you may be half an hour late for the start of a shift.
Still don’t understand?
Right-to-work (in theory) implies that every employee is equal regardless of professional status or rank. Of course, we still have supervisors, managers, executives, and shareholders who represent the separation between the peon and the big dog due to education, social connections, or work experiences within the industry. Sadly, right-to-work today resembles this scenario:
I work 80+ hours weekly at poverty wages and haven’t received a raise in three years yet am blamed for rising prices at work. If I can make $20/hour somewhere else, what is in it for me to stay here for $9.50/hour to do the same job?
Employers want to pay peanuts for top-notch labor. The South was more successful at it than the North.
We're all looking for work. Hire us, please. |
Keep ‘em dumb, work the shit outta ‘em for free: that’s the real Southern political class strategy.
Just follow the money – and rhetoric spewed by all nineteen candidates for President of the United States.
The South did win the battle of labor. We’ve been paying for it since the end of the Civil War.
Thank you for clarifying the part about “at will” employment. I guess they go together, but I had it in my mind that “right to work” was the thing that allowed employers to fire workers without any justification.
ReplyDeleteThanks for clarifying the “at will” employment. I guess they work together, but I was thinking that “right to work” was the part where employers could fire workers without justification.
ReplyDelete