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I grew up in a union household. My mother got to do the books for her local.
She was resigned at one point. She couldn't make the numbers add up. Any of them. We're not talking small numbers. We're talking a lot. We're also talking about her coming home one day truly pissed off because she was told to shut up and it would be worth her while. Then, a few weeks later, she was just told to shut up.
The local president's wife took over the books. The next day several years' of union records were reconcile, financial statements had been drawn up and were presented to the national union board and certified as valid. How that one woman managed to go through a dozen boxes of records, reconcile several years of banking accounts for a number of different accounts in the course of fewer than 24 hours is nothing short of a miracle. Esp. since my mother still had a couple of boxes of records. Somebody showed up a few weeks later for the boxes. My mother, however, suddenly shut up but never had any good word for the union after that. Not one.
She basically had defended the union for decades. She also hated the men that ran it. The same guy was president for years, then he had a nephew or someboy get elected. He was a sexist pig who hated blacks and "Mexicans." Such was the union.
But my mother, born (D) and still (D) 80+ years later, apparently was a mouthpiece for corporatist propaganda directed entirely at her family. Or, perhaps, I'm allowed to think critically about what unions say about themselves in the furtherance of their own agenda (often the same as their members', but not always).
Then, years later, I watched a union being formed. They kept playing fast and furious with the rules and with their promises and words. No, we can't say what we'd do, that's for the membership to decide; but we promise that everybody will be represented as we fight for X, Y, and Z for all. Well, not for all, but for union members. See, we'll have a meeting--and if we don't get quorum, we won't decide on reps. Well, we didn't get quorum when the meeting was to start, so they decided that people could vote and leave--and others who came in later could vote and leave. Over 4 hours, with no more than 50% of a quorum present at any time, they had enough "aye" votes to constitute 51% of a quorum. Then it turned out that instead of just voting on who would be the representatives, we'd all been voting on the platform. Which was announced in the last 10 minutes of voting with everybody's else's votes appended to it. By the time it came out what had happened and people objected, the vote had been submitted and accepted--and the head of board responsible for recognizing the union and its status simply said he'd not deal with unfounded accusations.
Unions can be good things. But the people running then can be horribly corrupt and lying. But since unions are simply groups of people, it means unions can be horribly corrupt and lying.
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