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Their opinion is that yes, Biden did fight off-camera to get them the lions share of what they wanted. The job is still hard, because that's the job.
What a lot of people miss in this discussion is that being a freight rail worker is just a job they wouldn't do. All the workers know the game when they sign up. They know the attendance policy, they know the serious bodily harm risks, and they know the hours. They then look at the pay and decide it's worth it, or they don't become rail workers.
My best friend is a lineman, and it's a similar thing there. You're going to get electrocuted. You're going to get bit by enormous spiders. You're going to get injured, sometimes seriously, and you're absolutely going to work sick because there aren't enough linemen and electricity is important. By embracing that risk, you can get a 6 figure income in rural wherever without any education.
All of the arguments like the dude above makes involves taking away the agency of the actual workers, and imo infantilizing them, to try to score some shitty "but Biden isn't a god who can magic into existence exactly what I want" kind of thing
I think that has to be part of the discussion, education. These workers are "unskilled laborers", and that means companies can push them around however they'd like. There isn't a limited pool of workers that requires them to offer comprehensive benefits, like with more technical positions. There's also a very high chance some of the job hazards will be eliminated with automation -- while also eliminating jobs. We need to prepare for that.
In the meantime, we should create formal education programs for these positions so the workers have more leverage if they desire.
This really isn't true. Laborers have the advantage in the unskilled market right now because there are more jobs than people post-covid. Education is overrated for most unskilled positions.
The Lineman union is using that leverage to kick wholesale ass.
That's a fair point. More jobs than people inherently gives the laborers the advantage. I'll need to look into the Lineman union too -- nothing's more heartwarming than a union successfully kicking execs to the curb.