Brew wrote on Mar 12th, 2011 at 8:52am:It is. Dems are in bed with union bosses, and they end up negotiating the contracts together, using public monies to fulfill the terms of the contracts. So they both end up singing the same song to keep the gravy train flowing.
What I still can't believe is how many of their members buy into it. Stockholm syndrome, perhaps. I guess we'll see soon since it's now law that membership and contribution of dues are no longer mandatory.
There's also corporate lobbyist sway with legislators, negotiating contracts, in which the return on investment doesn't reach down to many voters.
Corporate general contributions have an unlimited hand in support since last year with Supreme Court decision Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission.
Motivation for legislation seems to be based on, who has the most money wins. Anonymous, not specific, but vast. Five milliion dumped in a race by Republican Governors Association for a state gets the better spin.
Since about August 2008 that I've known of, simply defunding a party has been the game plan. With the S.C. decision, unlimited funding available.
Budgets are an extreme concern.
Leaving a livelihood in the hands of corporate decisions has not seemed to be trustworthy. Many people's memory of this lately has been to lose their job. This is what still affects people at this stage. Saying you are making a more fertile environment for business can be equated with discontented thoughts of lower wages when many are working very hard now just to pay bills, and for lower costs, business can make it even harder. All they see is someone makes out, but never them, and this can comprise a large number of people who vote. Most likely not investors either.
It's not that profit is wrong, it's just that they have no incentive to create jobs, only incentive to come to a state and make profits, foremost of course, the fertile environment. It has been an employers market, hiring for less, and many see it to be ever moreso, which is what carries this beyond state workers.
There are many who are successful, but there is less room between good pay and minimum wage, the middle ground many are happy to have.
Getting off the goverment payroll would be a great idea, if corporations had more of that middle ground to offer people. As they've found, much can be done for less outsourcing jobs elsewhere, a lack of security has permeated thoughts of trusting corporations. This is what unions opposingly have represented, security. Too much is bad, I agree, we get into that Peter Principle thing too, but a good worker would like it to be felt a little more than experienced lately, and promoted on merit. That era may not be coming back. Meanwhile watching decisions promote the person who shows enough to fool none of the people none of the time except the people upstairs.

Yeah ok, I'll trust that.