A Tyrant Named Miltiades! wrote: » You're not. You're misinterpreting the meaning of a 'free-market economy', via some impossible, or exaggerated, misinterpretation of that term to refer to some unfettereD, or unrealistically utopian, standard of 'freedom'. A competitive economy is a core, longstanding guiding principle of European and domestic economic policy, indluding in the retail sector. Anybody in denial of the relative freedom of the market is, well, in denial. And she's not a so-called professor, no more than the American judge James L. Robart is a 'so-called judge'. She's a Harvard-educated Distinguished (top tenured) Professor of Economics. It isn't a question of some guy's opinion on the internet as to whether or not she is a professor.
ThisRegard wrote: » You're an advocate of bolting the door after the horse has bolted?
suicide_circus wrote: » The 250 is entirely relevant. If they can't run the stores with 98% of the staff on "modern" contracts it's says more about the management than anything else. Also no one believes for a second that they'll stop at the pre 1996 staff.
ThisRegard wrote: » For once try two things for me, firstly, stop lying. Secondly, learn about capitalisation. Edit, lying is probably a bit harsh. Your tendency is to bluff without actually knowing what you're bluffing about.
ThisRegard wrote: » As you said yourself, they have a responsibility to their shareholders, some of whom are their employees. The fact that there's only a few affected, which keeps getting trotted out, is irrelevant. A store manager can't run their store as efficiently as possible if some of their staff are stuck in a bygone era. But you seem to have the notion that such inefficiencies don't need to be tackled until things go into the red for some bizarre reason.
end of the road wrote: » i don't lie and i know what i'm talking about. i'm only the messenger and i cannot be responsible for people not liking the message.
end of the road wrote: » there are no efficientsies to be made with these staff. the staff are running at full efficientsy, the managers are managing at full efficientsy, and the staff are entitled for their contracts to be honoured.
ThisRegard wrote: » You clearly never worked in, or managed at, retail level, or any level for that matter. You have a finite set of resources which you have at your disposal. And no one believes? Ok so, I take it at face value you've done the research and polls on this.
suicide_circus wrote: » I know all about retail management, hon
ThisRegard wrote: » You don't. I just used the same pollsters suicide circus used, and nobody believes you. You're a contrarian for the sake of it and never can back up any of your wild claims.
ThisRegard wrote: » I mean, did you actually keep a straight face when posting the following?
end of the road wrote: » i do know what i'm talking about and i don't lie. i couldn't give a stuff whether people believe me, it's no skin off my nose whether they do or not. i'm not one bit of a contrarian for the sake of it or a contrarian full stop. i can and do back up my factual claims.
ThisRegard wrote: » You do, you claming to be an employee and everything?
Deleted User wrote: » And I'd pass a picket for the craic of it. You see people's true colours very quickly when you make your own decisions against the mob and in my experience there's few as vicious as the union rabble-rousers in any organisation.
end of the road wrote: » the fact you would "cross a picket for the crack" knowing the outcome you claim, says that you are the rabble rouser and trouble maker, i'm afraid.
ThisRegard wrote: » Out of 8 stores balloted yesterday, 7 voted to reject striking, only 1 voted for. The support for the position of Mandate and pre96ers is not there.
VinLieger wrote: » Sounds like the average Tesco worker is a bit fed up of by some accounts their holier than though ivory tower attitude.
mcko wrote: » Well I have a contract of employment and if my company tried to change it for worse conditions then I would go to the gate as well, I have a fantastic full time job pension health care bonus and share scheme but the future for my children is bleak. Good jobs are starting to disappear and some people see that as a good thing kick the unions , I am a member of a trade union and would hate to work in a non union plant
amtc wrote: » Tesco Roselawn has the entrances picketed. I parked there to get my hair done and was leafleted. Plus my dad was stopped going into the pub. I didn't go into Tesco but that's at least 15 small shops affected...all still paying full rent.
amtc wrote: » Tesco Roselawn has the entrances picketed. I parked there to get my hair done and was leafleted. Plus my dad was stopped going into the pub.
end of the road wrote: » no as there are no such things in the company. they were remove years ago. the problem is bad management, to many management and to much spending on marketing (all though marketing is very important to a company)
end of the road wrote: » i can and do back up my factual claims
end of the road wrote: » absolutely i did as i believe it to be the case and have saw nothing to convince me otherwise.
Maguined wrote: » I would imagine it must be hard for the young staff in their twenties to believe in solidarity when they are always left working the crap shifts because their fellow 96'er comrades refuse to do so.
Delacent wrote: » If they unilaterally changed it then yes, but if they NEGOTIATED with you for two years, went to labour court, they adjudictaed on it and the vast majority accepted the new terms which are do not involve ANY reduction in pay then you may have a different thought on it. If 70% of those affected took a generous redundancy and only THEN after that 70% have left your union takes a vote on it would you not consider your union to be a bit underhand? Mandate have shown time and time again that their overpaid execs are simply not up to the job of reasonably representing their members and instead pull strike strokes that lead to bad blood between co-workers and management and an eventual outcome that will not differ to current one. Seems most Tesco workers are noiw realsiing how ridiculous Manadate are. Funny Mandate would never do a overall vote - its store by store! Why, because they know they'd lose by a massive margin. Union bosses are overpaid fatcats!