BUsh and Big Business

[blockquote]
----------------
On 12/6/2002 6:33:25 PM MiAAmi wrote:

Wasn't it just about 2 years ago that Bush said that he would not allow any airline strikes? But now its ok to let the whole industry go down the tubes.
----------------
[/blockquote]

I believe the primary concern prior to 9/11 was of the collateral damage of an airline strike to industries not related to the firm. But I have a sense that they were very hesitant to even do that back then, but felt compelled to act because of the slowdown in economic activity within the economy as a whole.

Now, when the airlines go CH11, the only impact will be on equity and debt holders, not a large swath of firms. Hence, CH11 is the appropriate mechanism for disposing and rehabilitating the firms assets. The only potential negative effect is the inability of firms with viable business models to access the capital markets, but the government solved that with the ATSB. And I believe that the capital markets are opening up for some firms (although probably only for asset-backed debt products). Furthermore, the economy is recovering. The problem is that the visible signs of an economic recovery are lagging indicators, so people will still "think" things are bad for about 12 months after the economy is growing.

Because of all that, the Administrations actions are consistent with its free market philosiphy.
 
FA Mikey, maybe you should tell BUCK what union you belong to.
Buck;
Is the APFA an industrial Union? How about the APA or in Uniteds case the AFA or ALPA? (Both AFL-CIO members)
 
FA Mikey, maybe you should tell BUCK what union you belong to.
Buck;
Is the APFA an industrial Union? How about the APA or in Uniteds case the AFA or ALPA? (Both AFL-CIO members)
 
Is the "market rate" for a mechanic the same in Tulsa the same as the "market rate" for a mechanic in NYC? Most economic experts would say "No". Its funny how all these Conservatives in Tulsa will bash baggage handlers and the "Socialistic" tendancies of many union contracts when they are the biggest benificiaries of the system. The fact is if "market rates" were indeed used instead of broad "socialistic" contracts where the rate of pay is the same despite the locality Baggage handlers in NYC would probably get a raise and mechanics in Tulsa would probably get about what a baggage handler is earning now.
I beleive the Topic of this thread is Bush and Big Business. The fact is while Bush may have taken a stand that appears to hurt a Big Business, he has done so against Employee owned UAL at the behest of other Big Businesses. This is corporate cannibalism not a sign that Bush's loyalties have changed.
 
Is the "market rate" for a mechanic the same in Tulsa the same as the "market rate" for a mechanic in NYC? Most economic experts would say "No". Its funny how all these Conservatives in Tulsa will bash baggage handlers and the "Socialistic" tendancies of many union contracts when they are the biggest benificiaries of the system. The fact is if "market rates" were indeed used instead of broad "socialistic" contracts where the rate of pay is the same despite the locality Baggage handlers in NYC would probably get a raise and mechanics in Tulsa would probably get about what a baggage handler is earning now.
I beleive the Topic of this thread is Bush and Big Business. The fact is while Bush may have taken a stand that appears to hurt a Big Business, he has done so against Employee owned UAL at the behest of other Big Businesses. This is corporate cannibalism not a sign that Bush's loyalties have changed.
 
Maybe the union leaders who profited from the below corruption would be willing to insure a loan to United using their own illegal profits to save the union members jobs and pay that created this fund in the first place? Why not sweep our own porch of corruption before we go sweep the Bush porch or anyone else for that matter?

http://www.laboreducator.org/ullico4.htm

ULLICO Shareholders Approve Probe
Of Insider Stock Deals by Directors

By Harry Kelber


Pension fund stockholders at ULLICO’s annual meeting on May 7, 2002 in Washington gave their seal of approval to CEO Robert A. Georgine and his board of directors without any comments or questions about the charges of insider stock trading that have been levied against them.

In fact, it was Georgine himself who devoted a single paragraph to the subject in his annual report by announcing that the board had hired former Illinois Governor James R. Thompson to “independently examine questions raised by the recent media coverage.â€

Currently, a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C. is investigating the self-enrichment schemes approved by the board, which enabled many of its members to gain personal profits totaling more than $6.5 million. A separate investigation is being conducted by the U.S. Labor Department to determine whether union leaders on the board, in their management roles, breached their fiduciary responsibilities to their union pension funds.

What is especially unusual about the ULLICO insiders’ stock trading scandal is that all but two of the 28 board directors are current or retired national union presidents and secretary-treasurers and include AFL CIO President John Sweeney and Executive Vice President Linda Chavez Thompson. CEO Georgine, who chose most of them as directors, was president of the AFL-CIO Building and Construction Trades Department for 26 years before his retirement in January 2000.

Damaging allegations against the directors, which they have not denied and which will undoubtedly be spotlighted in the three forthcoming investigations, deal with the buying and selling of their shares at lucrative profits, from January 2000 to September 2001.

Specifically, on Dec. 17, 1999, Georgine sent a private letter to board directors inviting each of them to buy 4,000 shares of the company stock at $53.94 a share — based on its 1998 book value — even though the company stock was now worth $146 a share as the result of windfall profits from an early investment of $7.6 million in Global Crossing that netted ULLICO an enormous after-tax profit of $330 million.

Board members received still another opportunity to trade their shares for personal advantage. In November, 2000, as Global Crossing was in a free-fall toward bankruptcy, causing a sharp decline in the value of ULLICO shares, the directors gave themselves the privilege of selling back their shares to the company at the price of $146 a share, even though they knew that the book value of the company’s shares would be fixed at $75 a share by the end of 2001. While all shareholders were allowed to participate in the $30 million stock repurchase offer, a series of restrictions were placed on union pension funds with more than 10,000 shares. Georgine sold 16,868 of his shares in 2001 at a personal profit of more than $2 million, according to proxy statements.

Questions have been raised about the composition of the board, which has only three of its 28 directors with actual management experience in the insurance and financial services industries in which ULLICO is engaged. Why were these prominent union leaders selected, and what expertise in insurance and corporate investments did any of them bring to the board? What did they actually do on the board? Were they there to serve as window dressing and to rubber stamp decisions made by management personnel behind the scenes?

ULLICO directors receive $6,000 a year, while those on the executive committee (about half of the board) get $16,000 annually. They also are paid $500 for attending each semi-annual board session or an additional executive committee meeting. This is regarded as modest compensation, compared with what directors on major corporate boards are paid.

Even if Sweeney and other directors did not personally cash in on the ULLICO stock offer, they approved the stock transactions and the rules that enabled co-directors to reap huge profits, even extending the time limit to give them five more months to cash in additional shares.

ULLICO is a union-owned insurance and financial services company, founded by the American Federation of Labor in 1925 as the Union Labor Life Insurance Company to provide affordable health and life insurance to union members. In the last eleven years since Georgine became its chief officer, ULLICO has made a profit every year. With a stable labor force of 1,800 workers, its investments have provided thousands of good paying jobs for unionized construction workers.

The Thompson investigation is seen as a thinly-veiled effort at damage control by ULLICO’s directors. Thompson, a former United States attorney in Chicago, told The New York Times: “I’ll do the investigation that they’ve asked me to do…I’ll ask the questions they want me to get answered. Then I’ll give them a report, and it’s up to them.†And if the board doesn’t like his recommendations, it can ignore them.

Meanwhile, the AFL-CIO and its affiliates are suffering considerable embarrassment over the ULLICO scandal, especially since they have been so vehemently critical of Enron executives. The ULLICO mess is being characterized as “Labor’s Little Enron,†and will be used to discredit unions in both their organizing and political campaigns.

No matter what the outcome of the current investigations, the image of American labor and its leaders has been severely tarnished. There never was a time when so many powerful national union leaders were implicated in a self-enriching scheme in a company dedicated to the welfare of union members.

Will the AFL-CIO resurrect its Ethical Practices Committee to conduct hearings on the behavior of the 11 ULLICO directors who are also members of the labor federation’s policy-making Executive Council? What penalties, if any, will they be required to pay for conduct unbecoming a union officer? Or will a cover-up be followed by a whitewash?

Like the fallout over Enron, the ULLICO scandal will be unfolding in the weeks and months ahead, and we shall be watching it closely.

ULLICO’s Board of Directors
Morton Bahr, President, Communications Workers of America
John J. Barry, President Emeritus, Int’l. Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
William G. Bernard, President Emeritus, Int’l. Assn. of Asbestos Workers
Moe Biller, President Emeritus, American Postal Workers Union
Marvin J. Boede, Former President, Plumbers and Pipefitters
Kenneth J. Brown, Former President, Graphic Communications Intl. Union
Bill J. Casstevens, Former Secretary-Treasurer, United Auto Workers
Linda Chavez-Thompson, Executive Vice President, AFL-CIO
John F. Gentleman, Former President, ULLICO, Inc.
Robert A. Georgine, President and Chief Executive Officer, ULLICO President Emeritus, Building and Construction Trades Dept., AFL-CIO
Frank Hanley, President, Int’l. Union of Operating Engineers
Frank D. Hurt, President, Bakery, Confectionery and Tobacco Union
John T. Joyce, Former President, Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers
Earl J. Kruse, President, Roofers, Waterproofers and Allied Workers
James La Sala, President, Amalgamated Transit Union
Martin J. Maddaloni, President, Plumbers and Pipefitters
Joseph F. Maloney, Secretary-Treasurer Emeritus, Building and Construction Trades Dept., AFL-CIO
Douglas J. McCarron, President, United Brotherhood of Carpenters
James F. M. McNulty, General Counsel, Union Labor Life Insurance Co.
Lenore Miller. Former President, Retail, Wholesale and Dept. Store Union
Terence O’Sullivan, President, Laborers’ Int’l. Union
James H. Rankin, President, Glass, Pottery and Allied Workers
Vincent R. Sombrotto, President, National Assn. of Letter Carriers
John J. Sweeney, President, AFL-CIO
Eugene Upshaw, President, Federation of Professional Athletes
Jacob F. West, President Emeritus, Int’l. Union of Iron Workers
John W. Wilhelm, President, Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees
Roy Wyse, Former Secretary-Treasurer, United Auto Workers
 
Maybe the union leaders who profited from the below corruption would be willing to insure a loan to United using their own illegal profits to save the union members jobs and pay that created this fund in the first place? Why not sweep our own porch of corruption before we go sweep the Bush porch or anyone else for that matter?

http://www.laboreducator.org/ullico4.htm

ULLICO Shareholders Approve Probe
Of Insider Stock Deals by Directors

By Harry Kelber


Pension fund stockholders at ULLICO’s annual meeting on May 7, 2002 in Washington gave their seal of approval to CEO Robert A. Georgine and his board of directors without any comments or questions about the charges of insider stock trading that have been levied against them.

In fact, it was Georgine himself who devoted a single paragraph to the subject in his annual report by announcing that the board had hired former Illinois Governor James R. Thompson to “independently examine questions raised by the recent media coverage.â€

Currently, a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C. is investigating the self-enrichment schemes approved by the board, which enabled many of its members to gain personal profits totaling more than $6.5 million. A separate investigation is being conducted by the U.S. Labor Department to determine whether union leaders on the board, in their management roles, breached their fiduciary responsibilities to their union pension funds.

What is especially unusual about the ULLICO insiders’ stock trading scandal is that all but two of the 28 board directors are current or retired national union presidents and secretary-treasurers and include AFL CIO President John Sweeney and Executive Vice President Linda Chavez Thompson. CEO Georgine, who chose most of them as directors, was president of the AFL-CIO Building and Construction Trades Department for 26 years before his retirement in January 2000.

Damaging allegations against the directors, which they have not denied and which will undoubtedly be spotlighted in the three forthcoming investigations, deal with the buying and selling of their shares at lucrative profits, from January 2000 to September 2001.

Specifically, on Dec. 17, 1999, Georgine sent a private letter to board directors inviting each of them to buy 4,000 shares of the company stock at $53.94 a share — based on its 1998 book value — even though the company stock was now worth $146 a share as the result of windfall profits from an early investment of $7.6 million in Global Crossing that netted ULLICO an enormous after-tax profit of $330 million.

Board members received still another opportunity to trade their shares for personal advantage. In November, 2000, as Global Crossing was in a free-fall toward bankruptcy, causing a sharp decline in the value of ULLICO shares, the directors gave themselves the privilege of selling back their shares to the company at the price of $146 a share, even though they knew that the book value of the company’s shares would be fixed at $75 a share by the end of 2001. While all shareholders were allowed to participate in the $30 million stock repurchase offer, a series of restrictions were placed on union pension funds with more than 10,000 shares. Georgine sold 16,868 of his shares in 2001 at a personal profit of more than $2 million, according to proxy statements.

Questions have been raised about the composition of the board, which has only three of its 28 directors with actual management experience in the insurance and financial services industries in which ULLICO is engaged. Why were these prominent union leaders selected, and what expertise in insurance and corporate investments did any of them bring to the board? What did they actually do on the board? Were they there to serve as window dressing and to rubber stamp decisions made by management personnel behind the scenes?

ULLICO directors receive $6,000 a year, while those on the executive committee (about half of the board) get $16,000 annually. They also are paid $500 for attending each semi-annual board session or an additional executive committee meeting. This is regarded as modest compensation, compared with what directors on major corporate boards are paid.

Even if Sweeney and other directors did not personally cash in on the ULLICO stock offer, they approved the stock transactions and the rules that enabled co-directors to reap huge profits, even extending the time limit to give them five more months to cash in additional shares.

ULLICO is a union-owned insurance and financial services company, founded by the American Federation of Labor in 1925 as the Union Labor Life Insurance Company to provide affordable health and life insurance to union members. In the last eleven years since Georgine became its chief officer, ULLICO has made a profit every year. With a stable labor force of 1,800 workers, its investments have provided thousands of good paying jobs for unionized construction workers.

The Thompson investigation is seen as a thinly-veiled effort at damage control by ULLICO’s directors. Thompson, a former United States attorney in Chicago, told The New York Times: “I’ll do the investigation that they’ve asked me to do…I’ll ask the questions they want me to get answered. Then I’ll give them a report, and it’s up to them.†And if the board doesn’t like his recommendations, it can ignore them.

Meanwhile, the AFL-CIO and its affiliates are suffering considerable embarrassment over the ULLICO scandal, especially since they have been so vehemently critical of Enron executives. The ULLICO mess is being characterized as “Labor’s Little Enron,†and will be used to discredit unions in both their organizing and political campaigns.

No matter what the outcome of the current investigations, the image of American labor and its leaders has been severely tarnished. There never was a time when so many powerful national union leaders were implicated in a self-enriching scheme in a company dedicated to the welfare of union members.

Will the AFL-CIO resurrect its Ethical Practices Committee to conduct hearings on the behavior of the 11 ULLICO directors who are also members of the labor federation’s policy-making Executive Council? What penalties, if any, will they be required to pay for conduct unbecoming a union officer? Or will a cover-up be followed by a whitewash?

Like the fallout over Enron, the ULLICO scandal will be unfolding in the weeks and months ahead, and we shall be watching it closely.

ULLICO’s Board of Directors
Morton Bahr, President, Communications Workers of America
John J. Barry, President Emeritus, Int’l. Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
William G. Bernard, President Emeritus, Int’l. Assn. of Asbestos Workers
Moe Biller, President Emeritus, American Postal Workers Union
Marvin J. Boede, Former President, Plumbers and Pipefitters
Kenneth J. Brown, Former President, Graphic Communications Intl. Union
Bill J. Casstevens, Former Secretary-Treasurer, United Auto Workers
Linda Chavez-Thompson, Executive Vice President, AFL-CIO
John F. Gentleman, Former President, ULLICO, Inc.
Robert A. Georgine, President and Chief Executive Officer, ULLICO President Emeritus, Building and Construction Trades Dept., AFL-CIO
Frank Hanley, President, Int’l. Union of Operating Engineers
Frank D. Hurt, President, Bakery, Confectionery and Tobacco Union
John T. Joyce, Former President, Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers
Earl J. Kruse, President, Roofers, Waterproofers and Allied Workers
James La Sala, President, Amalgamated Transit Union
Martin J. Maddaloni, President, Plumbers and Pipefitters
Joseph F. Maloney, Secretary-Treasurer Emeritus, Building and Construction Trades Dept., AFL-CIO
Douglas J. McCarron, President, United Brotherhood of Carpenters
James F. M. McNulty, General Counsel, Union Labor Life Insurance Co.
Lenore Miller. Former President, Retail, Wholesale and Dept. Store Union
Terence O’Sullivan, President, Laborers’ Int’l. Union
James H. Rankin, President, Glass, Pottery and Allied Workers
Vincent R. Sombrotto, President, National Assn. of Letter Carriers
John J. Sweeney, President, AFL-CIO
Eugene Upshaw, President, Federation of Professional Athletes
Jacob F. West, President Emeritus, Int’l. Union of Iron Workers
John W. Wilhelm, President, Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees
Roy Wyse, Former Secretary-Treasurer, United Auto Workers
 
[blockquote]
----------------
On 12/5/2002 1:32:44 PM BeenThere wrote:

I would venture to say that all the Corporate Shenanigans existed long before Bush became president. It's amazing how every topic turns to an anti Bush or GOP agenda. United's woes as well as most of the other major carriers were caused by gross mismanagement. Hey, why don't you blame cancer on the Bushes while you're at it? Funny thing though, if you remember when the unions begged George Bush the First to get involved in the Eastern Airlines situation and he refused, he became organized labor's archenemy. Then when George Bush the second DID get involved with airline labor disputes, right away, he too was anti-labor and pro big business. I guess you Clintonites forget Slick Willie's midnight intervention with the APA and AMR? I sense hypocrisy and selective memories here.
----------------
[/blockquote]

The problem with your post is that there is more to the story. Bush the First was the first President to go against the NMB recomendation for a PEB ever. The IAM had several of their strategies deliberately foiled by the senior Bush who made it clear that he would use his office to support "his freind Frank Lorenzo". Along with Bush's precident setting decision not to follow the recommendation of the NMB because of Lorenzos unrealistic demands Federal judges issued injuntions against the IAMs legal right to set up secondary pickets as given under the RLA.
While I did not agree with Clintons interference with the APA, being that Bush had set the precident of going against the NMBs recommendation and was free to also do so, he was merely follwing the established norm for handling disputes under the RLA. Bush the second came right out and said that he will not allow any airline strikes during his administration. He blocked two strikes of mechanics already. It will be interesting now that things have changed so dramatically in the industry if he were to allow UAL workers to strike should a Bankruptcy judge void the contracts. My guess is that he will go back on his word as he did with the longshoremen. If Bush steps in at UAL the status quo is maintained for at least 90 days.
 
[blockquote]
----------------
On 12/5/2002 1:32:44 PM BeenThere wrote:

I would venture to say that all the Corporate Shenanigans existed long before Bush became president. It's amazing how every topic turns to an anti Bush or GOP agenda. United's woes as well as most of the other major carriers were caused by gross mismanagement. Hey, why don't you blame cancer on the Bushes while you're at it? Funny thing though, if you remember when the unions begged George Bush the First to get involved in the Eastern Airlines situation and he refused, he became organized labor's archenemy. Then when George Bush the second DID get involved with airline labor disputes, right away, he too was anti-labor and pro big business. I guess you Clintonites forget Slick Willie's midnight intervention with the APA and AMR? I sense hypocrisy and selective memories here.
----------------
[/blockquote]

The problem with your post is that there is more to the story. Bush the First was the first President to go against the NMB recomendation for a PEB ever. The IAM had several of their strategies deliberately foiled by the senior Bush who made it clear that he would use his office to support "his freind Frank Lorenzo". Along with Bush's precident setting decision not to follow the recommendation of the NMB because of Lorenzos unrealistic demands Federal judges issued injuntions against the IAMs legal right to set up secondary pickets as given under the RLA.
While I did not agree with Clintons interference with the APA, being that Bush had set the precident of going against the NMBs recommendation and was free to also do so, he was merely follwing the established norm for handling disputes under the RLA. Bush the second came right out and said that he will not allow any airline strikes during his administration. He blocked two strikes of mechanics already. It will be interesting now that things have changed so dramatically in the industry if he were to allow UAL workers to strike should a Bankruptcy judge void the contracts. My guess is that he will go back on his word as he did with the longshoremen. If Bush steps in at UAL the status quo is maintained for at least 90 days.
 
[blockquote]
----------------
On 12/5/2002 9:43:05 AM coldplay wrote:

actually it's just something he does not want to clog his tiny brain right now. He's so focused on his "Get Saddam" agenda, that everything else is moot and takes a backseat.
He'll deal with it & all other economic issues AFTER 2004. By then it'll be the other guy's problem, and not his. same tactic he used during his "businessman" days. someone was always there to bail him out, whether it be Daddy, Mumsie, or Dickie boy.
----------------
[/blockquote]
Isnt it Uncle Dickie?
 
[blockquote]
----------------
On 12/5/2002 9:43:05 AM coldplay wrote:

actually it's just something he does not want to clog his tiny brain right now. He's so focused on his "Get Saddam" agenda, that everything else is moot and takes a backseat.
He'll deal with it & all other economic issues AFTER 2004. By then it'll be the other guy's problem, and not his. same tactic he used during his "businessman" days. someone was always there to bail him out, whether it be Daddy, Mumsie, or Dickie boy.
----------------
[/blockquote]
Isnt it Uncle Dickie?
 
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread starter
  • #42
Next thing you'll be saying is that since Carty is so tight with Bush, he had the Gov't deny UAL the loans.
 
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread starter
  • #43
Next thing you'll be saying is that since Carty is so tight with Bush, he had the Gov't deny UAL the loans.
 
[blockquote]
----------------
On 12/7/2002 6:40:46 AM Rational Thought wrote:

[blockquote]
----------------
On 12/6/2002 6:33:25 PM MiAAmi wrote:

Wasn't it just about 2 years ago that Bush said that he would not allow any airline strikes? But now its ok to let the whole industry go down the tubes.
----------------
[/blockquote]

I believe the primary concern prior to 9/11 was of the collateral damage of an airline strike to industries not related to the firm. But I have a sense that they were very hesitant to even do that back then, but felt compelled to act because of the slowdown in economic activity within the economy as a whole.

Now, when the airlines go CH11, the only impact will be on equity and debt holders, not a large swath of firms. Hence, CH11 is the appropriate mechanism for disposing and rehabilitating the firms assets. The only potential negative effect is the inability of firms with viable business models to access the capital markets, but the government solved that with the ATSB. And I believe that the capital markets are opening up for some firms (although probably only for asset-backed debt products). Furthermore, the economy is recovering. The problem is that the visible signs of an economic recovery are lagging indicators, so people will still "think" things are bad for about 12 months after the economy is growing.

Because of all that, the Administrations actions are consistent with its free market philosiphy.
----------------
[/blockquote]

A temporary shutdown of an airline, which is what MAY have resulted without the PEBs would have been a short term interuption to commerce for those firms unrelated to to the company that may have seen a strike. Such companies generally would have had other options for their transportation needs. The effect would have been broad, because the interruption would be nation-wide, effecting all that carriers system but interruptions to commerce are not all that rare or as harmful as claimed. We frequently see intense interuptions due to Storms and other natuaral events that completely shut down commerce, most businesses rebound easily.
When we look at the recent Longshoremans dispute we see a complete inconsistancy between the administrations stated policy and actions. He flat out told the Union that he would not allow them to shut down the ports but then sat and let the owners shut them down as a preemptive move against the union. When the move backfired and the union embraced the lockout he reversed course and ordered the ports reopened-again against the unions wishes. It seems as if the admministration tries to claim that its policies are free market orientated, then the market must also accept that Labor has the right to withhold their product from the market also. It has become blatantly clear that this administration is will not allow market interruptions due to labor, but will allow everyone else to act freely in their own self interests, despite its effects on society. Doesnt free market philosophy also embrace the concept of minimal government interference, even in behalf of proping up a sagging economy? Dont they feel that it should run its course?
 
[blockquote]
----------------
On 12/7/2002 6:40:46 AM Rational Thought wrote:

[blockquote]
----------------
On 12/6/2002 6:33:25 PM MiAAmi wrote:

Wasn't it just about 2 years ago that Bush said that he would not allow any airline strikes? But now its ok to let the whole industry go down the tubes.
----------------
[/blockquote]

I believe the primary concern prior to 9/11 was of the collateral damage of an airline strike to industries not related to the firm. But I have a sense that they were very hesitant to even do that back then, but felt compelled to act because of the slowdown in economic activity within the economy as a whole.

Now, when the airlines go CH11, the only impact will be on equity and debt holders, not a large swath of firms. Hence, CH11 is the appropriate mechanism for disposing and rehabilitating the firms assets. The only potential negative effect is the inability of firms with viable business models to access the capital markets, but the government solved that with the ATSB. And I believe that the capital markets are opening up for some firms (although probably only for asset-backed debt products). Furthermore, the economy is recovering. The problem is that the visible signs of an economic recovery are lagging indicators, so people will still "think" things are bad for about 12 months after the economy is growing.

Because of all that, the Administrations actions are consistent with its free market philosiphy.
----------------
[/blockquote]

A temporary shutdown of an airline, which is what MAY have resulted without the PEBs would have been a short term interuption to commerce for those firms unrelated to to the company that may have seen a strike. Such companies generally would have had other options for their transportation needs. The effect would have been broad, because the interruption would be nation-wide, effecting all that carriers system but interruptions to commerce are not all that rare or as harmful as claimed. We frequently see intense interuptions due to Storms and other natuaral events that completely shut down commerce, most businesses rebound easily.
When we look at the recent Longshoremans dispute we see a complete inconsistancy between the administrations stated policy and actions. He flat out told the Union that he would not allow them to shut down the ports but then sat and let the owners shut them down as a preemptive move against the union. When the move backfired and the union embraced the lockout he reversed course and ordered the ports reopened-again against the unions wishes. It seems as if the admministration tries to claim that its policies are free market orientated, then the market must also accept that Labor has the right to withhold their product from the market also. It has become blatantly clear that this administration is will not allow market interruptions due to labor, but will allow everyone else to act freely in their own self interests, despite its effects on society. Doesnt free market philosophy also embrace the concept of minimal government interference, even in behalf of proping up a sagging economy? Dont they feel that it should run its course?
 

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