Phemanderac
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Cods, I suspect you won't like my point of view on this, but, none the less here we go....
To my mind, this is part of the end result of the systematic white anting, undermining and dismantling of the union movement.
It seems to have escaped you that if these people are not union members then quite simply the union cannot help them by law. A further point to that is this, the union should not help them either. Those paid up union members, particularly the ACTIVE ones are not in a financial position to carry the load for those who do not pay their union fees for whatever reason. That is simply inequitable.
NO bullying is wrong and yes bullying should be stamped out and addressed without pause.
That said, it is not simply a UNION issue and it is patently erroneous to simply use a case of bullying to slag of at the union movement. The Union movement presently is hardly a UNITED bunch of workers - it is, sadly, more often than not a dodgy organisation managed from afar that receives money from a bunch of, mostly, disinterested people who believe that the money they pay entitles them to some kind of magical protection. Being a Union member rather involves being pro active. Further, the union is not a separate thing to your work, it is either part of your work or you are fooling yourself thinking you have protection....
The other problem is, bullying is a management problem as well.
If there is a culture of bullying in any work place, then that has either been allowed to develop out of managerial ignorance or facilitated by managerial design. Either way, bullying does not occur because of the union movement in a work place nor is the union movement solely responsible for addressing it.
Workers need to get back to the very basics of looking out for each other. A line from a very recent mental health promotion springs to mine, workers need to adopt the "I've got your back" mentality and, until they do, it will be workers with minimal resources vs the MAN with more resources and, isolated from any form of unionised help, protection or support.
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