Ronald Trowbridge has an excellent op-ed in Saturday’s Houston Chronicle about the corrosive effects on forced unionism in the workplace.
Some years ago, I crossed a faculty picket line at a large university — the only faculty member out of several hundred professors to cross. Every fiber in my body opposed the strike, and I was pathologically unable to not cross. The nightmare that followed was the most stressful experience in my life, save for the cancer and death of my wife.
What happened?
As for my professorial friends, Frank screamed to me down the pathway filled with students, "You a******!" Walter said he was going to take a picture of my crossing the line and show it to people, hoping that I would get hurt.
Donald said to me in the crowded faculty lunchroom, "There’s Trowbridge. No, he’s not a scab; he’s an oozing, running sore." Laughter erupted. Sheila called me a "scab," with a scowling, mean face. She really meant it.
Jay, my telephone mate and one I had taken in as a guest at my summer cottage, was so red-faced with anger at me that he yelled, "That’s it, Trowbridge, I am never again going to answer your telephone!"
All this over an illegal strike. But for forced unionism proponents, what’s legal, or just, or fair is irrelevant. It’s all about some mindless, don’t-question-your-peers sense of "solidarity."
And as Trowbridge warns, the so-called Employee Free Choice Act (a.k.a. the Card Check Forced Unionism Bill) will further increase workplace hostility by pitting union partisans against their co-workers by eliminating the protection of the secret ballot and incentivizing intimidation against workers by union goons.