Talya wrote:
Collective action is not the same as collective ideology. A group of like-minded people coming together to accomplish a task need not create a institution that promotes its ideals.
Hmmm. I mostly agree, however, some sort of institution is needed at least temporarily to deal with issues. If you don't have such an institution, your gains are likely to be very temporary. For example, the civil rights movement spawned a number of institutions that continue to struggle for justice to this day. Had those institutions not existed, not worked, it's likely that a lot of their hard won gains (gains that many gave their lives for) would have been rolled back.
We established the United Nations (after the league of nations fell apart) in response to the horrors of Nazi oppression. That body's primary goal was to prevent the same thing happening again in the world. There are many that absolutely hate the UN, but it *was* born out of a desire to prevent another Hitler from rising to power.
Trade Unions, if they simply vanished after a single successful contract, would not have been able to hold on to their gains in terms of wages, worker safety, and all the other things that workers in this part of the world take for granted. That doesn't mean that Unions are perfect - they're just as vulnerable to the vagaries of human nature as corporations and governments are. However, that doesn't mean they are by their nature evil. They're just a tool. The nature of the individuals that call the shots is what will determine how that tool is used.
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It feels like all the people who want limited government really just want government limited to Republicans.
---The Daily Show