Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your back"
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
Oh don't be such a crabass fartypants. I was just agreeing with Gooky.
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
Oh, so you've just now heard of gookstorm and torison having vehemently opposing view points?father of lies wrote:Oh don't be such a crabass fartypants. I was just agreeing with Gooky.
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
It's not that. Father of Thighs is just like....maybe a fat woman in her mid to late 30s in the freshman level sociology or political science class that you're just taking as an elective, and she's got a fucking trite, predictable opinion on everything and won't hesitate to let everyone know about it. And she takes herself really seriously and is obtuse enough not to know that she even annoys the professor.
Haha,
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
Look at all the future private sector workers!father of lies wrote:
I'm in there somewhere. My school, at noon.
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oh wow youre loyal, you know who else was loyal, fuckin goebbels
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
can you toss me a link to all the numbers you're referencing?father of lies wrote:Employee wages are only like 9% of the budget, so this shit saves less than .1% or some such meaningless number. As it stands, the bill is like a 10% pay cut, plus frozen wages, plus when wages are unfrozen they can only go up with the CPI. I've seen multiple articles predicting thousands of jobs lost and devastated government income due to decreased consumer purchases.
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
I'll post a ton of articles when I find them again. That shit is getting buried.
http://host.madison.com/wsj/pdf_f8ce991 ... 03286.html
The bill itself
http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/ ... 002e0.html
Effects on Medicaid
http://www.epi.org/publications/entry/6759/
Only the 1% of public employees with no high school diplomas make more than private sector employees
http://markpocanwi.blogspot.com/
This is a democratic state rep who is obviously pretty biased, but I can no longer find the other things that say:
Total salaries and compensation in the last budget were 8.5% of the entire state budget. Even with the changes being made to paying more for health insurance and pensions, the total is less than 1/10th of one percent.
I'll post more n umbers as I find them.
http://host.madison.com/wsj/pdf_f8ce991 ... 03286.html
The bill itself
http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/ ... 002e0.html
Effects on Medicaid
http://www.epi.org/publications/entry/6759/
Only the 1% of public employees with no high school diplomas make more than private sector employees
http://markpocanwi.blogspot.com/
This is a democratic state rep who is obviously pretty biased, but I can no longer find the other things that say:
Total salaries and compensation in the last budget were 8.5% of the entire state budget. Even with the changes being made to paying more for health insurance and pensions, the total is less than 1/10th of one percent.
I'll post more n umbers as I find them.
fvkk
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
Then there's this.
Shouting starts at 4:45. The republicans told the democrats in the assembly proceedings would start at 5pm, and they started voted at 4:57pm, before the democrats got there.
Different guy. Shouting.
http://milwaukeecountyfirst.com/?p=2251
It never ends.
Shouting starts at 4:45. The republicans told the democrats in the assembly proceedings would start at 5pm, and they started voted at 4:57pm, before the democrats got there.
Different guy. Shouting.
http://milwaukeecountyfirst.com/?p=2251
It never ends.
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
Fox News, per usual, cutting straight to the heart of the matter.
University of Wisconsin Medical School Investigating Doctors' Notes at Protest
by Fox News | February 21, 2011
The University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health is investigating whether some of its doctors wrote fake sick notes to people protesting the governor's plan to strip public union employees of the right to collectively bargain.Over the weekend, FOX News reported that doctors from the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine were manning a doctor station to write medical notes excusing those protesting at the Wisconsin State Capitol from work. Physicians were seen standing on a street corner wearing lab coats and giving out medical notes."This involves a few individuals out of the nearly 1,300 physicians at UW Health," Lisa Brunette, Director of Media Relations for the school said in an email."These UW Health physicians were acting on their own and without the knowledge or approval of UW Health, she continued. "These charges are very serious and in response the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health and the University of Wisconsin Medical Foundation, two of the entities that comprise UW Health, will immediately launch an investigation of the reported behavior. The investigation will identify which UW Health physicians were involved and whether their behavior constituted violations of medical ethics or University of Wisconsin and UW Health policies and work rules."
Many protesters could be in violation of their work contracts if they call out sick without a medical excuse. But a fraudulent doctor's notes could protect them from punishment by their employers even though they weren't sick and were out protesting.
FOX News Chicago Bureau Chief Todd Ciganek contributed to this story.
University of Wisconsin Medical School Investigating Doctors' Notes at Protest
by Fox News | February 21, 2011
The University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health is investigating whether some of its doctors wrote fake sick notes to people protesting the governor's plan to strip public union employees of the right to collectively bargain.Over the weekend, FOX News reported that doctors from the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine were manning a doctor station to write medical notes excusing those protesting at the Wisconsin State Capitol from work. Physicians were seen standing on a street corner wearing lab coats and giving out medical notes."This involves a few individuals out of the nearly 1,300 physicians at UW Health," Lisa Brunette, Director of Media Relations for the school said in an email."These UW Health physicians were acting on their own and without the knowledge or approval of UW Health, she continued. "These charges are very serious and in response the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health and the University of Wisconsin Medical Foundation, two of the entities that comprise UW Health, will immediately launch an investigation of the reported behavior. The investigation will identify which UW Health physicians were involved and whether their behavior constituted violations of medical ethics or University of Wisconsin and UW Health policies and work rules."
Many protesters could be in violation of their work contracts if they call out sick without a medical excuse. But a fraudulent doctor's notes could protect them from punishment by their employers even though they weren't sick and were out protesting.
FOX News Chicago Bureau Chief Todd Ciganek contributed to this story.
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
I'm sure there are different situations in different states so I'm only answering for my own state. It depends on a few different factors:The Torsion wrote:But do you have to be in a public sector union to work for the state?
- I work for the state but I'm not in the union since I am management. I'm not a manager (supervisor) but the duties I perform and information I work with make me management service. I'm not protected by a collective bargaining agreement, the governor and/or legislature can pretty much do whatever they want to me.
- Not all state agencies are unionized. For those technical staff that are unrepresented, they follow the same administrative statutes and policies that I do.
- For those technical staff that are in a unionized agency, they can choose not to sign on with the union which makes them 'fair share'. They still have dues taken out of their pay but the union is not allowed to use it for political activity.
- One tiny clause, which I've never seen invoked, is union contract language which states that if you are a member of a religious group that forbids you to join organized groups such as a union, you can have the equal amount of $ that would usually be union dues taken out of your pay and given to a charity.
As I've stated many times here, my negative feelings toward unions do not come from being management. They come from spending 5 years as a union employee. Although I'm not sure I'd want to see what happened if the stuff happening in Wisc started happening here......
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
Oregon is a not a "right to work (for less)" state, which means that if you have a job that is part of a bargaining agreement, you have to pay dues. What you're describing is a Beck Objector, who still has to make the same monthly contribution, but can choose to have their money go to a charity intead of the union.Introvert wrote:- For those technical staff that are in a unionized agency, they can choose not to sign on with the union which makes them 'fair share'. They still have dues taken out of their pay but the union is not allowed to use it for political activity.The Torsion wrote:But do you have to be in a public sector union to work for the state?
In "right to work" states, individuals can opt out of having to pay any dues, even though they would still enjoy the benefits of the collective bargaining agreement; "free riders".
It's a subtle distinction, but it's not hard to see the implications.
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
I have avoided keeping up with this story, but why are anarchists(?) protesting for jobs in the state sector?...
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
neckbeard wrote:I have avoided keeping up with this story, but why are anarchists(?) protesting for jobs in the state sector?...
Toilet Fleet wrote:dogs are shit tbqh
oh wow youre loyal, you know who else was loyal, fuckin goebbels
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
haha, it's a retarded symbolic vote, anyway.Pisscubes wrote:Should state politicians really be engaging in the kind of trickery I'd expect to see from the "rich kids" in an 80s summer camp movie?father of lies wrote:The republicans told the democrats in the assembly proceedings would start at 5pm, and they started voted at 4:57pm, before the democrats got there.
w/out the Dems, they don't have enough people for a quorum, so the vote is not valid.
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
Oh come on man. Labor rights are labor rights, no matter whether the garbage man in question works for the state or Waste Management.neckbeard wrote:I have avoided keeping up with this story, but why are anarchists(?) protesting for jobs in the state sector?...
This was the Assembly. The senators are still in Illinois afaik.Hypnagogia wrote:haha, it's a retarded symbolic vote, anyway.
w/out the Dems, they don't have enough people for a quorum, so the vote is not valid.
The unions have officially endorsed a general strike, and are discussing how to prepare for one.
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
HURR IMA DEPUTY ATTORNY GENERAL
WUTS A TWITTER
http://motherjones.com/politics/2011/02 ... protesters
On Saturday night, when Mother Jones staffers tweeted a report that riot police might soon sweep demonstrators out of the Wisconsin capitol building—something that didn't end up happening—one Twitter user sent out a chilling public response: "Use live ammunition."
From my own Twitter account, I confronted the user, JCCentCom. He tweeted back that the demonstrators were "political enemies" and "thugs" who were "physically threatening legally elected officials." In response to such behavior, he said, "You're damned right I advocate deadly force." He later called me a "typical leftist," adding, "liberals hate police."
Only later did we realize that JCCentCom was a deputy attorney general for the state of Indiana.
WUTS A TWITTER
http://motherjones.com/politics/2011/02 ... protesters
On Saturday night, when Mother Jones staffers tweeted a report that riot police might soon sweep demonstrators out of the Wisconsin capitol building—something that didn't end up happening—one Twitter user sent out a chilling public response: "Use live ammunition."
From my own Twitter account, I confronted the user, JCCentCom. He tweeted back that the demonstrators were "political enemies" and "thugs" who were "physically threatening legally elected officials." In response to such behavior, he said, "You're damned right I advocate deadly force." He later called me a "typical leftist," adding, "liberals hate police."
Only later did we realize that JCCentCom was a deputy attorney general for the state of Indiana.
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As one of 144 attorneys in that office, Jeff Cox has represented the people of his state for 10 years. And for much of that time, it turns out, he's vented similar feelings on Twitter and on his blog, Pro Cynic. In his nonpolitical tweets and blog posts, Cox displays a keen litigator's mind, writing sharply and often wittily on military history and professional basketball. But he evinces contempt for political opponents—from labeling President Obama an "incompetent and treasonous" enemy of the nation to comparing "enviro-Nazis" to Osama bin Laden, likening ex-Labor Secretary Robert Reich and Service Employees International Union members to Nazi "brownshirts" on multiple occasions, and referring to an Indianapolis teen as "a black teenage thug who was (deservedly) beaten up" by local police. A "sensible policy for handling Afghanistan," he offered, could be summed up as: "KILL! KILL! ANNIHILATE!"
Early Sunday, Mother Jones sent an email to Cox's work address at the Indiana attorney general's office, asking if the Twitter and blog comments were his, and if he could provide context for some of them. He responded shortly after from a personal email address: "For 'context?' Or to silence me? All my comments on twitter & my blog are my own and no one else's. And I can defend them all.
"[Y]ou will probably try to demonize me," he wrote, "but that comes with the territory."
To be sure, in the current political climate, partisan rhetoric has run hot online—and the Constitution guarantees everyone's right to such rhetoric. Nonetheless, a spokesman for the Indiana attorney general's office, Bryan Corbin, told Mother Jones that Cox's statements were "inflammatory," and he promised "an immediate review" of the matter. "We do not condone any comments that would threaten or imply violence or intimidation toward anyone," Corbin added.
The incident seems all the more troubling now that the public-sector union fight playing out in Wisconsin is now headed to other states—including Indiana, where GOP senators Tuesday passed a bill that would abolish collective bargaining for state teachers. (Indiana's Republican governor walked back his support of the measure Tuesday after taking stock of the opposition.) Cox's public writings made it clear that he isn't a member of a public-service union, and he has no love for those who are.
"Individuals have the First Amendment right to post their own personal views in online forums on their own time," Corbin wrote to Mother Jones, "but as public servants, state employees also should strive to conduct themselves with professionalism and appropriate decorum in their interactions with the public." Cox had been contacted by the office, Corbin added: "We have reiterated to the employee the standards of professional conduct expected for all licensed attorneys and for employees of the Indiana Attorney General's Office. After all the relevant information is obtained, this agency then will determine whether there has been any violation of the personnel handbook."
In the meantime, we hoped to give Cox a chance to explain his thoughts in greater detail. In his initial email to Mother Jones, Cox had written, "Ask what questions you want & I will do my best to answer. Maybe you'll learn something. Maybe I'll learn something." So we emailed him a list of questions:
What did he mean when he tweeted: "Planned Parenthood could help themselves if the only abortions they performed were retroactive"?
In referring to President Obama, why did he use a George W. Bush line once directed at the Iraqi people: "Your enemy is not surrounding your country, your enemy is ruling your country"?
Were members of the SEIU really like Hitler's Sturmabteilung, and did he stand by his headline, "Putting the 'Reich' in Robert Reich"?
We never heard back.
UPDATE: Indiana is conducting an "immediate review" of Cox's comments and will take "appropriate personnel action" when the review of this "serious matter" is complete, according to a statement the state attorney general's office released Wednesday.
Adam Weinstein is Mother Jones' copy editor. For more of his stories, click here or follow him on Twitter. Get Adam Weinstein's RSS feed.
Early Sunday, Mother Jones sent an email to Cox's work address at the Indiana attorney general's office, asking if the Twitter and blog comments were his, and if he could provide context for some of them. He responded shortly after from a personal email address: "For 'context?' Or to silence me? All my comments on twitter & my blog are my own and no one else's. And I can defend them all.
"[Y]ou will probably try to demonize me," he wrote, "but that comes with the territory."
To be sure, in the current political climate, partisan rhetoric has run hot online—and the Constitution guarantees everyone's right to such rhetoric. Nonetheless, a spokesman for the Indiana attorney general's office, Bryan Corbin, told Mother Jones that Cox's statements were "inflammatory," and he promised "an immediate review" of the matter. "We do not condone any comments that would threaten or imply violence or intimidation toward anyone," Corbin added.
The incident seems all the more troubling now that the public-sector union fight playing out in Wisconsin is now headed to other states—including Indiana, where GOP senators Tuesday passed a bill that would abolish collective bargaining for state teachers. (Indiana's Republican governor walked back his support of the measure Tuesday after taking stock of the opposition.) Cox's public writings made it clear that he isn't a member of a public-service union, and he has no love for those who are.
"Individuals have the First Amendment right to post their own personal views in online forums on their own time," Corbin wrote to Mother Jones, "but as public servants, state employees also should strive to conduct themselves with professionalism and appropriate decorum in their interactions with the public." Cox had been contacted by the office, Corbin added: "We have reiterated to the employee the standards of professional conduct expected for all licensed attorneys and for employees of the Indiana Attorney General's Office. After all the relevant information is obtained, this agency then will determine whether there has been any violation of the personnel handbook."
In the meantime, we hoped to give Cox a chance to explain his thoughts in greater detail. In his initial email to Mother Jones, Cox had written, "Ask what questions you want & I will do my best to answer. Maybe you'll learn something. Maybe I'll learn something." So we emailed him a list of questions:
What did he mean when he tweeted: "Planned Parenthood could help themselves if the only abortions they performed were retroactive"?
In referring to President Obama, why did he use a George W. Bush line once directed at the Iraqi people: "Your enemy is not surrounding your country, your enemy is ruling your country"?
Were members of the SEIU really like Hitler's Sturmabteilung, and did he stand by his headline, "Putting the 'Reich' in Robert Reich"?
We never heard back.
UPDATE: Indiana is conducting an "immediate review" of Cox's comments and will take "appropriate personnel action" when the review of this "serious matter" is complete, according to a statement the state attorney general's office released Wednesday.
Adam Weinstein is Mother Jones' copy editor. For more of his stories, click here or follow him on Twitter. Get Adam Weinstein's RSS feed.
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
ghost boner wrote:our cousins should fuck
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
Hahahahhahaha
http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread666377/pg1
>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBnSv3a6 ... ded#at=250<
>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3a2pYGr ... r_embedded<
Maybe he thought he was talking to Montgomery Burns or Scrooge McDuck
http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread666377/pg1
>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBnSv3a6 ... ded#at=250<
>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3a2pYGr ... r_embedded<
Maybe he thought he was talking to Montgomery Burns or Scrooge McDuck
Last edited by Cascade Whore on Wed Feb 23, 2011 2:43 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
Think anyone will notice if we swap out Scott Walkers in the middle of the night?
ghost boner wrote:our cousins should fuck
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
This really could have been MUCH better. It still proves that it's about busting unions and not filling any monetary holes. The scary part is that it really seems like he thinks like he's doing the right thing, while still slurping the Kochs' acidic black cum.Cascade Whore wrote:prank call
fvkk
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
Oh man, you went and invoked THE KOCH BROTHARZ!1 So he must also advocate complete de-regulation of narcotics, open borders, withdrawing all military bases and troops stationed overseas and ending all subsidies.
Haha,
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
...or the guy's just an idiot for thinking that the only solution to what he perceives to be a systemic labor cost problem in his state is to prevent collective bargaining writ large. There is that option.
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
Okay, but I was asking how that tied him to the Kochs. I don't think that jumping to hyperbolic conspiracy theories is helpful.
Haha,
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Re: Wiisconsin "Well, you'll work hard with a gun in your ba
On the right, in the background...
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