[email protected] writes: > Anyway, insofar as Mr. O'Connor's rejoinder is concerned, if there > were actually a _general_ strike, which by (my) definition would > include non-union workers and other citizens, it would require > fantasizing, not meaningful analysis of law, to presume that presently > existing NLRB procedures even if facilitated by ancillary judicial > procedures would be even (practically) relevant much less > "absolute[ly]" significant.
You're right, and my initial claim that a General Strike would be "absolutely illegal" was reflexive. I'm still smarting over the TWU strike here in New York City. There would be no mention of unfair labor practices in such an environment as would initiate a General Strike. I would point out that the general laws covering collective bargaining and *ordinary* strikes are so odious that the idea of a General Strike is much less plausible in the U.S. than, say, France. -- In Solidarity, Billy O'Connor _______________________________________________ pen-l mailing list [email protected] https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l
