Go back to high school and pay attention in your Civics class, it sounds like you need to. And maybe you could go study your history about unions, and read up on what unionized people have given up for years now, in the hopes to help the state Walker is pushing a plan to get rid of almost all union rights for teachers. He wants to monitor how much money they earn and make them pay a greater share of pension and health care costs, all while limiting their ability to bargain collectively, which is a total joke because teachers are vastly underpaid.
His big picture plan is to elimante all Unions. The reason for this is basically that Wisconsin is broke, but what he's doing is wrong. And reading other comments about Walker on various other questions/posts supporting his decision irritates me, but I realize that nobody probably actually saw Scott Walker's campaign ads, in which he never mentioned this as part of his agenda.
They also don't realize how disasterous this is going to be for the state of Wisconsin. It's not good. He's a first class asswipe in my book.
Scott G- You're a dumbass, Schools are closed not because teachers "aren't showing up" but because there aren't enough substitutes. What teachers are doing is 100% fine and if School districts around the state of Wisconsin are encouraging teachers to take off work like they are then I don't see what people are complaining about. And finally, schools in Wisconsin plan on having days off due to snow/ice/etc..(usually about 3 snow days per year) meaning that if this weeks cancellations pushes the school districts over the limit then students have to make the days up in June.
Like I said, you're just a fool. And Scott G-It seems like you're missing the point. Health Care benefits and Pensions are the only perks to being a teacher, and now you're going to make them pay $200+ a month out of their pocket for this when they are already vastly underpaid?
It's not like Teachers are making $150,000 a year like State Patrol Cops.
I've noticed that most of the people out there cheering in support of public-sector unions own and drive cars that were not made by union workers. Anyway, it seems that there is a conflict of interest in public-sector unions fighting against the tax payers and voters by trying to effectively overturn the election results in Wisconsin. Gov.
Walker is not trying to remove unions' fundamental power to bargain for wages. He is demanding that state workers put 5.8% of their wages toward retirement and that they cover 12.6% of their health care premiums, which would still have them paying more than $100 less a month than the average private sector employee.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.