This article has a lot of opinions (it’s from a union organization) without a lot of citations. In the 1970s, a lot of things changed (e.g. see this discussion[0]). Seems this article wants to focus on its narrative of what happened in the 1970s.
This article is more about politics than something interesting to hackers. It's a difficult line, but in this case the way the article appeals to emotion instead of basing on fact and example is why, IMO, it's flagged.
IMO, if this topic is important to you, I'd find a source that doesn't have a political agenda, and doesn't appeal to emotion. Unions, (love or hate them,) are political organizations, and often work by appealing to emotions.
> Off-Topic: Most stories about politics, or crime, or sports, or celebrities, unless they're evidence of some interesting new phenomenon.
Edit: Remember that most people on Hacker News are either entrepreneurs, who do not want their employees to unionize, or professionals, who can negotiate independently and don't need a union to protect their income and work environment.
This seems to be the main thing I could find in a quick search.
I am trying to understand, but I don't know how increasing access to funds among the poorest segments of society can help defeat fictionalization as they have defined it. It really feels to be more of a spitball against an entire cultural dynamic that revolves around extracting guaranteed money through money.
> If that focus on immediate shareholder value means the quality of products suffers, the environment is damaged, that workers are treated poorly, or even if it comes at the expense of the long-term sustainability of the business, that's too bad! Today’s profits are the only thing that matter in a world of financialization.
... is this trying to argue that corporations cared about all of that stuff before financialization? Because that is what it seems like it's trying to argue. And as anyone who's done even a cursory glance at the history of the 19th century well knows, corporations were far more rapacious than they are today.
At the end of the day, the nation has to produce Goods and Services. In every measure, US makes far more Goods and Services than ever before and financialization actually helped that.
0. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25188457
Apparently this is by creating unions and a postal bank. I have no idea how we get from here to there, I wish they had concentrated on that.
Deleted Comment
IMO, if this topic is important to you, I'd find a source that doesn't have a political agenda, and doesn't appeal to emotion. Unions, (love or hate them,) are political organizations, and often work by appealing to emotions.
See: https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
> Off-Topic: Most stories about politics, or crime, or sports, or celebrities, unless they're evidence of some interesting new phenomenon.
Edit: Remember that most people on Hacker News are either entrepreneurs, who do not want their employees to unionize, or professionals, who can negotiate independently and don't need a union to protect their income and work environment.
https://apwu.org/news/new-research-shows-potential-postal-ba...
This seems to be the main thing I could find in a quick search.
I am trying to understand, but I don't know how increasing access to funds among the poorest segments of society can help defeat fictionalization as they have defined it. It really feels to be more of a spitball against an entire cultural dynamic that revolves around extracting guaranteed money through money.
... is this trying to argue that corporations cared about all of that stuff before financialization? Because that is what it seems like it's trying to argue. And as anyone who's done even a cursory glance at the history of the 19th century well knows, corporations were far more rapacious than they are today.
At the end of the day, the nation has to produce Goods and Services. In every measure, US makes far more Goods and Services than ever before and financialization actually helped that.