Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeYour LettersUnion support

Union support

Our Treasurer attracted a load of flack when he reminded Australian workers that the well off and wealthy sector of our society regarded the average workers as milking cows from whom they could extract as many dollars as possible to pay their very high salaries, bonuses and profits.
The comments after that speech grew to include the unions who were, of course, subjected to the usual example of class warfare in the old description of union officials being thugs dressed in Jackie Howe singlets, shorts and boots and sporting a few days’ growth of stubble on their chins.
The problem is that Australian workers of today are not aware of the working conditions that those of us who have passed the three score years and ten were forced by our employers to comply with, nor do they understand that most of the conditions that they work under today are those that the unions fought for.
The period of some 20 years between 1930 and 1950 contained a world depression, brought on by greed and mismanagement on the part of ‘Big Business’, and the second World War. Both of these experiences gave employers generally and particularly ‘Big Business’ the opportunity to impose conditions on workers that were far from fair.
Around 1950 Service-men from the World War were coming back to jobs they had been employed in before they had enlisted to defend Australia. They were used to working together, they knew that they could achieve nothing on their own, so they joined unions and fought for improvements .
Describing union reps and union members as wearers of Jackie Howe singlets, shorts and boots was fair enough – they were, after all, workers who had come from factories, coal mines, building sites and all the trades we see today. However, to say they where thugs was not a fair description, but they did have to be able to fight physically as their ‘Big Business’ opponents were not backward in employing local criminal thugs to attack a too popular union group .
Around 1970 ‘Big Business’ saw that they were not winning the battles they entered into, so they changed tactics to the well tried USA caper of encouraging workers to enter into debts that they did not have the ability to repay and live reasonably.
Workers in the US of A entered into huge debts that remained tied around their necks for all of their lives, they were economic slaves.
We have watched since that period as Australians swallowed the bait that Business set out for them and now they cannot afford to join a union or to lose a day’s pay while on strike…. they are now also in the economic slavery bracket.
Statistics are showing that Australian Workers are turning from spending money to SAVING. If they can keep it up, they will have the pleasure of actually owning their house, furniture and car. The other important change they need to put in place is to support the unions and unionists, remember that it is safety in numbers .

G H Gilmour
Stanthorpe

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Cool Music in hot form in Warwick

Bryan Dais is keen to step Cool Music up in distance after the mare returned to form by claiming the Les Clarke Memorial race...
More News

Residents hoping Cherrabah rejection sends clear message

Elbow Valley residents are hoping the Southern Downs council’s overwhelming rejection of a controversial water bottling facility at Cherrabah Resort sends a clear message...

McMillan and Ludlow star

Brendan McMillan and Lynette Ludlow took the titles as 39 players, including nine women, played out a Single Stableford sponsored by Stanthorpe’s Hello World...

Three teams in semis hunt

Souths, Valleys and RSL are all still in the race for the Stanthorpe and District Cricket semi final with just one round to go...

Warwick Show returns for 2026

The annual Spano’s IGA Warwick Show is returning to the Warwick Showgrounds from Friday, 10 March to Sunday, 22 March, promising a weekend of...

Festival icon Johnny Crunch returns

Johnny Crunch, also known as Jonno Apple, will again lead the 2026 Apple and Grape harvest festival parade. The nearly 4 metre high fibreglass...

Stanthorpe swimmers excel at Pittsworth

A team of eight swimmers from Stanthorpe Swimming Club headed to Pittsworth on Sunday for the Pittsworth Piranhas long course swim meet. “There...

Forgotten Dalveen veterans finally recognised

Nineteen World War One veterans have been added to the Dalveen Honour Board after over a century of being unnamed and unrecognised in the...

Grassroots push to stop gendered violence before it starts

Advocates will spell out the 12 actions community members can take to prevent violence against women at two free workshops in Warwick next week. The...

Sovereign Animals search for first cup

Sovereign Animals are through to their first ever Warwick Cricket Condamine Cup grand final following a gutsy four-wicket win over Redbacks at Slade Park...

GALLERY: Killarney show delivers big weekend

Small in size but big in spirit, this year’s Killarney Show delivered the goods. Considered one of the smaller agricultural shows on the Darling Downs,...