Originally Posted by
slowplay
While your strike was an honorable one, it in my view wasn't the key factor in other airlines achieving pattern gains. The airlines were generating huge free cash from 1996-2000. When there's more pie, there's more for everyone.
Please show me an example of a "successful" post deregulation strike against an employer with poor free cash flow. All the strikes that I've researched that "worked" (NWA ALPA, IPA sympathy, Amerijet et. al.) were against companies that were making money. Some other strikes against companies making money only rearranged the deck chairs of the pre-strike offer on the table or not making enough gains above that offer to pay for the time spent out(CMR), so both management and the union "lost".
Strike is a tool, not a strategy. It should be entered into with methodical thought, not just gonads.
And here we are stacking away cash and paying down debt, yet we are still losing money. Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
Not disputing your point slow. I understand what you're saying. Just pointing out how tricky bean counters are.
