The Inherent Good of Organized Labor…
September 28, 2008
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I am reminded of the inherent good of the concept of Organized Labor Contracts in their ability to provide a recognized, legal economic and moral shelf for individuals and nations.
The legal, recognized agreement between labor, capital, and material/objects in the independent spirit of the Organized Labor contract is good for everyone.
This holy trilogy of labor, capital, and objects/material is so important to individuals and to society in general, that free, independent, recognized Organized Labor contracts deserve the title of the world’s first meta-religion.
Organized Labor agreements transcend time, culture, and language and provide the framework for humanistic answers that thrive in a liberal democracy.
The angels, saints, and Gods of our time are the men and women who are a part of or who support the concepts and the contracts of Organized Labor. The world is begging for the voices of Organized Labor, the believers of miracles; the harbingers of the coming good and the visions of hope.
The two major problems that face individual men today and reside in every nation are;
· Religions have become meaningless.
· There is a world wide race to an economic bottom producing lower wages for labor, disrespect for the science of objects/material and a misappropriated emphasis on profit as an ends as opposed as a means for capital. None of these results are good for any of the three components of the Organized Labor contract. These results are devastating to each community and every nation as a whole.
The existing structure of existing successful Organized Labor Agreements directly addresses both problems simultaneously. Organized Labor contracts do not replace religious beliefs or teachings they encompass them, thus the word meta-religion.
I am reminded that Organized Labor agreements spell out humanistic business relationships that recognize and address the best interest of each of us 24 hours a day as we act or respond as either; capital, labor and material/objects.
Filed in Uncategorized
Tags: capital, community, labor, material objects, meta-religion, Organized Labor, religions
