FrequentFlierCA
Veteran
- Feb 25, 2008
- 591
- 35
There is so much bitterness and rancor on this topic. You accuse me of making assumptions, but you all assume that I'm an outsider to the industry.
The comparisons between contract negotiations and the Revolutionary War are so ludicrous as to be hardly worth addressing. I really don't follow your reasoning most of the time. Your "democratic right" and (another poster's) "rewards on the back of the workers". This isn't Czarist Russia.
All you are sharing is empty and inflammatory rhetoric about slave wages and greed. I've done my homework (courtesy of Yahoo! Finance) and here are some facts:
* Your pay is almost entirely non-risk (more than 95%). The majority of exec pay is linked to performance, and much of it comes in shares. Someone else mentioned AMR's stock price dipping under $10 today. Would you like some of that executive pay right about now or would you like a guaranteed paycheck? So much for greedy suits getting rich.
* If AMR's board is overpaying the execs so much, why isn't there shareholder activism to stop it? Where's the outrage? In the era of Carl Icahn you would think somebody would cause a major fuss.
I'm not opposed to labor asking for its share. What I find particularly offensive is the inflammatory rhetoric. We've already heard about the "blood money" and "slave wages". This sort of thing is as wildly inaccurate as it is counterproductive. Why don't you focus those energies on constructive negotiations?
The comparisons between contract negotiations and the Revolutionary War are so ludicrous as to be hardly worth addressing. I really don't follow your reasoning most of the time. Your "democratic right" and (another poster's) "rewards on the back of the workers". This isn't Czarist Russia.
All you are sharing is empty and inflammatory rhetoric about slave wages and greed. I've done my homework (courtesy of Yahoo! Finance) and here are some facts:
* Your pay is almost entirely non-risk (more than 95%). The majority of exec pay is linked to performance, and much of it comes in shares. Someone else mentioned AMR's stock price dipping under $10 today. Would you like some of that executive pay right about now or would you like a guaranteed paycheck? So much for greedy suits getting rich.
* If AMR's board is overpaying the execs so much, why isn't there shareholder activism to stop it? Where's the outrage? In the era of Carl Icahn you would think somebody would cause a major fuss.
I'm not opposed to labor asking for its share. What I find particularly offensive is the inflammatory rhetoric. We've already heard about the "blood money" and "slave wages". This sort of thing is as wildly inaccurate as it is counterproductive. Why don't you focus those energies on constructive negotiations?