Maybe the RMT will now get someone more forward thinking and less belligerent to lead them, and they can truly become a world leading transport system.
Maybe...
He may not have been popular to some people but he has fought tooth and nail for the working class. He has my respect.
Well said!Chris [BEANS];25985914 said:He was allocated a powerful position and he used it to bully for personal gain. He used it to make unreasonable demands and didn't care remotely about the effect it had on anyone else.
Completely without morality.
One less extortionist to worry about.
But all workers now have rights and laws that protect them. The unions are just there to protect jobs, which often stifles modernisation and improvement. Their powers should be reviewed to be more applicable to the modern world - such as strikes to be approved by a majority of all members, not simply those balloted - or the militant unionists will continue to hold their employers and customers to ransom in the interest of their own betterment.Stretch said:The job isn't to create a world leading transport system. It to look after the interests of it's members.
The system is the responsibility of Transport for London.
Chris [BEANS];25985914 said:As a member of 'the working class' I found him incredibly harmful.
He was a gangster, plain and simple. He was allocated a powerful position and he used it to bully for personal gain. He used it to make unreasonable demands and didn't care remotely about the effect it had on anyone else.
Completely without morality.
One less extortionist to worry about.
I don't wish the guy any harm. 52 is young, that's sad and I don't know about his family situation but I have sympathy for whatever family he leaves behind.
I am however very glad he's no longer in the position he abused for so long.
It's kind of spooky to me, as I was listening to him on Radio 2 yesterday. Not sure when the interview was, but he sounded healthy at that point.
Healthy? Really? That's what you're going with?![]()
Well it's unusual for people to drop dead overnight without any history of illness. If he was interviewed yesterday and then died last night, that seems quite something to me.
I am not suggesting foul play or anything daft like that. I am just surprised is all.
Maybe the RMT will now get someone more forward thinking and less belligerent to lead them, and they can truly become a world leading transport system.
Maybe...
People who have heart attacks, especially when young, rarely have any kind of warning it's about to happen. His weight was a sure indicator as to what was going to happen to him as he got older. Just by looking at him you could tell he must have seriously abused his body with drink and food most of his life.