"France"
Quick: What word associations do you make?
Wine.
Yes
Cheese.
Yes
Love.
Oh, la la …
Bien sûr
Strikes.
???
Once you get to know France a little more, you’ll see they like
to strike.
Over the holidays, there is
always a threat of us missing a flight, whether it be the airline workers or
the train conductors that get us up to the airport.
I’m for unions; I was in one when I was a
teacher.
My union did a great job negotiating
for my needs and I had no problems supporting them for the work they did on my
behalf.
Thanks to their hard work, I
never had to strike.
This last year, I had friends who went on strike.
They are Chicago Public School teachers and
they went on strike for 7 days.
When the
strike was called, they did not know when they were going back to work.
Negotiations needed to be made and only when
a satisfactory deal was meet did they walk back into the classroom.
These are the type of strikes I knew; hard
shut downs that were meant to send a message when backs were put against the
wall.
In France, strikes occur differently.
They are soft strikes; that is, they are not indefinite;
they last only a day.
The trains don’t
run, airline baggage doesn’t get checked, or teachers don’t go to school – for a
single day.
The next day, everything is
back in order as if nothing has happened.
This occurs quite often, for example, elementary school teachers went on
strike yesterday.
Today, everything is
back to usually.
I’m not questioning the
reasons for a strike, but the method.
Quite often, the needs of workers are not met and they’ve simply missed
a day of pay.
Sometimes, a second strike
day is called a few weeks later, but the moment has already passed.
There are not more negotiations and the
workers’ contracts have already been modified.
The second strike day is just to say they are not satisfied with how
things went down.
I’ve seen this happen
time and time again, so I wonder why French workers stick to the soft
strike.
It doesn’t seem to really work,
at least from my perspective.