What do Lockheed Martin and James Hardie Building Have in Common?
Lockheed Martin and James Hardie Building are both making expansions soon in Right to Work Alabama.
The Evansville, Indiana Courier Press lends its voice in opposition to the Card Check Scam:
. . . It is a basic standard of democracy, a protection that allows them [workers] the freedom to vote their conscience and their best interests.
But that would change if labor organizations have their way with the Employee Free Choice Act, more commonly known as card check. Indeed, if the bill passes Congress and as expected, is signed into law by President Barack Obama, it would allow anything but “free choice.”
But they certainly are not alone. The Birmingham [AL] News makes the point:
The card-check bill is a horrible idea in a good economy; it’s even worse in the economy we’re living in today.
Lockheed Martin and James Hardie Building are both making expansions soon in Right to Work Alabama.
Companies investing in Right to Work Indiana include Evonik, McLaren Racing, Eli Lilly, and Stellantis and Samsung.
President Biden flatly rejects the long-standing consensus that secret-ballot elections are, with few if any exceptions, far superior to “card checks”