January 11, 2023

Many Americans, conservative or not, should be angry that unions now hold so much influence over elected officials and Joe Biden that the Teamsters Union, long fraught with ties to the U.S. Mafia and organized crime, is receiving a $36-billion bailout, under the $1.9-trillion American Rescue Plan, after years of mismanaging and stealing from their members’ pension fund and the new revelation that the fund was essentially insolvent.  This is an act by the executive that takes the hard-earned tax dollars of private citizens to give to a group of collectivists, socialists, and outright criminals whose leadership should be placed behind prison bars.

‘); googletag.cmd.push(function () { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1609268089992-0’); }); }

Please recall that in 2020, labor unions donated $27.5 million to Joe Biden’s presidential campaign.

Look at the timing of this, taking place on December 8, 2022, just a week after forcing a deal on the railroad unions that soured many union workers against Biden.  Sean O’Brien, Teamsters president; Liz Schuler, AFL/CIO president; and Marty Walsh, U.S. secretary of labor, stood by his side during the announcement.  It’s clear as day that this was Joe Biden rewarding his political allies, at the expense of ninety percent of Americans who are not members of any union.  It also forces conservatives and independents to pay for the sort of collectivism that goes against their conscience and beliefs, as well as the very principles this country was founded upon.

A smattering of other fairly large unions are going to share in the redistribution of some $58 billion, but many small unions will be left out in the cold.  And one can safely bet that the beneficiaries of this political payoff and the union bosses are smiling from ear to ear, especially since the Teamsters and these other unions were looking at a sixty-percent cut in the final payouts for members.

‘); googletag.cmd.push(function () { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1609270365559-0’); }); }

The Teamsters can blame the shortfall on inflation, poor stock performance, and a fall in dues-paying membership until the cows come home, but the fact remains that their union has had decades to correct this situation and clean out the thieving riffraff criminal element from their organization, and they have yet to do so.  Even while under federal investigation, embezzlement schemes have flourished into the present, and long before the COVID-19 virus arrived, all of their top people full well knew that the pension fund was in trouble and why.

And yet these people seem to think they are entitled to receive this money from the taxpayers, even though they well knew for many long years that they had climbed into bed with a snake.  They took the wrong path with the wrong people and expected to attain good results.

This is nothing less than an outrageous public relations stunt that helps an extremely small number of Americans, 350,000 Teamsters, and sets a terrible precedent that will make certain that many more union leaders will step forward in the days and months ahead to demand bailouts from American taxpayers, too, to cover promises that pension trustees never should have been allowed to make.

Whether one views taxation as the theft of one’s wealth, as many do, we have all come to accept to some great degree that at least the tax dollars going to our roads, military, schools, post offices, and the general running of government have produced some good results.  Even our welfare system, supposedly in place to help those who are truly unable to properly provide for themselves, is seen as oriented along the lines of charity and helping people to help themselves, and it’s largely tolerated as a necessary thing.

However, these union bailouts are outright theft, pure and simple, taking private wealth from citizens to hand to other private citizens who didn’t earn it or have any right to it, not at all different from if a robber with a pistol took one’s wallet on the street.

The union members were all supposedly capable, working men and women of sound mind who voted for the leadership that betrayed their trust.  What’s the old adage?  Trust but verify.  And it is obvious that they didn’t give close enough scrutiny or do their due diligence when it came to protecting the earnings they placed into these pension funds.