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Ender
Guest
This position is not tenable. Nowhere does the Church state that unions have a right to exist in all situations. She does support a generic “right of unions to exist” but that says nothing about whether public service unions should be permitted and it certainly says nothing about collective bargaining. I am not aware that the Church has ever said anything about this, and if the Church hasn’t said anything, there is no basis for your claim.Any attempt to destroy unions, to deny collective bargaining is to destroy unions, is against Catholic Church teaching.
If anything is being destroyed here it is logic. As you say, unions are one form of solidarity, but even if the public sector unions in Wisconsin were banned that means nothing about the destruction of solidarity for the simple reason that unions are not the only form of solidarity and not in all cases a necessary one. Again, you are trying to cobble together a moral argument where one does not exist. The bishops haven’t asserted this so it should be pretty obvious that they don’t see the moral difficulties you claim to find. Be clear about this: no bishop has come out and said that the proposals of the governors re the unions are immoral so it’s a bit of a stretch for you to make that claim.A key principle of Catholic Social Teaching is solidarity; a principle is repeated over and over again in the documents. Unions are one form of that solidarity. To destroy unions is to destroy solidarity. So the only conclusion I can come to about what is happening in the Wisconsin and in other states is an attempt to destroy unions and that is against Catholic Social Teaching.
Ender