So you are happy for others to bear the brunt of getting YOU a payrise?
Has anyone here heard of a tax deduction? As a handy hint its in your 'tax return' on the page opposite your income. In here you enter your union fees which reduces the tax you pay so being in a union doesnt really cost you anything, and you even get the money in a lump sum which is more useful to spend on aforementioned 'nice things' than in sums of 3 and 6 dollars which could buy maybe a drink and a burger or par of a movie ticket.
Hessie my statement in regards to economics was probably a bit harsh, what I was meaning to say is that your sig indicates that you choose not to study subjects which asked you to think in a broader sense, Business studies is a very insular course.
The plural of anecdote is not fact.
I don't know of a business which as had trouble firing a casual, a full time employee yes, a casual no as they have basically very few rights. It is easy enough just to reduce their shifts to a trickle or cancel them entirely, you still technically employ them but thye don't actually get work hence money off you.
If the motel operator believed that they were in the right they should have fought the court case.
Further you mention that unions should not be able to strike at will, firstly (I'm hypothesising here) what you propose would quite easily stop unions from strking at all and hence remove any power they do have in negotiations. Secondly they can not strike at will, a strike caan be declared an illegal strike and in most cases the union will cease and desist.
Finally in the words of a frind of mine (studied Arts/Law at the ANU and now works on the government legal team in the Dept of Workplace Relations, or some such name): AWA's remove the bargaining power of employees and place employers in a position to dictate terms.
When I started work where i am now I did not negotiate an AWA, I was given one, I was not given the oppurtunity to be employed in any other way, I signed the AWA. Fortunately for me my boss is really good - that is not always the case, or even most commonaly the case.