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Churchill, Winston, 1871-1947

"Dr. Jonathan"

We ain't got a chance against the, employers without the union.
TIMOTHY. God help me, to think my son would join the union,--and he
going to be a soldier!
BERT (glancing at GEORGE). I guess there'll be other union men in the
trenches besides me.
ASHER. Soldier or no soldier, I'll never employ any man again who's
joined a union.
GEORGE (perturbed). Hold on, dad!
ASHER. I mean what I say, I don't care who he is.
BERT (who retains his self-possession). Excuse me, Mr. Pindar, but I'd
like to ask you a question--I've heard the men talking about this in the
shops. You don't like it if we go off to--fight, but if we join the
union you fire us, no matter how short-handed you are.
ASHER. It's a principle with me,--I won't have any outside agency
dictating to me.
BERT. But if it came to recognizing the union, or shutting down?
ASHER. I'd shut down tomorrow.
(GEORGE, who sees the point, makes a gesture as if about to
interrupt.)
BERT. That's what I'm getting at, Mr. Pindar. You say you'd shut down
for a principle, whether the government gets the machines or not. And
the men say they'd join the union for a principle, whether the government
gets the machines or not. It looks to me as if both was hindering the
war for a principle, and the question is, which principle is it that
agrees best with what we're fighting for?
ASHER.


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