• no bananaOP
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    3211 months ago

    But the reason we have those things is also because of the way our workforce is organised. Had we not been so well organised we wouldn’t have structured society in such a way.

    • Uglyhead
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      1611 months ago

      You seem to know a bit about how this all works there, so I’ll ask the question here:

      So in the US, unions used to be really strong. With this however, eventually came mass corruption in the unions.

      How is this corruption prevented there? Is there a body of some sort that keeps all the unions in line? Or?

      • no bananaOP
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        1511 months ago

        The big problem comes when participation in the union goes down. The lower the number of active members, the lower the quality of candidates in important positions. There’s an issue with that going around which pretty much all of society is working on. Corruption is of course a thing in places of society to some extent but with high trust in the system comes a self-correctiveness that helps stave it off some. What also helps is building robust processes for voting and handling issues, which Sweden has done in most if not all of our democratic institutions.

      • @snor10@lemm.ee
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        1411 months ago

        We have very low corruption in Sweden, rank 5 on the index compared to 24 for the US.

        When one of our top politicians bought a Toblerone with her government card it was a big scandal.