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18 Kommentare

  1. Hey, I’ll give you one chance to guess. Hint – it’s the same reason anyone strikes anywhere in the world

  2. Independent-Home-845 on

    Usually, they want more money and less hours. And it’s just a local thing in Bonn and Köln today.

  3. Crocodile_Banger on

    So every once in a while you get an actual reason for those Zugausfälle

  4. MyPigWhistles on

    The union contracts have a limited duration, which means they have to negotiate the next contract in regular intervals, which means strikes. It’s the normal process. 

  5. So much disruption just for money. The rest of the world just negotiates and it only gets to striking over really major issues after long periods of negotiating. And the solution is usually a long term fix. wtf would Germany treat this as a normal occurrence? 🤦🏻‍♂️

  6. External-Chain2266 on

    And this is why AI will take over our jobs. It’s just a matter of times till all trains are autonomous

  7. It’s how this country allows the workers to negotiate for better condition and wages.

    Fascinating how people don’t at all blame the transit companies but those that are standing up for their rights. By fascinating, I mean enraging.

    Corporations don’t need you helping them, they already usually hold all the cards

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