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There were 7,094 credit unions in the US as of 12/31/11.
about 2.37
Life for people in America in the 1930s was very bleak. This was the era of the Great Depression, which means that many people were without work, without homes and without food.
Many people are against cruel and unusual punishment. It is against the 8th Amendment of the United States Constitution.
The white people had many things that blacks didnt. Blacks were treated as animals and they even had to SIT in diferent waiteing areas because the whites were so racist.
The CIO formed during this time. Labor unions had more legal rights. Unskilled workers joined unions. this answer is under the question "Which of the following contributed to unions growing more powerful in the 1930s?" The National Labor Relations Act (APEX)
Many working people belong to unions. This is true on a world wide basis. The laws concerning labor unions provide a basis for people to obtain a say with regards to pay and working conditions. Some unions, however, are prevented from total freedoms. As an example, teachers in the United States, are represented by "professional " unions. Nevertheless, there are areas where these unions can bargain with State departments of education,however, in many US States, there are statutes against teacher strikes.
To many!
Many unions opposed Prohibition as an attack against working people. George Meany said that the 18th was the first amendment to the Constitution to remove rights rather than to extend them.
alot
Many people distrusted unions because some were organized by socialists.
The main purpose of the many purges and public trials that too place in the Soviet Union in the 1930s was to suppress political dissidence. Through the purges and public trials people that spoke out against the government were made an example of through their punishments.
Obviously the bosses are against them because they'd have to share a little more of their massive profits with the people who actually do the work. Some workers are against them because they probably don't understand what a union does, not only for unionized workers, but all workers. Also, there is a lot of anti-union propaganda in the media, since newspaper owners are themselves anti-union. There have been many abuses by unions, and this hasn't helped. While some reforms are needed, many would throw the baby out with the bathwater. In short, it's mostly ignorance. Because of laws that were passed in the seventies and eighties that crippled unions, fewer young people nowadays have grown up with parents, friends, or relatives who are union members. They simply don't understand their importance to working people.
why many people are against DRM
I think many Americans did not immediately support the labor union because violent strikers turned public feeling against and unions in the late 1800s.
why many people are against DRM
The GREAT DEPRESSION was an economic disaster in the 1930s which led to many countries' people wanting a strongman who was willing to take drastic measures to "right the ship". In many cases, the people got what they asked for: dictators.