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Originally Posted by Beatle17
False equivalency, the criminal and victim are not part of the same players association (notice they aren't a union because they agree on stars vs others for the pay rate. If it was a true union all players would make the same).
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The criminal and victim are both citizens of the same country and subject to the same justice system. The victim is not entitled to legal representation at the trial when the Crown brings charges against the criminal, nor is the victim in an NHL disciplinary incident entitled to be represented at the offender's hearing.
Seems like a pretty exact equivalency to me.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Beatle17
There is a pay scale in a public service union, it all depends on are you year 1 vs year 5 senior. The scale for each level is set $20 to $25 Level 1. So every employee classified as a year 1 employee gets the same money. All raises are based on seniority NOT ABILITY.
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Pay scales are different depending on job description as well. But so what? The NHL is not in the public sector and neither it nor its players are obliged to do business by public-sector rules.