WacoFan
Bigly
As you said, it's an uneducated guess.
They can still make money that way since the normal COSTS also go away.
This is very important becuase you're putting pressure from multiple directions on the struck company. Increases in aircraft guage or frequency is a big deal from this perspective. Airlines also tend to let eachother buy discounted tickets. So while they might still be putting people on competitors, they are still making money doing so. This lets them run a strike much longer than they could otherwise.
Gotcha...kind of. Although, while their costs go down, they would be absorbed by the carrier you would have to hire wouldn't they? I mean, if you hypothetically had $100 worth of freight, your costs to move that freight were $90, leaving you a $10 profit, I would imagine that you would now have to pay that $100 to another carrier because they would have $90 in cost to move the same weight, and they would also require a profit at least as good as yours...leaving the company that is being struck with all the admin expenses, and fixed overhead as well as lease payments for the planes and stuff. Not trying to be dense, just trying to understand. I also don't think that flying someone that was booked on Delta, then Delta strikes and I fly them on Air Tran as "flying struck work" if I am on a normal AirTran flight out of ATL or anywhere else. Hell, even if I am on a flight that Air Tran adds to compensate for the strike I don't view that as "struck work".