Pulease.....
Have an emergency fund, live within your means, and none of this becomes an issue. If you don't, you only have yourself to blame.
So let's run a scenario for the high and mighty. You're 48 years old; have a mortage on a middle class house in the suburbs; two kids in college; car payments for normal middle of the road cars; plus all normal expenses. You go on strike for 6 months, in fact, you're head of a strike committee talking to ALPA on a daily basis. You're savings get depleted and the money the union is giving you from the strike fund is not enough to cover the monthly nut. You can't get another job because of your age ( this was 1989 after all ). ALPA National is telling you to go back to work three months into the strike. 6 months into the strike you and a large portion of your striking colleagues want to go back to work. However, you get out voted by a slim margin to stay on strike. The group that out voted you have already got jobs at UAL, USAir, Piedmont, Midway ,etc or they are old enough to retire. They want to see Lorenzo screwed. So the next day you and 900 of your colleagues decide you have to survive and nobody can help you do it by any means other than returning to work. So you all sign up to go back to work. You're now labeled an Eastern scab and placed on a list.
Those 900 guys generally get along pretty well with those who did not go back to work. Why?, because they all struck together for 6 months. Those guys understand where each was coming from, but if they run into a pilot from another airline or some kid here on JC they are scums of the earth.
The UAL pilots think themselves heroes for going on strike for 35 days. Anybody can take a one month break from work without pay. When it stretches to six months ( EAL ) or two years ( CAL ) and you can stay on strike without a job then you might be a hero. If you decide it's more important to take care of your bills and your family you become a "scab".
Think about it. What would you really do in those situations? Many of you are too young and just don't understand the pressures involved. Career going down the drain; mortgage payments late; car payments late; wife leaving you. How many suicides were there on the EAL and CAL strikes? Do you guys know?
Somebody who crosses a picket line to get a take a job away from somebody on strike is a scab. That is unforgiveable, but guys who go back to work after being on strike for a long period of time should not be labelled scabs in the same sentence.
I've worked with many many ex-EAL and CAL pilots over the years. I worked in a foreign country with 3 types of EAL pilots ( ones who never went back to work, ones who went back after 6 months and ones who crossed the line to take a job ) The first two groups got along okay. I worked at a major manufacturer with a management pilot who crossed on day 1; one who didn't go back; and ones who went back after 6 months. They all got along okay.
One thing that seems to occur here on JC regularly is this academic attitude towards unions and scabs. Most of you have no concept of what it's like when it actually happens.
Typhoonpilot