How long do they have to pay dues? Who says so? Why do they have to? WHERE did this notion even come from?!
Everybody has to pay their dues, and yes, just like any other job, it is difficult at the beginning, if that beginning is 1 year, 3 years, 5 years, if you want the job, you stick with it.
I have personally seen pilots from some of the Regionals, busted check rides with the majors, or not even put up for the check rides.
Fifteen years out of college or five out of the military and becoming furloughed and then having to go to another carrier to start at $18 per hour is asinine.
Every path leads to a different goal, what can you do. The way things work out in the US Aviation Industry, when you leave the airline you work for and go to work for, you start at the beginning, again. Working for the airlines is a service related industry, the cheaper the ticket, the cheaper the pay. Sometimes, it does matter what your background, it is what the market is willing to pay.
Let's quit the due-paying argument right here, because it only applies to the first few years of any career. Things don't always flow smoothly and people don't always go from FO to CA to mainline FO to CA. It could take a while.
"Also- keep in mind that the commuters never paid six figures to FO's either.... "
Fine. But did those commuters in the 80s and 90s have 90 seat airplanes with jet engines that flew the same routes as mainline jets, or did they often have planes such as Jetstreams and Saabs and Beeches with turboprops. You used the word commuter and not regional, and today's RJs are flying routes that might as well be mainline and in many cases, were mainline a year or three ago. Times are changing.
Yes, times are changing, more aircraft, more airlines, more pilots, more tickets, this helps to bring down the cost and salaries, you want to see pilot salaries go up, ground the Regionals & their aircraft. Less pilots, less aircraft, salaries will go up.
"and current fare wars supported by the American consumer wont allow it under current business models"
Consumers will never OPPOSE a fare war since they are the beneficiary.
That said, the airlines choose how low to go. A bunch of employees willing to go very, very low is going to ease the fare ware along and not help raise wages, benefits, or working conditions.
The consumer pays for a ticket, if there is a fare war, they may or may not take advantage it, hell, so do all of us on this website. If there are two airlines going to the same exact place, same aircraft, same schedule, same service, the only thing separting them, is price.
People act like there are people out there with picket signs screaming FARE WAR, which of course is not true.