"You specifically named mobility as a factor of opportunity!
You keep mentioning company stores. What about company stores? Are you arguing that there are no consumer goods alternatives within any reasonable walking distance of a factory? What happened to free-market principles of supply and demand? If a demand for consumer goods arises around a factory, surely some individuals with entrepreneurial spirit would have set up shop around those factories?"
Do you know nothing of the history of worker exploitation? Do you know nothing of the conditions which you argue unions are so responsible for ending? How can you hold such a strong position without this knowledge?
Company stores are the classic example of worker exploitation used in teaching the history of unions and espousing the positive change they caused.
Decades and centuries ago when populations were much more rural, when consumers didn't consume SO MUCH as to make economical the retail store ratio we know today, and transportation (of both goods and people) was a tiny fraction of what it is today, exploitation of people with few or no options was possible in ways it isn't today virtually anywhere.
I'm a bit confused by having to explain this. Are you unaware of the history of worker exploitation? Are you arguing that it's unions preventing it from happening today? Please be more clear, because that's a hilarious notion.
"Well, conditions for the working (wo)man in late 19th century New York still sucked. So what happened?"
Do you really want to get into all of the layers of the political/socioeconomic history of centuries past? Are you going to offer commentary, responses, and make arguments if we do? Or are your questions intended solely to suggest that it's unions preventing such conditions today? Again, please be more clear. Because you'll have to explain how you perceive this to be the case. It'll be a difficult argument to make, given the small minority percentage of the population which unions represent and vastly improved standards of living today. Hell, work hours are considerably less too, and that includes those w/o unions. But if that's the argument you're going for, please do make it. Discussion of the socioeconomic development of NYC more than a hundred years ago, I suspect, would be fruitless.
"No, I am not ignoring what you said. You are attacking regulatory laws through an argument of barrier of entry, are you not? Remember, we are talking about unskilled labor here. What could education provide unskilled laborers that they couldn't otherwise gain through training at the job?"
A lot. Have you ever employed anyone? While schools certainly vary and many fail today (thanks, in no small part, to unions!), one can safely have much higher expectations for a high school graduate than someone who can't read. Even for unskilled labor, the basic socialization and reasoning skills inherent in education hold much value.
Again I beg you to be more clear. It sounds like you're playing the devil's advocate, but to what end? You're suggesting that an unskilled laborer could benefit economically by seeking work as a janitor without first learning to read or getting a basic (high school) education? That's just silly. Such education is accomplished before adulthood anyway. Unless you're advocating child labor and parents abandoning their children, you're not even making any argument that it would benefit people economically to forgo basic education. Also, presumably, there are other accepted purposes to education, such as the development of responsible citizens (don't want cave men voting down civilization) and some nonsense about human potential and happiness. 
"Are you disagreeing with those capitalists who hired children as young as 4?"
I've clearly stated that nobody disagrees with all labor laws. You're completely ignoring what I've posted, again. What do these commonly accepted and supported labor laws have to do with unions? Or are you arguing my side now?
I'm all for labor laws preventing child labor. Yet I've stated that unions largely exist today to extort society, protect laziness and unproductivity, and cost society as a whole greatly--the poor most of all.
I've explained the mechanics by which I contend this happens. Do you disagree with anything I actually said? Care to state what and discuss it? Because I certainly didn't argue that laws against child laborers are a problem, and that's the sort of thing you've repeatedly talked about.
"I can only assume you realize that both consumer protection laws and regulatory laws did not exist at one point. If the ideal case you presented worked, consumer protection laws would have never been needed in the first place. "
You're arguing from an all-or-nothing standpoint. I'm not. Of course, many consumer-protection laws are common sense and I have no problem with them. I have never, at any point, in this thread or elsewhere, argued the extreme "ideal case" you're alleging here. Your straw man is for your convenience--I've never advocated anything that could be misinterpreted as some sort of "purist," "ideal" academic nonsense. Of course some laws are pragmatic, common-sense, and there's nothing wrong with them. There's nothing wrong with saying hey, no lead in children's toys. Or no furniture which will catch fire if someone lights a pipe a meter away. So please stop pretending I've advocated some insane position and responding to that. Those are not my positions, and refuting them means nothing to discourse here.
I merely said that many consumer-protection agencies act more often in the interests of big businesses in their respective fields, not in the interests of consumers. I challenge you to find a single regulatory board whose members are not predominantly industry heads. The fact that common-sense laws are desirable does not negate the fact that these corrupt regulatory agencies harm the entirety of society.
"I stress caution against the blind belief that free market is a panacea that will automagically solve all our problems."
I've explained the mechanics by which what I allege occurs occurs. How is my belief blind when I've explained it and you've disagreed with not a word of it? I stress caution against blind belief too. And I've explained myself at length.
"History does not support it, experience does not support it, and last but least, human nature does not support it."
False, false, and false. Educated in Amerika I presume? Indoctrination has been getting worse for decades. The reasons free markets work are precisely because of human nature.
Here's why freedom (aka capitalism) is so awesome for everybody:
With his freedom in tact, man benefits (is rewarded) the most from being productive. Man likes benefiting, so he's more productive! The more productive most men are, the more things are produced, and the cheaper things become! Yay! Freedom, aka capitalism, is not complicated. And you certainly haven't provided any explanation of your vaguely alleged shortcomings here. You just vaguely allege that capitalism, without significant government involvement at every level, is terrible and fails, without explanation or examples (at least, not any I remotely accept as being the fault of freedom
).
And that's just economically! I happen to think freedom is very metal for moral reasons. But that's just me. I'll stick to the math here.
Great depression? Recent recessions? Dangerous (extreme) market fluctuations? All caused (and prolonged) by government, not freedom. Only indoctrinated overlords and sheep with no interest in learning the ugly truth about tyranny and the intellectual laziness of the masses buy into propaganda alleging otherwise.
I have no problem with government protecting people. But the notion that government has to take away significant economic (and other) freedom to protect people is the biggest lie tyrants have ever told mankind. They don't know you. They don't care about you. They can't make better decisions than you. They just want your money. They want more of your money. They'll never get enough; they will ALWAYS argue why it's best for you and everyone if they can just take a few pennies more.
"You do not seem to be against the idea of unionization of productive workers. So tell me, what is your opinion that we as a society, should do to people who fail to achieve the simplest of functions?"
I have no problem with government support being the last refuge of invalids. I don't want them to starve or be homeless or some such horrible fate. My arguments here are focused on the fact that waste--such as that of high taxes and government spending, such as that of unions making whole sectors of the economy less productive and taxing all of society because of this--makes doing this less possible, and makes any such care we provide significantly less.
We're broke. We're waaaay into debt. We're not paying off our debt. We're EXPLODING it. Interest costs are going up every single day. At some point, it will be acknowledged that we're never going to be ABLE (let alone choose to) to pay it down/off. Then we literally will not be able to care for those who cannot care for themselves.
This isn't theoretical, this is inevitable. And it's the least-skilled, who fail to achieve the simplest of functions, who will be hurt the most. It's them I'm arguing we ought to protect by avoiding insolvency. It's them I'm arguing we can provide better lives for by removing the waste that makes our costs of living SO high in the USA. Our poor have larger incomes than 90%+ of the rest of the world, but it's costs like those imposed by government/labor/regulatory board taxes/waste/corruption that make our cost of living SO astronomically high compared to most of the rest of the world. Our poor are harmed most by the cost of living in our nation, not the amount of aid provided to them.
[I wish I could obey forum rules]