P.A.T.C.O. AND REAGAN: AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY - The Air Traffic
Controllers' Strike of 1981 - documents those ominous days leading
up to, including, andafter the fateful strike and consequent firing
of over 11,000 federal employees by the President of the United
States in August, 1981. Relying onprimary White House research
materials available in the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library
archives, the book concludes that both the strike and thedismissal
were not only predictable, but inescapable scenarios, given the
resolute and tenacious personalities of the leaders involved. It
discussesin length, the compounding effects that the strike had on
its members, society at large, and the White House.
P.A.T.C.O. AND REAGAN explores the motivations behind the
strikers' controversial actions and the corresponding rationales of
their opponents, whichincluded just about everybody else. It
highlights the heightened emotions that fueled the union's
expectations before the strike and drove its ferventquest for
redemption after the strike. The union's inability to comprehend
how the strike would be perceived ultimately doomed its efforts
andcondemned it to a collision course with the Reagan
Administration, the general public, and even its own membership .
As a consequence, organized laborin the United States would never
be the same.
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