I read Mr. Totten's letter, limmed with "outrage," seated in a cafe - on-line (free wireless with a $2.10 coffee) - all I could think of was the future. Two or three years at the most. The A section of the NYTimes sits beside me - didn't really need to look at it, everything I wanted to read is online - yellowing in the sun.
I am not familiar enough with the Times / Globe predicament to comment in detail. However, what I know from reading - on-line, much of it free - is that his attitude and letter will, probably seem awfully quaint, sooner than later. He seems out of touch with reality: asking for wage increases in an economy that is dicey, at best, and in an industry where the baseline is shifting BY THE DAY, seems not just stupid but also a bit insane. I am politically predisposed to unions. Reading this, and reading about the dismantlement of GM, what I'm left with is an astonishing lack of imagination. Better, apparently, to be "right" than to do the hard work to find a workable solution for both parties that reflects the current economic and social realities.
Sadly, Mr. Totten seems to be writing as if it's 1982 or '79. When we look back, after the inevitably end of the Globe, I only wonder how this vitriolic letter will be viewed.