"Buy" not so much, but influence absolutely, and here's why: when companies thrive they provide not only jobs but valuable goods and services to the community.
Of course, workers ALSO provide labor and valuable demand for goods (or cashmoney, if you prefer) when THEY thrive. The fact that one side is benefitting is NOT a reason to offer them more advantage. Even more problematic is the fact that what is in the short term profit motives of a company is often dramatically AGAINST the interests of the country as a whole, both in the short and long term. Oil is a paradigm example of this. Our dependence on it is is strategic weakness, forces us into extremely problematic foreign entanglements, and is slowly (and quickly, if you ask the gulf region) destroying the environment. Yet, despite oil companies yielding world-record (literally) profits in recent years, republicans who claim to be interested in fiscal responsibility want to larder them with massive (43 billion, if memory serves) subsidies, as if they somehow needed more incentive to produce oil. Why? Because they've been bought. They are serving the interests of ultrawealthy corporations instead of those of the public. There's a word for this system of government: oligarchy. And you, apparently, think it's A-Ok so long as companies contribute their half of the economic whole: jobs and supply of products (your words, up top). Whereas labor, who contribute labor and demand for products, deserve...whatever the companies deign to give them? Do I need to requote Adam Smith above, on the natural advantages of industry over labor?
That being said, "buy" and "own" cannot happen in a society where voters are vigilant and private voting is exercised. Informed voters are the reins of politicians, and informed consumers are the reins of companies.
If only such a society existed. You and the other 99% of conservatives who don't make multiple millions each year have been boondoggled into thinking that organized labor is a wicked conspiracy against hard-working middle class citizens, rather than a good faith opponent of organized industry, and you want to talk about 'informed' voters? Money buys opinions, and thereby votes, as has been amply demonstrated over the last three decades. Why do you think republicans were so hot to see Citizens United turn legal fiction into fact (literally, corporate personhood was a 'legal fiction' before that ruling)? And why, do you think, there has been a complete lack of outcry on the right about what is hands-down the single most activist decision in the last century of Supreme Court jurisprudence (assuming, for the sake of argument, that conservatives actually care about judicial activism).
Workers who can fire their bosses cannot be "owned" by politicians, and positions that cannot be filled by just anybody (professional occupations) are not easily turned over.
I assume that by 'workers who can fire their bosses', you mean public employees. This is a nonsequitor. The ability to vote a politician out of office does not equate to the ability to negotiate a price. Actually, that's a very command-economy (read: communist) notion. Politicians are NOT the people who should be in charge of setting prices (this is, quite literally, the definition of a command economy, and, simply put, it is far less efficient than a market pricing mechanism). The simple reason for this is that they lack the detailed expertise needed to make pricing assessments. For this, we have industry, or, in the case of the government, the bureaucracy, both of whom do have such specialized knowledge. It is with this bureaucracy, not elected officials, that price negotiations should take place with public sector unions. The ability to vote pols out of office has absolutely no bearing on such pricing decisions.
In fact, by deciding to take this task upon himself, Walker has engaged in command-side pricing. He is, quite literally, engaging in the defining characteristic of communism that brought about its downfall. Yet your 'informed' 'pro-market' electorate is, instead of vilifying him for this complete lack of regard for market mechanisms, hailing him as a hero.
In short, while it sounds cute and catchy to claim that the ability to vote politicians out of office obviates the need for collective bargaining rights, you are in actuality advocating command economy pricing by politicians, something which the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics has shown to be a very poor way of doing things. I just love it when conservatives all twisted up by republican talking points accidentally advocate for communism without realizing it - pardon me while I mop up the irony.
Teachers are well-educated professionals and as such are perfectly capable of negotiating their own terms without a union.
This is actually a fantastic point, kudos. Sophistication of a party is, among other things, one of the major considerations courts look at when determining how to interpret a contract. Unfortunately, there is a LOT more to consider. As Smith points out (see my original post), even very sophisticated parties are poorly positioned both informationally and powerwise, when bargaining with industry, which has access to immense amounts of industry-specific information, and has both more staying power and more alternatives. You're absolutely correct that sophisticated parties need unions less than less sophisticated parties, but that sophistication by itself isn't nearly enough to achieve pareto-efficient bargains between industry and labor. Absent a union, even highly sophisticated jobseekers like attorneys are price-takers, rather than price-makers, though they're certainly not hurting nearly as much as the middle class (because, in large part, of their sophistication).
PL