The greek and Irish economies are not in a mess because of public spending cuts. They are in a mess because for many years they have been spending money they havent earned and dont have. 
I will retract the reference to the Greek economy, as I made that without knowing everything, but the Irish economy IS broken due to spending cuts.
The government there was praised for having a pretty stable economy, however when the recession hit they imposed a series of "emergency budgets" that cut public spending, including reducing wages and benefits and charging MORE for public services.
They are now in their THIRD year of recession, and are slipping further into it. If spending cuts are the way out, why is their economy not improving? Unemployment there reached 13.7% in April 2010. It's now 14.2%.
Sounds like a good ecomony to me!
I would like to ask you a question though if I may. If the report in the link I posted is true - that I contribute more to your pension than I do to my own - do you think thats ok/fair/just/reasonable ?
No it's not, but is that the
fault of the public sector? No. Look at your employer. I am not in a strong position to say this about yours directly, but in general, the private sector pensions are hampered by rather wealthy CEOs at the top who have very generous pensions (like the MPs in parliament!) who are disproportionately having more paid into THEIR pensions then the people who are working for them.
Why should
I pay (by which I mean, lose out on what I could potentially have) just because there are some greedy rich people at the top of the companies in the private sector who aren't willing to ensure their hard-working employees get a fair deal?
I dont want anyone to fight for me, Im capable of fighting my own battles. Dont need someone like Bob crowbar on his £100,000+ p.a. to tell me he is going to lead me out of my misery to a socialist utopia. 
Well that's your decision then, isn't it? Fighting as a union (or in union with other similarly affected people) is more effective then taking on everyone by yourself. You don't want to fight for the better pensions that you deserve then live with what you do have and don't complain and don't get upset when other people begin fighting for what they should be getting. I take the same attitude with colleagues who refuse to take part in what we do, and it's entirely fair.
What has become
really evident since that day is the HUGE divide between private and public sector workers. The Government and press are doing their damndest to turn us against each other for the Government's own benefit (although I can honestly say that the support we received on Thursday was brilliant, at a local level at least).
It's also sincerely depressing that EVERYONE'S attitude is that the way to approach unfairness is to cut, cut, cut, rather than
raise everyone to the same level.
It's the old race-to-the-bottom attitude and we implemented it across all working practices and in all professions then we truly would be back in the early 1900s.