I think their are alot of facts that are debunked, I use another service into London that uses exactly the same trains and does not need guards, non of the staff in the transition from old to new lost their jobs but were retrained and still work for the company, I know because some are local to me and I know them.
The RMT would have us engage debate about whether or not modern train doors can safely be closed automatically by the driver, or whether we must persist with traditional guards. Already 40 per cent of services on Southern are operated by the driver in this way and as I say the majority of region rail companies have operated like this for years. Modern trains no more need a guard to close doors than they need a fireman to shovel coal.
And as I have said before the RMT action would be more comprehensible if jobs or wages were under threat. Southern has confirmed that there will be no job losses and no one will take a cut in salary. Instead, on-board staff would be able to concentrate on providing a better quality service for the growing number of customers.
My dad was a gas fitter once upon a time and was made redundant, went to college, retrained and went to work for Credit Suisse, not only because his my dad but i have major respect for people like that, not these urban terrorists that are not even losing their jobs but sulking about a little retraining to retain their jobs.