Showing posts with label working class. Show all posts
Showing posts with label working class. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Today in Labor History—February 20

February 20, 1895 – Frederick Douglass died on this date. In an 1857 address Douglass said, "If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet deprecate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground. They want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will." (From the Daily Bleed)

February 20, 1917 - Thousands of women marched to City Hall in New York to demand relief from high wartime food prices. Inflation had wiped out wage gains made by workers prior to the war, leading to a high level of working class protest . (From Workday Minnesota)

February 20, 1937 – The National Lawyers' Guild was founded on this date. (From the Daily Bleed)

February 20, 1947
– 15 people were killed and 100 were injured as an explosion leveled a Los Angeles, California, electroplating plant where a chemical mixing error occurred. (From the Daily Bleed)

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Today in Labor History—January 6


January 6, 1878 - Author-poet Carl Sandburg was born on this date in Galesburg, Illinois. Sandburg worked as a labor organizer, published in the International Socialist Review and later worker for the Chicago Daily News. The Feds accused him of being a Bolshevik symp, when he was actually just a working class symp. Sandburg died on July 22, 1967. (From the Daily Bleed and Workday Minnesota)

WORKING GIRLS (by Carl Sandburg)
THE working girls in the morning are going to work--
     long lines of them afoot amid the downtown stores
     and factories, thousands with little brick-shaped
     lunches wrapped in newspapers under their arms.
Each morning as I move through this river of young-
     woman life I feel a wonder about where it is all
     going, so many with a peach bloom of young years
     on them and laughter of red lips and memories in
     their eyes of dances the night before and plays and
     walks.
Green and gray streams run side by side in a river and
     so here are always the others, those who have been
     over the way, the women who know each one the
     end of life's gamble for her, the meaning and the
     clew, the how and the why of the dances and the
     arms that passed around their waists and the fingers
     that played in their hair.
Faces go by written over: "I know it all, I know where
the bloom and the laughter go and I have memories,"
     and the feet of these move slower and they
     have wisdom where the others have beauty.
So the green and the gray move in the early morning
     on the downtown streets.

January 6, 1882 - The Toronto Labor Council voted to support equal pay for equal work. (From Workday Minnesota)

January 6, 1916 – A strike was called at the Youngstown Sheet & Tube plant by its 8,000 workers. On January 7, strikers were joined by their wives and other family members on the picket line. Company guards attacked the crowd with tear gas bombs and live fire killing three strikers and wounding 25 others.(From the Daily Bleed)

January 6, 1937 – The Abraham Lincoln Brigade formed to fight fascism in the Spanish Civil War. Roughly 4,000 American men and women fought for the Republicans, most in violation of U.S. law. Nearly 2,000 of them died of wounds or disease. One of the casualties was Oliver Law, the first black man known to have commanded white U.S. troops. He led the Tom Mooney Machine-Gun Company (named for labor organizer Tom Mooney (see here,here and here), who spent years in prison on trumped up charges related to the San Francisco Preparedness Day bombing. (From the Daily Bleed)

January 6, 1970 – West Virginia miners launched a wildcat strike to protest the murder of their union reform leader Joseph "Jock" Yablonski. (From theDaily Bleed and Workday Minnesota)

January 6, 1975 – 12,000 workers struck at the Vaal Reefs gold mine in South Africa. (From the Daily Bleed)

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Today in Labor History—December 20


December 20, 1790 - The first American cotton mill began operation in Pawtucket, Rhode Island. The mill, owned by Samuel Slater, employed children aged 4-10. (From workday Minnesota and the Daily Bleed)


December 20, 1905 -- An 11-day General Strike began in Russia to bring down the Czar.

December 20, 1957 -- Brittish working class singer/songwriter Billy Bragg was born on this date. Bragg was a strong supporter of the 1984 miners strike and has been an outspoken critic of fascim, racism, sexism and homophobia.
 
The Ghost of Tom Joad, by Woody Guthrie
December 20, 1968—John Steinbeck died on this date. He was most famous for novels written from the perspective of working men and women, the poor and downtrodden, including East of Eden, Grapes of Wrath, Of Mice and Men, Tortilla Flats and Cannery Row. (From the Daily Bleed)

Monday, February 20, 2012

Today in Labor History—February 20


February 20, 1895 – Frederick Douglass died on this date. In an 1857 address Douglass said, "If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet deprecate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground. They want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will." (From the Daily Bleed)

February 20, 1917 - Thousands of women marched to City Hall in New York to demand relief from high wartime food prices. Inflation had wiped out wage gains made by workers prior to the war, leading to a high level of working class protest . (From Workday Minnesota)

February 20, 1937 – The National Lawyers' Guild was founded on this date. (From the Daily Bleed)

February 20, 1947
– 15 people were killed and 100 were injured as an explosion leveled a Los Angeles, California, electroplating plant where a chemical mixing error occurred. (From the Daily Bleed)

Friday, January 6, 2012

Today in Labor History—January 6


January 6, 1878 - Author-poet Carl Sandburg was born on this date in Galesburg, Illinois. Sandburg worked as a labor organizer, published in the International Socialist Review and later worker for the Chicago Daily News. The Feds accused him of being a Bolshevik symp, when he was actually just a working class symp. Sandburg died on July 22, 1967. (From the Daily Bleed and Workday Minnesota)

WORKING GIRLS (by Carl Sandburg)

THE working girls in the morning are going to work--
     long lines of them afoot amid the downtown stores
     and factories, thousands with little brick-shaped
     lunches wrapped in newspapers under their arms.
Each morning as I move through this river of young-
     woman life I feel a wonder about where it is all
     going, so many with a peach bloom of young years
     on them and laughter of red lips and memories in
     their eyes of dances the night before and plays and
     walks.
Green and gray streams run side by side in a river and
     so here are always the others, those who have been
     over the way, the women who know each one the
     end of life's gamble for her, the meaning and the
     clew, the how and the why of the dances and the
     arms that passed around their waists and the fingers
     that played in their hair.
Faces go by written over: "I know it all, I know where
the bloom and the laughter go and I have memories,"
     and the feet of these move slower and they
     have wisdom where the others have beauty.
So the green and the gray move in the early morning
     on the downtown streets.

January 6, 1882 - The Toronto Labor Council voted to support equal pay for equal work. (From
Workday Minnesota)

January 6, 1916 – A strike was called at the Youngstown Sheet & Tube plant by its 8,000 workers. On January 7, strikers were joined by their wives and other family members on the picket line. Company guards attacked the crowd with tear gas bombs and live fire killing three strikers and wounding 25 others. (From the Daily Bleed)

January 6, 1937 – The Abraham Lincoln Brigade formed to fight fascism in the Spanish Civil War. Roughly 4,000 American men and women fought for the Republicans, most in violation of U.S. law. Nearly 2,000 of them died of wounds or disease. One of the casualties was Oliver Law, the first black man known to have commanded white U.S. troops. He led the Tom Mooney Machine-Gun Company (named for labor organizer Tom Mooney (see here, here and here), who spent years in prison on trumped up charges related to the San Francisco Preparedness Day bombing. (From the Daily Bleed)

January 6, 1970 – West Virginia miners launched a wildcat strike to protest the murder of their union reform leader Joseph "Jock" Yablonski. (From the Daily Bleed and Workday Minnesota)

January 6, 1975 – 12,000 workers struck at the Vaal Reefs gold mine in South Africa.
(From the Daily Bleed)

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Pro-Union Capitalist or Typical Libertarian Moron?


Erik Kain had a curious piece recently in Forbes called the Economics of Unions. In his article, he argued for less regulation of unions and called for an end to corrupt and “unimaginative” leadership. He said that public sector unions may “actually be defending the interests of service recipients at the expense of their bureaucratic bosses,” and suggested that teachers unions serve the interests of students, as they “have often been the only group poised to resist authoritarian school reformers.”

While all this might seem surreal coming from a Forbes writer, it seems less so when placed in the context of Kains’ overall perspective. He is a libertarian who loves capitalism and personal freedom, but hates government. For example, when he argued that organized labor since Taft-Hartley was a “creature of state-capitalism,” he was implying that the state is already too involved in the economy and that there should be less regulation and oversight of business, something that would be terrible for workers, as it would increase corruption, pollution and workplace injuries and deaths.

His hatred of government can also be seen in his perverse portrayal of public sector workers as freedom fighters in the war to shrink Big Government. He glowingly quotes Kevin Carson (libertarian blogger who refers to himself as a “free market anarchist”), who believes in “Removing the parasitic middlemen [i.e., politicians], who have inserted themselves into the relationship between service providers and recipients. . .” Carson also argues that “Anything that strengthens the hand of public sector workers against the commanding heights of the state, also weakens the hand of the state and its plutocratic allies.”

Don’t get me wrong. I hate plutocrats and state bureaucracies as much as the next guy and I’d love to see public sector workers in complete control of their workplaces. (However, I’d prefer even more a system without bosses, rulers or oppression of any kind, in which everyone was able to enjoy the good things in life). Nevertheless, it is absurd to think that public sector workers are somehow going to bring down the state or its plutocratic allies, and even crazier to believe that this would bring on a utopian paradise, while leaving capitalism intact.

Speaking of crazy, what the hell is “free market unionism?” The concept is oxymoronic (or just plain moronic), unless you consider unions a protection racket, as some critics do. Perhaps he is suggesting that unions should act more competitively, which would clearly not be in workers’ interests as it would pit them against each other in the competition for jobs, exacerbating the downward spiral of wages and benefits.

On the other hand, in the context of Kain’s other arguments, it would seem he is arguing for the repeal of all labor laws, so that workers can enter into “voluntary” relationships with their bosses. Such an argument presumes that the employing class and labor have similar interests and a willingness to negotiate in good faith, which is simply untrue. Workers enter into relationships with bosses because they have no choice. They must either work for wages, or starve—hence the term wage slave. Bosses, on the other hand, are most interested in maximizing productivity and lowering costs. Thus, they have an interest in keeping wages and benefits low and in maximizing their control over the workplace. The willingness to sit down and talk does not lead to a good contract. It is workers’ ability and willingness to go on strike or otherwise impair business as usual that compels the boss to sit down and talk.

Contrary to Kain’s assertion, organized labor has been a “creature” of capitalism since well before Taft-Hartley. Indeed, from the earliest days of capitalism most unions accepted the bosses’ right to profit from the labor of the working class, and most have bought the delusion that there would be no work at all if it were not for the beneficence of the capitalists. This is not to say that unions have always been obsequious. Far from it. Thousands of workers in the U.S. alone have been slaughtered by cops, soldiers, private security and vigilantes in conflicts with their bosses over wages and working conditions. However, when business leaders finally recognized that co-opting labor was cheaper and more profitable than dealing with ongoing strikes and disruptions to production, they began to tolerate unions and collective bargaining, albeit with many strings attached, including the demand for increased labor laws to enforce those strings.

Kain argues that right to work laws “impose artificial restrictions on voluntary association and the ability of employers and employees to bargain.” However, it is misleading to call the restrictions artificial. There is very little that is “natural” about the relations between workers and bosses. Virtually everything about the economy results from deliberate choices and decisions, most often made by the ruling class and imposed on workers. What is important is that right to work laws restrict employee freedom to join unions and weaken labor in its struggle against capital. This is true of most labor laws, as Kain acknowledges: “the entire suite of labor laws, even those passed ostensibly to bolster labor, have weakened unions and made them less dynamic and less suited to modern economic conditions.” The National Labor Relations Act, for example, came in the wake of a militant wave of strikes. While the law legitimized unions and collective bargaining, it also limited how unions could be organized and how they could fight, while increasing their bureaucratization and weakening their militancy.

Despite my criticisms, I think Kain is absolutely right that our unions are top heavy and ossified and that labor laws have only exacerbated these problems. However, the solution is not to embrace free markets and trust that workers and bosses will find a way to all get along, or that union leaders will suddenly become creative or courageous. In fact, the first step is for rank and file workers to recognize that the bosses are not their allies, that they have nothing in common with the bosses and that their relationship with their employers, no matter how pleasant it may seem on the surface, is adversarial by definition. The boss determines the conditions of employment, including wages, benefits, safety, and job duties. The employee can either accept these terms unquestioningly or negotiate and fight for something better.  However, they will rarely win this fight alone. The power of unions is their ability to organize large numbers of workers to withhold their labor and to disrupt business as usual. Until they are ready and willing to use this weapon, they will continue to be pushed further and further back. Contrary to Kain’s feigned concern that unions are stymied by the law, workers can still strike, regardless of the law (as long as they are willing to risk the consequences, as labor has done so often in the past).

Monday, April 25, 2011

Unions, What Are They Good For?


Huck/Konopacki Labor Cartoons
The WSWS reports that the big three automakers, after slashing 250,000 jobs and receiving billions of dollars in taxpayer bailout money, scored record profits in 2010 of $11 billion, due primarily to declining wages, factory speedups and downsizing. The big three are now planning to hire 35,000 new workers. With the full complicity of the United Auto Workers (UAW) who negotiated a sell-out contract, new hires will be paid less than $15 per hour, less than half the traditional wages of auto workers and many will be hired as temporary workers who can be fired at will.  The two-tiered contract also slashed existing employees’ wages.

A Union Loved By Bosses Is A Useless Union
The big three weakened the UAW (and increased profits) by shipping thousands of jobs overseas, resulting in high unemployment and declining wages in Michigan. Now, with a large army of unemployed workers desperate for a steady income, the big three can start hiring locally again, but this time at low wages, and still remain competitive with foreign auto producers. The U.S. has so decimated its labor movement that its labor force has become attractive to European companies seeking to increase their profits. Fiat, for example, is planning on shifting production of several models to North America in order to lower production costs, with a resulting loss of 16% to its domestic workforce in Italy. Fiat/Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne said, “It’s a pleasure to negotiate with U.S. trade unions,” indicating that the UAW has served the interests of capital well, not labor.

A strong union should be feared and despised by the bosses, not loved or enjoyed, and it should help drive up wages and working conditions locally and abroad, not lower them. Consider that the Mirafiori Fiat plant near Turin forced its employees to accept dramatic rollbacks by threatening to ship even more production to the U.S., where labor is cheap (see Reuters, “Fiat’s Italian Investment Rests on Union Vote”). The new Mirafiori contract forbids workers from striking, forces 10-hour work shifts and triples mandatory overtime.

Stockholm Syndrome: Union Leaders Who Love Bosses
UAW President Bob King said “Relationships with Marchionne are extremely positive, we believe in him a lot,” reports the WSWS. Of course, union bosses and capitalist bosses have a symbiotic relationship not shared by workers. The union bosses want to maintain their jobs and their six-figure salaries and their opportunities to hob nob with politicians, philanthropists and wealthy liberals. This can only happen if their unions continue to exist and continue to funnel members’ dues into their coffers. Capitalists like Marchionne are only too willing to allow this so long as the union leaders serve as their bulldogs and enforce their demands on the workers.

This can be seen in a resolution passed last month by the UAW bargaining convention (quoted in the WSWS) which said “In order to promote the success of our employers, the UAW is committed to innovation, flexibility, lean manufacturing, world best quality and continuous cost improvement… We are moving on a path that no longer presumes an adversarial work environment with strict work rules, narrow job classifications or complicated contract rules.” In other words, the union agrees to enforce factory speedups, increased productivity, downsizing and anything else that will increase profits, regardless of how that affects working conditions and wages.

Of course it is not really a Stockholm Syndrome. The union bosses are not being held captive by the capitalist bosses. They are birds of a feather. Consider that the UAW has assets of $1.13 billion, according to the WSWS, paying out $3.4 million to its top 24 officers, who earned an average of $142,000 last year, plus another $80 million salaries and perks for 1,000 staff members who also averaged more than $100,000 each.

The relationship between the UAW and other mainstream unions with their members is a dysfunctional codependent relationship that is detrimental to the interests of workers. In the name of “saving jobs” or “collective bargaining” the unions continue to keep their members dependent on them, while whittling away at wages and working conditions for the benefit of the bosses. The unions, thus, are complicit in the downward spiral of living conditions that has plagued the majority of Americans for the past forty years (e.g., the minimum wage in 1968 had 25% more buying power than it does today, while the purchasing power of the average 1972 wages was higher than today’s average wages).

Many argue that unions continue to provide a few important services, like fighting for members’ due process rights. However, when we look at the bigger picture, it is clear that many unions have actually become workers’ class enemy, as they give away more and more wage and benefits concessions and contribute to workers’ pauperization. What use are rights when one cannot afford rent, mortgage, healthcare or nutritious food? What use is due process if it just keeps one in a job that is dangerous and abusive and that barely (or doesn’t even) pays bills? Why fight for collective bargaining if it is only used to win contracts with declining pay and benefits?

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Class War Tennessee Style


The Duncan/Obama dream of looting the public sector for the private gain of corporations is coming to fruition in Tennessee, which is using a portion of its federal Race to the Top money to create 40 new charter schools in the state's two largest cities.

One of the major goals of Gov. Bill Haslam has been to lift the cap on the number of charter schools in the state. According to Timesnews.net, Gov. Haslam said, "We need to get some scale here, and adding two or three schools a year is not going to get us where we need to be to change the trajectory of education." Interestingly, Haslam did not regurgitate the usual lies about charter schools being better for kids or improving educational outcomes. Changing the “trajectory” is, of course, what all the Ed Deformers want, but not in a way that will benefit kids. They are interested in taking away public and teacher oversight and increasing the profits of private educational profiteers.

The funding for the 40 new charter schools in Memphis and Nashville, will come from a Race to the Top grant of $10 million, plus $20 million from private sources like Hyde and Ingram foundations and the Walton Family Foundation.

Haslam has also been pushing a bill that would make it more difficult for public school teachers to earn and keep tenure. The legislation would require teachers to have five years of service in order to earn tenure, rather than the current three, and it would make it easier to revoke it for poor teaching performance.

Meanwhile, several districts in the state have been attempting to sweep away collective bargaining rights for their teachers. Rutherford County suspended contract negotiations in order to await a ruling on collective bargaining, while Sumner County’s school board unilaterally ceased to recognize its local teachers union in October, arguing that it didn’t represent a majority of its teachers. Sen. Jack Johnson has co-sponsored a bill that would end the right of teachers unions to negotiate pay and working conditions with school districts. According to Johnson, ". . . the problem is these unions have created a hostile, adversarial relationship with their school boards,"

Lies, Damned Lies and Capitalist Lies
The problem is that an adversarial relationship always exists between workers and bosses, by definition. The teachers and their unions did not create it. Bosses are always trying to squeeze more work out of their employees for less pay, benefits, autonomy and safety protections. This is the nature of capitalism, and the same dynamic trickles down to the public sector. This is why the IWW wrote in the preamble to their constitution, “The working class and the employing class have nothing in common.”

Unfortunately, many teachers refuse to accept this reality. Indeed, some are convinced that they are “Teachers first, and workers or unionists second (or third, or fourth).” As a result of this kind of thinking, they gladly take on more responsibilities, longer hours and increasing stress, without increasing pay or compensation.

As far as hostility goes, it should be abundantly clear that the hostility has been entirely coming from the bosses, not the unions. The bosses and the pundits have been ranting and seething about the greedy, selfish unions, some going so far as to call them terrorists. They have threatened to call in soldiers and force them to work at gunpoint. They have tried to strip them of their rights to collectively bargain. All the unions have done is to give up more and more pay and benefits concessions in exchange for the right to exist, hardly a hostile behavior.

Here is an example of hostile: The Rutherford County administrators walked away from the negotiating table to wait and see if collective bargaining will be destroyed. The underlying message is “We don’t want unions and we don’t want to negotiate. We want to make unilateral decisions that affect your pay and working conditions.”