Upcoming Events

National | Anti-Capitalism

no events match your query!

New Events

National

no events posted in last week

Blog Feeds

Anti-Empire

Anti-Empire

offsite link North Korea Increases Aid to Russia, Mos... Tue Nov 19, 2024 12:29 | Marko Marjanovi?

offsite link Trump Assembles a War Cabinet Sat Nov 16, 2024 10:29 | Marko Marjanovi?

offsite link Slavgrinder Ramps Up Into Overdrive Tue Nov 12, 2024 10:29 | Marko Marjanovi?

offsite link ?Existential? Culling to Continue on Com... Mon Nov 11, 2024 10:28 | Marko Marjanovi?

offsite link US to Deploy Military Contractors to Ukr... Sun Nov 10, 2024 02:37 | Field Empty

Anti-Empire >>

The Saker
A bird's eye view of the vineyard

offsite link Alternative Copy of thesaker.is site is available Thu May 25, 2023 14:38 | Ice-Saker-V6bKu3nz
Alternative site: https://thesaker.si/saker-a... Site was created using the downloads provided Regards Herb

offsite link The Saker blog is now frozen Tue Feb 28, 2023 23:55 | The Saker
Dear friends As I have previously announced, we are now “freezing” the blog.? We are also making archives of the blog available for free download in various formats (see below).?

offsite link What do you make of the Russia and China Partnership? Tue Feb 28, 2023 16:26 | The Saker
by Mr. Allen for the Saker blog Over the last few years, we hear leaders from both Russia and China pronouncing that they have formed a relationship where there are

offsite link Moveable Feast Cafe 2023/02/27 ? Open Thread Mon Feb 27, 2023 19:00 | cafe-uploader
2023/02/27 19:00:02Welcome to the ‘Moveable Feast Cafe’. The ‘Moveable Feast’ is an open thread where readers can post wide ranging observations, articles, rants, off topic and have animate discussions of

offsite link The stage is set for Hybrid World War III Mon Feb 27, 2023 15:50 | The Saker
Pepe Escobar for the Saker blog A powerful feeling rhythms your skin and drums up your soul as you?re immersed in a long walk under persistent snow flurries, pinpointed by

The Saker >>

Lockdown Skeptics

The Daily Sceptic

offsite link In Episode 27 of the Sceptic: David Shipley on Southport, Fred de Fossard on Trump vs Woke Capitalis... Fri Jan 24, 2025 07:00 | Richard Eldred
In episode 27 of the Sceptic: David Shipley on Southport, Fred de Fossard on Trump vs Woke Capitalism and Ed West on the grooming gangs as Britain?s Chernobyl.
The post In Episode 27 of the Sceptic: David Shipley on Southport, Fred de Fossard on Trump vs Woke Capitalism and Ed West on the Grooming Gangs As Britain?s Chernobyl appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link Lib Dem Leader Ed Davey: Go Back to Your Constituencies and Prepare to Live in Mud and Grass Huts Fri Jan 24, 2025 07:00 | Chris Morrison
With all 72 Lib Dem MPs supporting the mad Climate and Nature Bill, their clownish leader Ed Davey is effectively telling them to go back to their constituencies and prepare to live in mud and grass huts.
The post Lib Dem Leader Ed Davey: Go Back to Your Constituencies and Prepare to Live in Mud and Grass Huts appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link News Round-Up Fri Jan 24, 2025 01:20 | Will Jones
A summary of the most interesting stories in the past 24 hours that challenge the prevailing orthodoxy about the ?climate emergency?, public health ?crises? and the supposed moral defects of Western civilisation.
The post News Round-Up appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link One in 12 in London is an Illegal Migrant Thu Jan 23, 2025 19:30 | Will Jones
London is home to as many as 585,000 illegal migrants, equivalent to one in 12 of the city?s population, according to a previously confidential report.
The post One in 12 in London is an Illegal Migrant appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link Illegal Afghan Migrant Kills Two and Wounds Three in Latest Knife Violence to Afflict Open-Borders G... Thu Jan 23, 2025 17:55 | Eugyppius
An illegal Afghan migrant has killed two and wounded three in the latest knife violence to afflict open-borders Germany. In response, Leftist organisations will light candles to demonstrate "solidarity and cohesion".
The post Illegal Afghan Migrant Kills Two and Wounds Three in Latest Knife Violence to Afflict Open-Borders Germany appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

Lockdown Skeptics >>

Voltaire Network
Voltaire, international edition

offsite link Should we condemn or not the glorification of Nazism?, by Thierry Meyssan Wed Jan 22, 2025 14:05 | en

offsite link Voltaire, International Newsletter N?116 Sat Jan 18, 2025 06:46 | en

offsite link After the United Kingdom, Germany and Denmark, the Trump team prepares an operat... Sat Jan 18, 2025 06:37 | en

offsite link Trump and Musk, Canada, Panama and Greenland, an old story, by Thierry Meyssan Tue Jan 14, 2025 07:03 | en

offsite link Voltaire, International Newsletter N?114-115 Fri Jan 10, 2025 14:04 | en

Voltaire Network >>

reports on grocery workers actions

category national | anti-capitalism | news report author Sunday February 01, 2004 20:30author by john throne - labors militant voiceauthor email loughfinn at aol dot com Report this post to the editors

Irish indymedia recently had an announcement for the action of the grocery workers in Oakland California. They are struggling against the employers in an effort to maintain health care in their contracts. Here are three reports on this action and the issues raised.

Report from Richard Mellor. Member of American federation of state county municipal workers and Labors militant Voice.

About 1500 or so people attended a rally in Oakland CA today in
support of the striking grocery workers from southern California. I
arrived on the picket line about 4 hours before marchers from a
nearby park arrived. While I was on the line I talked with many of
the strikers about our plan to go in and hold a mini rally in the
store. Some of the folks from the anti-war group I have been
somewhat involved with were unwilling to go in to the store if the
people organizing the rally, the State federation of Labor and
Central labor Council (the union hierarchy) opposed it. I wasn't
concerned whether the labor leaders opposed it or not but what the
strikers want is important to me.
Anyway, all of the strikers supported us going in to the store and
holding a mini rally in there regardless of the position of the union
officials.

After some time the marchers arrived. But about 15 minutes before
this, a huge $60,000 SUV drove up and the important labor officials
got out. Tom Rankin from the State Fed and some others. (Rankin
used to be in a socialist group called the IS.) I recognized the guy
driving the tank as a delegate from the CLC who heads security and
had two huge golden rings on his fingers. Anyway, they joined the
picket line 15 minutes or so before the marchers arrived.

As the crowd swelled I could see the impression this was having on
the faces of many of the strikers who I have come to know personally.
Strike activity has been cowed here in the U.S. and this is perhaps
the biggest grocery strike in 25 years and one of the most important.
Being on the lines with these people has been so important for me and
is important for all anti-capitalists and revolutionaries. Here we
meet workers at our best in many ways. The ideology of the
capitalist class is weakened as workers struggle and sacrifice for
the necessities of life. Class solidarity is strengthened and sexism
and racism and other forms of class division are in retreat. Many of
these folks have lost their homes and possessions. It is amazing
that they have the outlook they do at this point but things are
getting tough.

People saw the potential power of labor as the crowd grew bigger and
union jackets and hats could be seen everywhere. Who could not feel
a sense of solidarity and strength in moments like these? But before
the main crowd arrived, a few staffers joined the line. These were
overwhelmingly young people and one had a bullhorn. Unlike the
strikers I have been on many of these picket lines and attended many
of these rally's organized by the labor hierarchy and I know they are
only token gestures. Before the staffers came I was talking with the
strikers about the boycott and how it has failed miserably in the
past. I explained the need to shut down all the stores, we organize
workers, not consumers. All the pickets agreed.

But the staffer started with the usual slogans "we are the union, the
mighty mighty union" and "don't shop Safeway" and "Boycott safeway"
Another chant was we want a contract when do we want it now. The
AFL-CIO is going on the offensive according to them and want to widen
the boycott. This is the official position, boycott. Naturally, the
strikers followed suit and chanted these slogans. It made me realize
how difficult it is to get people to think about what really works
when the much more powerful subjective factor is pushing what
doesn't. After all, the union leaders have offered $400 million in
concessions and the employers rejected it. What sort of contract do
we want? But the mood of the moment is solidarity and the influence
of the official leadership is strong. It is when strikes are defeated
that the hatred and anger begins and is often directed against the
union as an organization.

I was talking with one picketer about the expected arrests. The
heads of the CLC, state fed and others had arranged with the police
to get arrested.It was sort of sickening to see them getting their
pictures taken and being arrested. One picketer told me that a cop
told him, "if you're not on the arrested list you'll get arrested".
It was like a Bush photo op.

Still, the mood was good and I am sure the strikers felt better as
they were not alone. Unfortunately, they are not aware that this is
not the beginning of a genuine offensive. The employers are also
aware that boycotts have failed so they feel very confident. More
importantly, they know the union leadership will not do anything that
will challenge the law or the employers' rights. In other words,
they will not mobilize to shut down all the stores.

All in all it was one of the better turn outs from the CLC but it was
still dominated by staffers and a layer of regular activists.
Richard


Report from John Reimann. Expelled member of the carpenters union and leader of the North californian carpenters wildcat strike in 1999 and labors Militant Voice.

Today's protest at Safeway was a study in contrasts.

The Central Labor Council (CLC) put this one together along with the
state federation of labor. The turnout was a bit larger than the
previous one here - maybe up to 1000 this time.

Along with some others, we had been discussing carrying the rally
into the store, but we heard that the leadership was planning some
sort of civil disobedience. We heard that they didn't want us to
"upstage" them. We also heard that they were negotiating with the
cops, making a deal as far as how things were going to work.

We rallied first in a park about a mile away from the store. There
were several strikers who spoke and told their stories. Then we were
treated to listen to Ignacio de la Fuente, president of the Oakland
City Council. De la Fuente stated several times that the Oakland city
council was "pro business". Through some sort of twisted logic he
found a way to explain that he was still on the side of the unions in
this strike, though. I was standing next to a picket I know and
pointed out what he was saying. "How can he be for us and pro
busienss at the same time?" I asked. "Business takes its profit out
of our hide." He agreed with me of course. After a series of other
speeches, we started of marching. Half of the crowd was on the
siewalk on one side of the street; half on the other. An agreement
had been reached with the cops, you see, that we would not block
traffic.

The mood was pretty loud, despite the fact that we were split up. As
we marched, we were chanting. One chant as "Boycott... Safeway!" As
we got closer to the store, a couple of us took up the chant, but
with a slightly different wording. "SHUT DOWN... Safeway" we yelled.

This started to take hold around us and others started chanting the same.

Those of us in the Direct Action to Stop the War had agreed to go
into the store. This took place after a long debate within the group.
Originally the majority in this group argued adamantly that we should
do what the official leadership wanted us to do. However, in the park
at the start of the rally a couple of strikers came over, and they
directly said that they'd like us to go into the store.

So into the store we went, when we arrived there.

We were met with security who told us all that we were trespassing
and that we'd be arrested, but we marched on anyway, passing out
leaflets and chanting as we went.

Then an official of the CLC came rushing in. This is a guy who's
never been a rank and file member of any union. He's a private
investigator who works often for union lawyers and has been made a
member of some union or another in order to be able to serve on the
CLC. "You have to leave here; you're going to ruin everything," he
told us. "This is not part of the agreement we made." !!!

Yes he actually said this!

Anyway, we had all agreed that we were going to try to avoid arrests,
so we did leave the store. But there was this huge crowd outside the
store, standing in the parking lot chanting and yelling. Meanwhile, a
few customers walked in without being stopped. Then a few of us stood
in the doorway. We got a few more people to join us, and for a brief
moment we actually were phsically blocking people from entering. But
those who'd organized the event did nothing to get the crowd closer
to the doors, so eventually we had to abandon our blockade.

While all this was goingon, however, this large crowd was standing
outside chanting and making a huge racket. It was clear that a lot of
people were rally fired up. At one point a guy in a business suit
came out with a basket full of groceries he'd bought. People gathered
round him yelling "shame! shame!" He tried to get through the crowd,
but there was no exit. Then he tried to reverse course and get
through another way. I just happened to be standing right in his way.
He had one hell of a time getting round me, and even then, he had a
hard time maneuvering his cart over my foot.

Just as it seemed he might not get through at all, one of the
security guys stepped forward. When I say "security" I don't mean
store security - this was a security guy for the protest. Poetic
justice, I guess - this was a business representative for the
Carpeners Union. The business rep helped guide this scab through the
protest!

After almost an hour, a group of the leaders sat down in the middle
of the parking lot. This was all planned with the cops, who gently
led them away one-by-one. They were cited and released on the spot.
(We were told that their huge worry was that if we messed up their
deal, that they might have to spend the weekend in jail!!!)

Anyway, this was how it went here in Oakland. Huge potential, and
even greater failure by the union leadership. Of course, had they
really taken advantage of that potential - say by marching us all
into the store - it would have ruined their relationship with such
"friends" as de la Fuente. Lord save us from that disaster.

John Reimann.

From Sean O'Torain. Labors militant Voice.

Thank you John and Richard for your reports on the action in support of the grocery workers in California. In case anybody on this list is not clear the strike is in Southern California and the union leaders are bringing strikers and locked out workers up to Northern California, that is the San Francisco Bay Area, to put pickets on the grocery stores of the struck chains. But these pickets are only to ask customers not to shop in the stores meanwhile the unions members continue to work in the stores. Naturally the customers see little logic in this and feel little inclination to respond positively. This strategy of the union leaders is a strategy for defeat.

Here in Chicago yesterday there was a day long meeting of the Chicago Social Forum. One of the sessions at this was on organizing and the panel speakers were from the Service Employees Union, the Food and Commercial Workers, the Union of Needle trades and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. The speakers were fulltime organizers with one exception and all were from the liberal wing of the union bureaucracy.

The speakers explained how nasty the employers were. Something that was not necessary at this meeting. The emphasis was on Walmart as the main enemy who was pushing the other employers to attack the workers. There was talk that "human greed was the root of all evil", that "corporate greed" was another problem. There was talk of one company wanting to be an "honorable company" . As I say this was all from the liberal wing of the union leadership. This was the introduction to the discussion.

I intervened in the discussion along the following lines. It was a complete waste of time to discuss the issue of organizing and the strike of the grocery workers unless we were prepared to discuss the role of the union leaders. The union leaders want to cooperate with the employers, they are afraid of mobilizing the rank and file, they believe there is no alternative to the bosses capitalist system and so they want to cooperate and help the union employers compete against the non union and to help the US employers compete against the non US employers. And not only that but when any determined opposition to these policies develops in the unions then these leaders smash these oppositions in the most ruthless fashion.

I spoke then directly to the union organizers who were present and who had spoken. I explained that when these vicious attacks on the more fighting oppositions takes place you guys, that is the liberal wing of the union bureaqucracy who were present, keep quiet and let the leaders crush the opposition. I asked these organizers directly to now at this meeting discuss the policies of the union leaders and the role these policies played in the defeats of the working class that are taking place and their own role in allowing the crushing of oppositions and the sell out of strikes such as P9, Staley lockout, the Detroit newspapers strike etc. .

An elderly lady then spoke up. Her husband she said is a member of the International Association of Machinists and the leadership of that union was taking action to crush and her husbands local because the local disagreed with the leaders policies. She wanted to hear some discussion on this.

The organizers made a few comments in response. Yes it is true there were a few bad leaders but the CEO of Walmart was worse. No organizations are perfect. But and this was repeated again and again by the organizers, there are now some unions prepared to organize, they were referring to the grouping around the Carpenters and the SEIU, and in general things have changed and things are now moving in the right direction. Again and again they said this things are now going in the right direction. This was their justification for keeping quiet about the role of the union bureaucracy.

The main left group at this meeting was the ISO. They allowed, in fact assisted these union organizers in covering up the role of the union leaders and in avoiding the debate that has to be held. It is clear that they view their relationship with the liberal wing of the union bureaucracy as more important than their relationship with the striking workers such as in the grocery workers strike now and many of whom are loosing their homes because of the role of the union leaders.

The grocery workers strike is about taking away health care from all workers. The present strategy of the union leaders in trying to give major concessions, in refusing to bring all the chains out on strike, and in refusing to raise the struggle for a single payer health care system for all, this will lead to defeat. The union leaders and organizers, the right wing and the liberal wings of the bureaucracy have to be engaged in debate and struggle and oppositions have to be built in the unions to oppose and replace these leaderships. It is interesting to note that two of the candidates for the presidential nomination of the capitalist Democratic Party are campaigning for a single payer health care system for all but the union leaders neither the right wing or the liberal version are prepared to do so. These two capitalist politicians are to the left of the union leaders on this issue.

The issue is simple. The employers, the capitalists are on an all out offensive against the working class. Wages, health care, safety, etc are all under attack. The working class is being driven back by this offensive. The union leaders accept and collaborate with this offensive except that they plead that the attacks be a little less severe and less immediate. When union members demand all out opposition to the bosses offensive they are told by their leaders, the right and the liberal version alike that they have to be "realistic" that capitalism rules and that is that. And if union members refuse to accept this defeatist policy and organize to change it then the union leaders organize to crush them. John Reimann whose report is included here was expelled for life from the carpenters union for being elected the leader of the 1999 carpenters strike in North California. One of the speakers at yesterdays meeting is in the Service Employees union which is now in cahoots with the carpenters union and according to the SEIU speaker the unions are now going in the right direction and I do not expect this union leader to raise with the carpenters leaders the rights of John Reimann and why he was expelled.


Sean O'Torain. Chicago Labors Militant Voice.
Email us at: [email protected] Phone us at 773 913 8068

Related Link: http://laborsmilitantvoice.com
author by Los Angeles Correspondent - International Indymedia News Gathererspublication date Mon Feb 02, 2004 22:43author address author phone Report this post to the editors

The strike by grocery workers is well into it's fourth month now. The strikers have been out since before Christmas, attempting to defend their right to a wage and healthcare benefits that will allow them to live in a very modest way.

The central union representing them (the UFCW) has adopted several controversial tactics: eschewing militancy in favor of an appeal to the conscience of the public and calling off pickets on one of the chains.

Recently the strikers have been encouraging supporters not to just stop shopping at the stores being picketed, but also to come down to the picket lines.

With a group of friends I did just that last weekend. The strikers were deeply demoralized, there were very few of them, they were being payed on a reduced scale by the strike fund. The picket captain was incensed at the leadership of the UFCW and the other strikers were resentful about being told not to "get into it" with people that crossed the picket line. The general consensus was that the UFCW leadership were in bed with the employers in some manner.

This weekend the response of the UFCW leadership has been to hold a mass solidarity march in Inglewood (Southern Los Angeles). This is seen as a pointless attempt to appeal for support (to do what?) from the public again.

Meanwhile LA critical mass rode into several Vons stores (about 50 cyclists rode through the aisles). In one of the stores the manager panicked and had the doors locked as she thought a riot was starting. 4 cyclists were trapped inside and all but one of them left through a rear exit in the stockroom. The 4th rider obeyed the order of the manager to stay there. Five cop cars turned up and let the last rider go without a ticket.

author by Los Angeles Correspondentpublication date Tue Feb 03, 2004 02:34author address author phone Report this post to the editors

This gives a slightly better description of the Critical Mass support of the grocery strikers and shows the militancy of the scabs and cops.

Related Link: http://la.indymedia.org/news/2004/01/102094.php
author by John Reimann - Labors Militant Voicepublication date Tue Feb 03, 2004 06:11author email wildcat99 at earthlink dot netauthor address author phone Report this post to the editors

Thanks to the Critical Mass person who posted the note on what they did in L.A. I will copy that and print it out and take it around to the pickets here in Oakland.

Below is the text of a leaflet that some of the pickets from southern California have put together and are distributing. Before posting it, though, I'd like to make one comment: Over the years I've gotten to know several of the clerks in the Albertsons where I shop. You shouldhear what they have to say about their union leadership. One in particular I'd gotten to know during the time of our (carpenters' ) wildcat strike (1999). She'd seen me on t.v. and really liked what we were doing.

Recently she commented to me that she hated her life. When asked why she explained that she is forced to work all sorts of different hours from one day to the next. I asked her whether she didn't have enough seniority to get a regular shift, but she said that the management didn't go by seniority; they went by who the liked. I asked what the union did about that and she gave me a sour look, one that would have made a grapefruit appear like sugar candy. "The union ain't worth a dime," she told me.

Anyway, here's what some of the southern california grocery strikers put together:

UFCW Members Fight Back!
We southern California grocery store workers have been on strike going on four months now. We have been loyal on the picket lines. Some of us have spent weeks away from our families, friends and homes. Some of us have lost our homes. We believe in the union and in our cause. But we have to say that we are not happy with how this strike is being run because of the lack of communication from the top to the bottom. We need some major changes and we need them now. Here is what we think our leadership should organize immediately:

*Better communication with grocery store workers throughout our union. Organize mass meetings of our brother and sister workers and ourselves to explain our issues and to get them involved in our strike. (In nothern, California, there has not been a serious drive by UFCW business reps to inform our brother and sister grocery store workers what the stores are trying to take away from us, although they will be next if we don’t win!)

*Better communication with the communities to get them involved in our strike effort.

*Better communication with the public. Make it clear that this is not only about health care, but also that we don’t want a two-tier pay schedule nor a pension freeze. Explain how this will affect everybody.

*No concessions. We have not been out on strike for months just to go backwards. Our Union should immediately remove the offer of hundreds of millions of dollars in concessions.

*Shut down all the chains nation-wide. As a first step towards this, stop the chains’ deliveries on the docks by picketing there and stop deliveries from the distribution centers nation-wide.

*The entire labor movement to organize a one day nation-wide shut down everywhere. We are faced with an emergency here. If the chains have their way in Southern California, then this will set the stage for the same thing nationally. And not just in grocery, but in every industry. But if the unions pull out all the stops, then we can turn things around and start to move forward.

We, the rank and file, have to take our unions back and make them fight for us. This is what we are trying to do. It is up to you to get involved in this. If you want to a quick and victorious end for this strike, then contact us.

UFCW Members for a Stronger Union
for more information contact us at: [email protected]

What Management Wants
It has been difficult to get the exact facts, but here is what we know the chains are demanding:
*massive increases in health benefit co-payments
*no pay increase (after two straight contracts without any raise)
*Increases in eligibility for pension credits
*a two-tier wage structure; lower pay for new hires
*reductions in medical benefits

Special Appeal
We are appealing to our brother and sister union members and supporters throughout North America: Get involved. Print out this leaflet and distribute it at your local store. Organize in-store rallies and protests at your local store of these chains. Demand that your union leadership take the steps we outline here. This is everybody’s struggle!

PS. If there is an Albertsons, Safeway, Von's or Ralph's anywhere in Ireland, it would be great to get this message to the workers there.

Related Link: http://www.laborsmilitantvoice.com
author by john throne - labors militant voicepublication date Sat Feb 07, 2004 03:03author email loughfinn at aol dot comauthor address author phone Report this post to the editors

I had such an interesting discussion with four Safeway workers here
in the Bay Area. I was going to a job and stopped to get a coffee in
a shopping center. The safeway there is not being picketed so I
thought I'd leaflet the workers inside with our leaflet. I had to be
careful and removed my clothes with the employers name on them.
Fortunately, this didn't include my underwear.

I went inside and the first person I spoke to was behind the deli
counter. I asked her what she knew about the strike. "I don't
really know anything", she told me. "Well what are they fighting
about?", I asked. She sort of rolled her eyes a bit and said it was
something to do with health benefits. I asked her if she sees her
business agents and she said no. I asked how she knew the strike was
about health benefits. She said she heard it on the news.

The next person was working behind the fish counter. I asked her if
she knew what was going on in the strike. She didn't know what was
happening but knew that they were going after their medical and that
she would be next when the contract expires this year. I asked her
if her local officials come round much and she said she never sees
them. She learns most about the strike from the news she said.

I wanted to talk to them a little longer but I was in full view of
the top balcony with the two way mirrors and was a little nervous as
my truck was parked in their parking lot. The next worker was in a
more secluded area stocking shelves. I thought he was a guy I knew
that worked in that store but he wasn't. We had a longer
conversation. he seemed to know more about what was happening and
was older than the other two. He said that Byrd, the Safeway CEO was
determined and would not back down, he focused his wrath on Byrd. I
argued that the CEO's of Albertsons, the other store that has locked
out the workers in solidarity with Safewey is no different. They are
all in this together I claimed.

"Byrd is a bad one though" he continued, "he won't back off unless
he's forced to." "Exactly", I said, "but how do we force him to?" I
said that the present strategy wasn't working and wouldn't force him
to. I explained that what we have to do is pull all the store
workers out and shut the chains down nationwide. He gave the
official union answer to this saying that it was illegal. I said
that strikers have lost their homes that should be illegal. He then
said, "yeah, what we need is Jimmy Hoffa. If he was around this
strike would be over"

I said that we need to just violate that contract and pull everyone
out. His f response again was that this was illegal. I went on that
it was illegal not so long ago for him to sit in the front of a bus
in this country but someone put a stop to that. He livened up even
more. "Your right" he said with some fire in his eyes, "this country
was built on industrial revolution." These were his exact words.
{that's what those little squigly marks mean at the end of each word
or sentence}

I had a similar discussion with one other guy before I had to leave.
In each case they started with the ideas of the employers passed on
by their officials adn union publications; you can't do this, you
can't do that, and ended up agreeing with me that we have to go back
to the methods that built the unions in the first place. They also
dropped the ridiculous and downright childish idea that the problem
is one greedy CEO and expressed their thoughts more in class terms;
all employers are the problem. The last two were a little older than
the first two and I think had been through the strike some years ago
so they were a little more seasoned which is why I think they knew a
little more; they knew were to look and probably had more connections.

I think that this also proves one important point. The role of the
leadership cannot simply be ignored. Why are the workers picketing
wall Street? Why are they fixating on one CEO? Because this is the
strategy of their leaders. This strategy has to be taken up and
exposed and the alternative presented. What makes their strategy
dominant at all is not so much their subjective strength in general
but this strength in comparison to any other opposition in the union
or workers movement.

Were all those that claim they oppose the present weak state of the
unions to join forces and openly campaign and organize against the
trade union leadership and their policies, the consciousness of the
members and the working class in general would benefit from it. I
say this because many activists simply want to ignore this leadership
and we can't, and we shouldn't. We should not abandon our
organizations to them. And we cannot begin to make changes by simply
calling for democratic reform in the abstract. Alternative programs
and strategy must be fought for.

Richard
--

Richard Mellor
Member, AFSCME Local 444
Oakland CA

"We think too small. Like the frog at the bottom of the well. He
thinks the sky is only as big as the top of the well. If he
surfaced, he would have an entirely different view."

Related Link: http://laborsmilitantvoice.com
author by iosafpublication date Sat Feb 07, 2004 15:06author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Oh now the frog at the bottom of the well really isn't that narrowminded, Mr Throne.
Now by occasionally reading your lengthy pieces I feel I have a grasp on how your mind works, in simple little logical steps, so I'll bring you through the frog thing step by step:-

1. How did the frog get down the well?
2. & just as important, _why_ did the frog go down the well? (surely there is some "froggy" advantage to be had whilst living at the bottom of a damp pit?)
3. If the frog is a healthy frog, may we presume it will mate? (We know that frogs mate by sending out acoustic signals and "froggy type" smells. Any cylindrical space will afford generous amplification to a frog's "ribbid" and thus a happy little laddy froggy at the bottom of a well, will find his song of lurve heard over greater distances. This will draw female froggies to his well and the female frog being a sexually voracious creature will undoubtedly take the leap down that well and start breeding. (on average 500 frogspawn will be the product of a succesful frog union "blessed by God and God alone with the babies"). Frogs are not troubled by intense female rivalry and any other female frog jumping down the well will probably not be attacked by her happily mating sister.
4. How long will it take frog and offspring to outlive the restrictive space at the bottom of the well? This is complicated by their "survival index", Somewhere in the extremely complex amphibian brain of the frog, a series of events shall have guaranteed wide genetic diversity by bringing together oddles of frogs in ...
{might I now place a trump card upon the table, Mr Throne}
..... in the absence of predators.
5. Living life at the bottom of a well, therefore really seems on the face of it to be a very good place to live for froggies, who finally (rubbing salt in to the wound)
6. Have very poor sight. Frogs are unique amongst amphibians in that they have very restricted sight. It is actually quite unlikely that your froggie at the bottom of the well would be able to see the sky above at all.

background material:
http://www-itg.lbl.gov/ITG.hm.pg.docs/dissect/info.html
this is a virtual frog dissection kit as used in Californian schools where you live Mr Throne.
http://www.froguts.com/flash_content/index.html
and this is a better flash froggie virtual disect.

If you're interested in the cutting edge of froggie sexual research you may be interested to know that increased use of hebicides is "hermaphrodising" frogs accross the USA. Now Mr Throne, "the militant voice of Labor", this works in your favour sort of. For our fabulous frog at the bottom of the well, would no doubt be victim to leeching of herbicide through the water table. Even though living in a perfect environment for a froggie, apparantly safe from predators, with a nice echo chamber and room for the tadpoles our little froggie would be neither frogette or froggó.

You like being a militant don't you?
How long have you been "the voice"?
Were you always "the voice"? or were the others before you?

author by Our Los Angeles Correspondentpublication date Sat Feb 07, 2004 19:08author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Strikers are getting to do what they thought they should do from the start. Confront the scabs and the scab-shoppers.

Related Link: http://la.indymedia.org/news/2004/02/102533.php
Number of comments per page
  
 
© 2001-2025 Independent Media Centre Ireland. Unless otherwise stated by the author, all content is free for non-commercial reuse, reprint, and rebroadcast, on the net and elsewhere. Opinions are those of the contributors and are not necessarily endorsed by Independent Media Centre Ireland. Disclaimer | Privacy