Archive for the 'Labor Movement' Category

Danger: Pushing ‘Recovery’ with a ‘White’ Top and a Black Bottom

by @ Thursday, April 23rd, 2009. Filed under African-American, Economic Democracy, Labor Movement, Racism

Economic Recovery for Everyone:

Racial Equity and Prosperity

 


by The Center for Social Inclusion

Published by POVERTY & RACE
RESEARCH ACTION COUNCIL
March/April 2009
Volume 18: Number 2


States are poised to receive significant federal funding to stimulate the economy and put people back to work. Much of it targets “shovel ready” projects. Government has to be smart about how it uses our money. The stimulus package alone will not be enough to put everyone who needs a job back to work. And it will not support all the services our communities need. But if it is allocated wisely and fairly, it can be a powerful boost to the economy and improve the lives of many.


To do that, states must ensure that those in the most need benefit from the stimulus. While we have made much progress on race and gender equality in this country, we have not yet achieved full fairness, and these inequities limit prosperity for all of us.

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Mike Davis on the Crisis, Obama, FDR and Socialism Today

by @ Saturday, March 28th, 2009. Filed under Economic Democracy, Economy, Labor Movement, Socialism

 

Bill Moyers Talks
With Mike Davis
on the Economic Crisis

 

March 20, 2009

BILL MOYERS: For all the talk on the cable channels and in the blogosphere, you would think Washington has been invaded and conquered. Remember that scary movie from the 1950’s, INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS? MALE VOICE: Everyone! They’re here already! You’re next! You’re next!

Many film scholars believe the movie is a paranoid parable, warning of a Communist takeover of America. But today, the body snatchers are you ready for this? Socialists! That’s right. Socialists, reportedly swarming over the city and making off with the means of production, namely the Federal budget. I’m not making this up. Newsweek was the first to spot the aliens a month ago and it was us. Here’s the headline of a recent article on Salon.com. Newt Gingrich, reincarnated once again as himself, sounds as if Obama ate his Contract with America for lunch and coughed it up as “European Socialism.”

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Anti-Immigrant in Black Face?

by @ Tuesday, May 29th, 2007. Filed under African-American, Economy, Labor Movement
Advertisement for the 'Coalition for the Future American Worker'The picture in the ad immediately caught my attention. The photo was of a very dignified older African American man looking into the camera, very determined and equally pensive. Underneath his photo was a caption giving his name—T. Willard Fair—and the fact that he was the veteran of 40 years of struggle in the Civil Rights Movement. This was certainly enough to pique my interest. Beneath the caption was a statement declaring that the alleged threat to African Americans comes from documented and undocumented immigrants. He went on to suggest that any notion of legalizing undocumented workers was a slap in the face of African Americans. The ad is associated with a group called the “Coalition for the Future American Worker.” Fair’s attack is not surprising, although the virulence and historical nature of it is very unsettling, particularly because it is bound to strike a chord among many African Americans. Black America has been taking a prolonged economic hit since the mid 1970s. The economic reorganization which many people call de-industrialization has had a devastating impact on the (more...)

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Do Unions Have a Future?

by @ Tuesday, January 16th, 2007. Filed under Economic Democracy, Globalization, Labor Movement
Australian Prime Minister John HowardMax Ogden, SolidarityEconomy.net January 16, 2007, Australia With acknowledgements for helpful comments – Dave Davies, Dave Feickert, and Greg Pettiona The Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) has led a very fine campaign against the reactionary industrial relations legislation and is winning the public debate. However in the long term the union movement needs to add another important dimension to its strategy, if it is not only to regain and increase membership and the critical role that a (more...)

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Worker-Owners and Unions: Why Can’t We Just Get Along?

by @ Wednesday, October 18th, 2006. Filed under Economic Democracy, High Road Economics, Labor Movement
Worker-owners at Colors, NYCYou have probably heard the story of the scorpion that convinces a frog to carry it across a river. Halfway across, the scorpion stings the frog, which means both will drown. The frog does not understand; the scorpion explains, "I couldn't help myself. It's my nature." In the abstract, worker-owned enterprises and labor unions would appear to have much in common. Both share the goal of improving pay and working conditions. Both aim to give workers a say in the workplace. And both belong on any progressive's short list of strategies for building a more just economic system. But when unions and worker-owned businesses actually interact, they sometimes act more like the fabled arachnid. The Ohio Employee Ownership Center at Kent State, where I work, provides preliminary technical assistance on worker buyouts. I once met with a group of employees exploring a worker buyout of a failing paper mill in southwest Ohio. When I (more...)

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The People Vs. The Developers

by @ Sunday, October 8th, 2006. Filed under High Road Economics, Labor Movement
Affordable housing protest in NYCTenants’ Bid Among a Dozen for Complexes (original title)
A group aligned with tenants of Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village submitted a $4.5 billion bid yesterday to buy the 110 apartment buildings overlooking the East River in the hope of retaining the complexes as middle-income housing. Their offer was neither the highest nor the lowest in one of the biggest real estate auctions of all time. Metropolitan Life, the company that built Peter Cooper Village and Stuyvesant Town in 1947 for returning veterans, got roughly a dozen offers by its 3 p.m. deadline yesterday, ranging from $4.3 billion to slightly more than $5 billion, according to real estate executives. (more...)

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Exploitation Without Borders

by @ Sunday, September 24th, 2006. Filed under Globalization, Labor Movement, Latin America
Immigrant Rights RallyI am waiting to board the train in San Diego when I notice the Border Patrol agent making his way down our line. He stops by each person who looks 'Latino' and asks them to present their legal documents. As the people standing next to me rummage for their identity papers, I stand by, angry, embarrassed and ashamed. In that moment, I don’t know what to say or do to protest. My mind suddenly travels back in time. I 'remember' what it must have been like during slavery for Black people who made it to the North. If they had no papers, they were doomed to live each day in fear. If they were 'legalized' by free papers, they still always needed these documents, no matter who they were or how old they were or how long they had lived in their community. These papers were all that stood between them and being 'deported' and returned to their slave status. (more...)

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The Left, the Market and the Struggle for Socialism

by @ Thursday, September 7th, 2006. Filed under Economic Democracy, Labor Movement, Organizing
Image from the film The CorporationA leader in the revolutionary left in the US should feel like a fox in a chicken coop. Increasingly large capitalists (Walmart, Enron, Wall-Street) are being exposed as so destructive to our society. The Bush administration creates global chaos and suffering. Attacks on democratic rights are expanding. Thoughtful people in all strata of our society realize that there are dangerous trends that need to be met with positive alternatives. Young people, and leaders from all sectors, are open to new ideas including the notion of system change. In other parts of the world resistance has and is being converted to system change. We see this taking place particularly in South and Central America as countries shift to the left. In our own country, though, the social movement remains marginal despite deepening anxiety among the majority of our (more...)

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