RSN Fundraising Banner
FB Share
Email This Page
add comment
Politics
FOCUS: Ukraine Peace Move Sets Off Violent Rightist Riot in Kiev Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=20877"><span class="small">William Boardman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Tuesday, 08 September 2015 11:36

Boardman writes: "When the Ukrainian parliament voted overwhelmingly, but almost a year late, to amend the Ukrainian constitution to allow greater autonomy to the eastern, separatist regions of Donetsk and Luhansk, Ukraine's rightwing nationalists immediately unleashed violence in the streets."

Protests in Ukraine. (photo: Reuters)
Protests in Ukraine. (photo: Reuters)


Ukraine Peace Move Sets Off Violent Rightist Riot in Kiev

By William Boardman, Reader Supported News

08 September 15

 

The question still in Ukraine: will peace be allowed?

hen the Ukrainian parliament voted overwhelmingly, but almost a year late, to amend the Ukrainian constitution to allow greater autonomy to the eastern, separatist regions of Donetsk and Luhansk, Ukraine’s right-wing nationalists immediately unleashed violence in the streets. The August 31 preliminary vote on the first reading of the constitutional amendment was 265-185 in favor, and changed nothing for now – except for the willingness of hundreds of right-wing protestors to amplify the democratic process with smoke bomb and hand grenade attacks on national guards and police. 

Eventually the reform bill will pass or fail in the vote on the second reading, which is expected in the next few months. To pass then it will need a two-thirds majority of 450 legislators, or 300 votes. Presumably street violence by the opponents now will make it harder for supporters to reach the 300-vote majority. 

By contrast, there were no public outbursts earlier this year, after the parliament formally recognized and granted pensions to members of the World War II fascist army, the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), that collaborated with the Nazi occupation in killing Jews and Poles. 

The attacks killed three national guards and blew the leg off a fourth. A Kiev police spokeswoman reported the day after the rioting that 141 people remained in hospitals, 131 of them national guards or police, ten of them in serious condition. The Kiev government deployed some 2,000 police and national guards to control the violence. They have arrested about 30 people, including a Svoboda party member of parliament accused of throwing a grenade. 

According to the BBC: “The protest was organised by the populist Radical Party and ultra-nationalist Svoboda (Freedom) party – who oppose any concession to the separatists.” [emphasis added] Police say they plan to question top Svoboda party leaders about their role, if any, in the organized violence. Svoboda has six seats in parliament. Svoboda officially claimed the violence was triggered by national guard and police attacks on the protestors (an account at odds with those of reporters on the scene, a number of whom were themselves injured). The paramilitary organization Right Sector, with extreme nationalist views, also appeared to be involved as its symbols and flags dotted the protest.  

Peace requires implementation of the Minsk Protocols

Over a year ago, the first Minsk Protocol was signed by four entities: Ukraine, Russia, and the self-declared People’s Republics of Donetsk and Luhansk. The resulting cease-fire didn’t hold and other conditions went unachieved. This led to a summit convened by France and Germany that produced a second Minsk Protocol signed on February 11, 2015, by Ukraine, Russia, the two people’s republics, and the OSCE (Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe). The OSCE’s role is to monitor compliance. 

The Minsk Protocol is not designed to settle all Ukraine’s conflicts, only the relentless fighting in the Donbass region along the Russian border, where the Ukraine government and Ukrainian separatists have spent a year and a half fighting to a stalemate. The Minsk Protocol ignores the issue of Crimea, taken over by the Russians in 2014. And the Minsk Protocol does not include other parties interested in Ukrainian instability or separation from Russian influence – including NATO, the US, and other hostile countries ringing Ukraine and Belarus. These non-signatories have contributed little to achieving peace in Ukraine, and some have acted to prevent it. 

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, faced with seemingly intractable resistance to peace in Ukraine on all sides, characterized the right-wing violence in Kiev as “a stab in the back.” On September 5, Poroshenko, apparently looking for good straws in an ill wind, made much of the fact that the week just ended was the first in which no Ukrainian soldier died in combat (some died from landmines and car accidents). The conflict in Donbass has killed more than 6,800 people since late spring 2014. Despite tensions and contradictions inherent in the Ukrainian situation, on September 5, Poroshenko focused on a glimmer of hope:

Alternatives to the Minsk agreement do not exist. Also if we want to return Ukraine’s territory, if we want to stop the occupation, if we want to regain control of all Ukrainian borders and if we want to release Ukrainian hostages illegally detained in the occupied territories and in Russia, then the OSCE’s role is very important.

The same day, German chancellor Angela Merkel expressed a similar, supportive view: “We are in the process of very subtle, detailed work trying to make progress. Unfortunately progress has been slower than we thought but we are very committed to this process.” 

Endless fighting in the Donbass is only the most violent of the problems Ukraine faces. Much more pervasive and perhaps intransigent is the country’s longstanding, pervasive culture of corruption. Even the Ukrainian justice system, with extensive control of many sectors of the economy, has been the target of reform, but “still looks more like a crime syndicate than a law enforcement agency,” according to EU Observor.

US and NATO lead anti-peace and anti-stability activities

Were it not for twenty years of US/NATO aggressive encroachment on Russia, Ukraine would not be in its present parlous state (although it might be in some other crisis, as has been true for much of its history). Even now, US/NATO forces seem to have no idea that backing off, even a little, might be good for Ukraine, Europe, and most of the rest of the world. Whatever the Obama administration might say, its officials continue to keep the imperial pressure on Russia, at little cost to the US, but little good for Ukraine or Europe. 

The deeper mystery is why the US, under whatever president happens to be in office, remains relentless in its endless belligerence that, in a worst-case scenario, could end in nuclear war. Deepening the mystery further is the scarcity of reliable information from any side. American propaganda points haven’t changed substantively in decades. Russian propaganda has intensified, especially aimed at Russian-speaking Ukrainians. In response, Ukraine has started Ukraine Tomorrow, a state-owned foreign broadcasting operation to be run by the Ukraine Ministry of Information Policy. Forced through parliament in December 2014 as an anti-Russian government organ, the ministry is referred to by critics as the Ministry of Truth, a reference to the totalitarian control of information in George Orwell’s “1984.” One of the ministry’s first acts was to start banning books that were “insulting a nation and its people.” Ukraine has seen its freedom of speech wither before. 

The fog of propaganda obscures reality, often deliberately, as in this Newsweek summary of the same events discussed above, by a fellow at the Cato Institute:

Unfortunately, the eruption of violent protests in Kiev last week, in response to the Ukrainian parliament’s consideration of a decentralization bill granting greater autonomy to Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts, seems to suggest that a permanent resolution is still a long way off. Yet the United States can certainly bring pressure to bear on both Ukraine and Russia to reach a permanent settlement.

This assessment is literally nuts, divorced from reality. Violent protests didn’t just “erupt,” they were carried out by right-wing nationalists that Newsweek doesn’t mention. The US used those right-wing nationalists and the violence they provided to topple the elected Ukraine government in the Maidan of 2014. The idea that the US would bring pressure for a peaceful settlement is a pure fantasy, contrary to twenty years of past and present destabilization of Ukraine. But even this Cato Institute fellow hints at the efficacy of US/NATO forces backing off from their endless confrontation with Russia, as he grudgingly writes:

In essence, the United States must be willing to grant Putin something he will surely portray as a victory. Unpalatable as that may be, it is certainly preferable to an indefinite continuation of the Ukrainian conflict.

Sadly, this perpetuates the Cold War framing that has distorted US policy for far too long. What the US still refuses to consider is that Ukrainians, perhaps a majority of them, would prefer to be an independent, democratic state and not anybody’s pawn. But the inherent divisions of Ukraine from east to west must be addressed and resolved honestly and respectfully for anything like peaceful independence to come to Ukraine. The Minsk Protocol addresses some of the legitimate concerns of the Donbass. Until the illegitimate violence of the western nationalists can be contained, it serves as a potential veto on any peace process short of military victory and de facto occupation. 

So is the key that Ukraine conflict is good for weapons sellers?

The eastern European panic touched off by the Russian taking of Crimea seems to have abated little, partly because the Russians, under US pressure, have chosen not to take the lead in relaxing tensions. There seems little flexibility in the larger context of Ukraine, where everyone seems to be thinking military first, democratic cooperation maybe never. Some items:

  • NATO is opening new offices in eastern European countries (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, and Bulgaria) adding to the perception that NATO is intent on encircling Russia. Ukraine feeds this perception by participating in NATO war games.
  • The US Navy has increased its presence in the Black Sea as an anti-Russian move. On September 1, the US Navy started operation Sea Breeze, joint operations with the Ukraine Navy (which lost more than half its ships in Crimea) and nine other countries. Roughly two thirds of Ukraine’s sailors defected to Russia. Ukraine, with about a dozen ships and 5,000 sailors, is seeking to rebuild its navy
  • Ukraine has used internationally-banned cluster bombs against the separatists in the Donbass, one of five countries in the world where they have been used this year (the others are Yemen, Syria, Sudan, and Libya). The US, which has not signed the treaty banning cluster bombs, continues to make and distribute these anti-personnel weapons that take a heavy toll on civilians. With cluster bombs, as with much else, the US continues to be a rogue state in defiance of the international community.  
  • Ukraine has renewed its bid to join NATO, which will take awhile. Meanwhile NATO’s secretary general plans to make his first visit to Ukraine in September. 
  • On September 11, President Poroshenko address the opening session of the 12th annual meeting of the Yalta European Strategy Forum (YES), where the agenda is: “At Risk: How the New Ukraine’s Fate Affects Europe and the World.” The goal of YES, posted on the YES website, was clearly articulated by a member in 2012: “I firmly believe that by strengthening its democracy, Ukraine can reach the point of no return on its path to the European Union.” The YES Forum is essentially a neo-Cold War gathering where the others speakers include: Gen. Stanley McChrystal (U.S. Army, Retired); Victoria Nuland, Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs, U.S. Department of State (famous for saying “f*ck the EU”); Gen. David A. Petraeus (U.S. Army, Retired, and Director, Central Intelligence Agency, 2011-2012); Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Secretary General of NATO (2009-2014); and Strobe Talbott, President, Brookings Institution, and Chair, Foreign Affairs Policy Board, U.S. Department of State. These are not people known for their determination to seek accommodation.

The official US state of mind is committed to military response and little else.

Republican congressman from Arkansas Steve Womack is one of those busy promoting hostility for its own sake. His recent blog post warns spookily about “the question of the balance of power in Europe,” without even attempting to explain what he means. He mentions neither the recent week without casualties in eastern Ukraine nor the Ukraine parliament’s first step toward implementing peace accords. He does get the geography right: “For the sake of review, Ukraine shares its eastern border with Russia and its western border with North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) members Poland, Slovakia, Hungary and Romania.”

American policy makers, like Womack, seem to have no clue that that is exactly the heart of the problem. 

Meanwhile in Europe, France is proposing a meeting with Ukraine, Russia, and Germany to advance the peace process in Ukraine. That is one indication of growing differences between the US and Europe on maintaining a divisive Ukraine policy.

As this is written, Ukraine Today is reporting that three Ukrainian service men have been kidnapped and are being held in Crimea by Russian forces. 



William M. Boardman has over 40 years experience in theatre, radio, TV, print journalism, and non-fiction, including 20 years in the Vermont judiciary. He has received honors from Writers Guild of America, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Vermont Life magazine, and an Emmy Award nomination from the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
FOCUS: A Crisis of Public Morality, Not Private Morality Print
Tuesday, 08 September 2015 10:14

Reich writes: "At a time many Republican presidential candidates and state legislators are furiously focusing on private morality - what people do in their bedrooms, contraception, abortion, gay marriage - America is experiencing a far more significant crisis in public morality."

Robert Reich. (photo: Richard Morgenstein)
Robert Reich. (photo: Richard Morgenstein)


A Crisis of Public Morality, Not Private Morality

By Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Blog

08 September 15

 

t a time many Republican presidential candidates and state legislators are furiously focusing on private morality – what people do in their bedrooms, contraception, abortion, gay marriage – America is experiencing a far more significant crisis in public morality.

CEOs of large corporations now earn 300 times the wages of average workers. Insider trading is endemic on Wall Street, where hedge-fund and private-equity moguls are taking home hundreds of millions.

A handful of extraordinarily wealthy people are investing unprecedented sums in the upcoming election, seeking to rig the economy for their benefit even more than it’s already rigged.

Yet the wages of average working people continue to languish as jobs are off-shored or off-loaded onto “independent contractors.”

All this is in sharp contrast to the first three decades after World War II.

Then, the typical CEO earned no more than 40 times what the typical worker earned, and Wall Street was boring.

Then, the wealthy didn’t try to control elections.

And in that era, the wages of most Americans rose.

Profitable firms didn’t lay off their workers. They didn’t replace full-time employees with independent contractors, or bust unions. They gave their workers a significant share of the gains.

Consumers, workers, and the community were considered stakeholders of almost equal entitlement.

We invested in education and highways and social services. We financed all of this with our taxes.

The marginal income tax on the highest income earners never fell below 70 percent. Even the effective rate, after all deductions and tax credits, was still well above 50%.

We had a shared sense of public morality because we knew we were all in it together. We had been through a Great Depression and a terrible war, and we understood our interdependence.

But over time, we forgot.

The change began when Wall Street convinced the Reagan Administration and subsequent administrations to repeal regulations put in place after the crash of 1929 to prevent a repeat of the excesses that had led to the Great Depression.

This, in turn, moved the American economy from stakeholder capitalism to shareholder capitalism, whose sole objective is to maximize shareholder returns.

Shareholder capitalism ushered in an era of excess. In the 1980s it brought junk bond scandals and insider trading.

In the 1990s it brought a speculative binge culminating in the bursting of the dotcom bubble. At the urging of Wall Street, Bill Clinton repealed the Glass-Steagall Act, which had separated investment from commercial banking.

In 2001 and 2002 it produced Enron and the corporate looting scandals, revealing not only the dark side of some of the most admired companies in America but also the complicity of Wall Street, many of whose traders were actively involved.

The Street’s subsequent gambling in derivatives and risky mortgages resulted in the crash of 2008, and a massive taxpayer-financed bailout.

The Dodd-Frank Act attempted to rein in the Street but Wall Street lobbyists have done everything possible to eviscerate it. Republicans haven’t even appropriated sufficient money to enforce it.

The final blow to public morality came when a majority of the Supreme Court decided corporations and wealthy individuals have a right under the First Amendment to spend whatever they wish on elections.

Public morality can’t be legislated but it can be encouraged.

Glass-Steagall must be resurrected. Big banks have to be broken up.

CEO pay must be bridled. Pay in excess of $1 million shouldn’t be deductible from corporate income taxes. Corporations with high ratios of executive pay to typical workers should face higher tax rates than those with lower ratios.

People earning tens if not hundreds of millions of dollars a year should pay the same 70 percent tax rate top earners paid before 1981.

And we must get big money out of politics – reversing those Supreme Court rulings, providing public financing of elections, and getting full disclosure of the sources of all campaign contributions.

None of this is possible without a broadly based citizen movement to rescue our democracy, take back our economy, and restore a minimal standard of public morality.

America’s problems have nothing to do with what happens bedrooms, or whether women are allowed to end their pregnancies.

Our problems have everything to do with what occurs in boardrooms, and whether corporations and wealthy individuals are allowed to undermine our democracy.


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
Can Millennials Save Unions? Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=36639"><span class="small">Jonathan Timm, The Atlantic</span></a>   
Tuesday, 08 September 2015 07:58

Timm writes: "Union membership in the United States is at a historic low, what with the decline of the heavily unionized manufacturing industry, but it is lowest by far among Millennials."

Union membership in the United States is at a historic low, but it is lowest by far among Millennials. (photo: Zak Bickel/The Atlantic/AP)
Union membership in the United States is at a historic low, but it is lowest by far among Millennials. (photo: Zak Bickel/The Atlantic/AP)


Can Millennials Save Unions?

By Jonathan Timm, The Atlantic

08 September 15

 

Membership rates are at historic lows for all American workers, especially those in their 20s and early 30s—and yet, that’s a generation with unusually favorable opinions of organized labor and what it stands for.

n 2008, Emma Bell Bern had just graduated from college and was ready to start living on her own. Leaving behind the rural college town of Galesburg, Illinois, she set off for Chicago for her first big-city experience. She got a job as a barista at a Peet’s Coffee and Tea on the city’s North Side.

Bell Bern liked working at Peet’s. Founded in Berkeley in the 1960s and known for its laid-back atmosphere, the company encouraged her to develop in-depth knowledge about their selection of coffees and teas from around the world, taste everything she could, and develop her palate.

“It was a little bit of a culture cult, but it spoke to me,” Bell Bern told me. “I like to learn, and I'm attracted to specialty knowledge, so I thought, ‘This is something I can excel in, that not everyone knows about.’ I was into it.”

Bell Bern kept her job for several years, eventually becoming a shift manager and one of the longest-tenured employees at her store. She wasn’t without complaints, but she enjoyed her work, liked her coworkers, formed relationships with regulars, and made enough money to get by.

But a few years later, in its efforts to secure an almost $1 billion acquisition, the company started looking for ways to cut costs and began making operational changes, some of which frustrated Bell Bern and her coworkers. At her store, she says, the manager cut the morning-rush staff in half, and a shop that once allowed for detailed conversations with customers about the minutiae of coffee now had lines snaking out the door. Meanwhile, a screen behind the bar tracked the time between a drink order and its completion, blinking from green to red as minutes passed.

Bell Bern says that at her store, the coffee bags used to sell Peet’s beans to customers were replaced by cheaper, flimsier models that ripped open, spilling their contents across the floor. She adds that some store equipment fell into disrepair, including an urn that broke during a morning rush, leaving the shop without coffee for hours.

“From the beginning, we were encouraged to take our jobs really seriously, but the conditions increasingly became such that we weren’t given the tools or resources to do that, so we were kind of humiliated,” Bell Bern said. “Loyal customers were starting to tell me that they didn't like coming to the store anymore, and I didn't either.”

Some Peet’s employees were having similar experiences in other parts of  the country. According to an exhaustive report in the Oakland-based alt-weekly East Bay Express, the company’s new speed standards on the espresso machines left numerous baristas with serious hand and wrist injuries, not to mention lower quality drinks.  

As for Bell Bern, the issues went beyond the day-to-day operations of the store. Though the starting wage had increased from $8.50 per hour to $9.50, her annual raise was around 12 cents per hour, so even after years with the company, Bell Bern’s trainees were paid more than she was. Hailing from the union stronghold of Madison, Wisconsin, Bell Bern held pro-labor views and had no reservations about calling her working conditions unfair. But while the idea of organizing a union at Peet’s was something she joked about occasionally, she didn’t see it happening—at least not then.

Union membership in the United States is at a historic low, what with the decline of the heavily unionized manufacturing industry, but it is lowest by far among Millennials: Only around 4 percent of workers aged 16 to 24 and 9 percent of workers aged 25 to 34 belong to a union. (In 1980, those figures were 15 percent and 28 percent, respectively.) The national membership rate has been falling steadily for decades, but today it would barely be a blip if not for the longtime members of older public-sector unions.

Educated Millennials have proven to be a particularly difficult group to organize, labor leaders have said, as they are heavily concentrated in high-turnover sectors, such as retail or food service. Further, they are scarcely aware of the union cause, or don’t consider joining a union possible.

So it was big news for labor when, in June, Gawker Media’s employees voted to join the Writers Guild of America, East, a union that represents writers, digital-media producers, standup comedians, and other creative workers in the entertainment industry.

The move was novel in several ways. For one, Gawker Media—which encompasses Jezebel, Deadspin, Gizmodo, and other sites—is the first new-media company to organize. Though newspapers were once union strongholds, many of them are no longer organized, and it remains to be seen whether the industry’s next generation will follow in their footsteps. As recently as January of this year, The Washington Post’s labor reporter published an article explaining the considerable barriers to unionization faced by young reporters, such as the surplus of labor, the high turnover, and new models of revenue sharing.

Another peculiarity was that Gawker already offered exceptional benefits to its employees, and Nick Denton, its founder and proprietor, was supportive of the campaign. Good compensation and pro-labor management aren’t typically the ingredients of a union drive.

But what got the most attention was the move’s apparent symbolism. With irreverent, Internet-fluent headlines such as “Scalia is a Twitter Egg” and “Jihad Me at Hello: Tinder Flirting With Osama bin Laden's Love Letters,” Gawker is seen as a prototypical Millennial media company.

For that reason, many saw Gawker’s move as a sign of more to come. “If the unionization effort succeeds, it will be a big PR boost for the ailing labor movement,” wrote Steven Greenhouse, the former labor reporter for The New York Times, on the eve of the vote. “It will show that unions, which have focused in recent years on organizing low-wage workers, can also attract hip, highly educated workers, many of them Ivy League graduates.”

Not long after Gawker’s announcement, Salon’s editorial staff voted unanimously to join a union, and after some back and forth, they were successful. One former Politico reporter, Michael Elk, tried unsuccessfully to organize his ex-colleagues, but didn't get far, which he attributed to a less union-friendly staff and a “culture of fear.”

While young, educated workers may not be joining unions in droves, the Gawker staff’s inclination is echoed in stirrings in other sectors over the last couple years. This March, unions representing graduate students at NYU won a historic contract to secure health coverage, pay raises, and funds for child and family healthcare; the victory followed years of challenges to NYU grad students’ rights since they first won the right to unionize in 2001. And in April of last year, Northwestern University’s football team voted to join the College Athletes Players Association, citing the need for long-term healthcare, the players’ long hours, and their lack of a voice within the organization. While the National Labor Relations Board recently rejected their petition, the Times reports that, whether or not the momentum can be attributed to Northwestern, “N.C.A.A. governance has been overhauled; universities and conferences have pledged greater scholarship protection and better health care; a federal judge has ruled that players can be paid for the use of their images.”  

And in what might be one of the more remarkable examples of organizing among Millennials, Haley Quinn, an intern at the American Federation of Teachers, organized her fellow interns, culminating in their vote to join the Office and Professional Employees International Union. The AFT is a hospitable environment for a union drive, of course, but the OPEIU is hoping to use the development as proof that even some of the most transient workers can be organized.

If large numbers of young, educated Millennials followed in these footsteps, the economic impact could be enormous. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, union workers on average make more money and have better access to wages and benefits than nonunion workers. And according to The Century Foundation, a left-leaning think tank, a worker can expect to earn an extra $551,000 in wealth over his or her lifetime simply as a result of joining a union. Given that by 2025 Millennials will make up 75 percent of the global workforce, the difference in earned wealth for a huge slice of the population would be in the billions. Could Millennials revive unions?

At the very least, Millennials’ positive opinions of unions should inspire some optimism among the labor movement. Earlier this year, Pew found that, while opinions about unions are evenly split among older generations, the majority of young people view them favorably. The Center for American Progress found in post-election polls a similar level of modest but still solid support among young people.

What Millennials think of unions specifically is one thing, but another question is whether Millennials tend to share, as some of the post-Gawker commentary would suggest, the values that fuel organized labor. Several studies suggest that they do.

One comes from PwC, the global professional services firm. In 2013, the company launched a massive study to understand why their younger workers were leaving within the first few years of employment instead of working diligently for years in order to climb the corporate ladder. After a slew of surveys, interviews, and focus groups, the company concluded that younger employees wanted greater flexibility at work, desired a team-oriented culture with transparent compensation and promotion structures, and felt that keeping up with the high demands of work weren’t worth sacrifices to their personal lives. Without discussing unions at all, the firm had found that younger workers share concerns for some of the very things that unions have sought for generations.

Lowell Peterson, the Executive Director of the Writers Guild of America East, where Gawker’s employees are unionized, says that though his organizers don’t often find young workers who hail from “union families” or are inherently pro-union, he says that they share values that align with organized labor. “The young people we see are politically astute, skeptical of entrenched power systems, and concerned about income inequality,” Peterson told me.

But although these ideas are in the air, very few young people associate them with unions. Researchers at Cornell University, for example, found that the attitudes of many Millennials on unions were not as much defined by “Unions, yes!” or “Unions, no!” but “Unions, what?” Worryingly for the labor movement, favorable views on unions and what they stand for do not necessarily translate into actually joining them, even when the option is presented.

At Gawker, for example, some of those who voted no said that they supported unions, but felt uncomfortable with the fast-track they took toward joining one. Michael Hession, an editor at Gizmodo, believes that although union representation could be good for Gawker, it also carries risks that went unaddressed during their deliberation. “It’s easy to have everyone at the company say ‘I’m for better health benefits, I’m for a better wage scale, I’m for better transparency,’ but what are the things that we might be willing to give up to get those?” Hession wondered. “We didn’t really know.”

Midway through 2011, three years after Emma Bell Bern began working at Peet’s, one of her coworkers returned from a trip to in Portland and brought back a ‘zine written by a group of Starbucks workers who had organized themselves under the Industrial Workers of the World.

“I remember thinking, ‘Oh my god!’” Bell Bern said. “That was the first time I saw any other person putting my problems out there.” She convened some of her coworkers in a small studio apartment to discuss their working conditions, and they went on to meet regularly. When they tried to involve the rest of the staff, they struggled to get everyone onboard, because some felt that nothing could be done, while others feared for their jobs. Still, after a year of slow and steady work, they were ready to start pushing for changes.

They met with their store manager first, to discuss their concerns and make sure he was aware of lower-level issues. Then came the bigger action: On September 3rd, Labor Day, 2012, they sent a letter to Peet’s corporate headquarters, laying out their formal complaints and specific proposed solutions. “Peet’s failure to pay a living wage to the majority of its employees directly undermines its stated vision and mission to ‘inspire our people,’” wrote the “Peet’s Workers Group.” They proposed a starting wage of $11 an hour, with 75-cent increases every six months, and paid sick time. Two days later, a Peet’s representative delivered a signed memo to the store stating that the regional director of store operations, Sam Ferreira, would visit the store on September 16 to address their concerns.

(Peet’s declined to comment on workers’ efforts to organize in at least two stores. A spokesperson said that it offers above-average wages and benefits and that employees tell the company in surveys that they “feel respected and valued and would recommend Peet's as a place to work.”)

When the meeting with Ferreira came along, the group was prepared. Reaching out to supportive store regulars, activists, and labor organizers, they had assembled dozens outside of the store to picket in support of the staff’s efforts.

Three Peet’s representatives led the meeting. Bell Bern and her coworkers closed the store early and formed a circle of chairs in the middle of the store. Opening up the meeting, Ferreira asked each member of the staff to introduce themselves and name their favorite coffee or tea.

According to Bell Bern, it wasn’t long before the meeting got tense. Ferreira, the Peets Workers Group wrote on their blog, said that the store seemed “divided,” and suggested that the local manager was responsible for the operational problems, such as poor equipment maintenance. The store’s staff insisted that the day-to-day issues had been resolved and that they had no issues with the current manager, but were there to discuss what was in their letter: compensation, healthcare, and scheduling. Ferreira, Bell Bern says, replied the way he would for the remainder of the meeting: He would be “happy to meet with any individuals privately about issues that affect the store,” she remembers him saying.

According to Bell Bern, the Peet’s representatives did not respond directly to the issues in the group’s letter. In an attempt to force an answer, one of the employees rose from his seat and walked to the window, where supporters had taped up signs, and read one of the signs out loud for the group: “This is not a protest. This is a respectful show of support. We support Peet’s Coffee and Tea as industry leaders, and we support them paying their employees a living wage.”

The meeting continued without the two parties finding common ground. Toward the end of the evening, Bell Bern’s friend and coworker turned to Ferreira directly, exasperated. “I just want to know this: We sent a letter to management, and you flew here from California,” she said. “And you are not going to address any of the concerns we outlined in that letter?” According to Bell Bern, he repeated that he would be happy to speak with any individuals about issues that affect the store. “I’ll take that as a no,” she said.

Unions have a record of connecting with youth that is far from perfect, and some of that may have to do with the fundamental idea of relinquishing control over bargaining to a larger entity. Millennials have shown themselves to be a generation that prefers transparency and wide-level input—in a word, democracy—and if they don’t see that, they’re unlikely to get onboard.

When Bell Bern was organizing at her coffee shop, she says older union members from the International Food and Commercial Workers union and other unions visited her store expecting to take the reins of their drive. One representative distributed worksheets for Bell Bern and her colleagues to fill out so that he could negotiate on their behalf. The approach was off-putting, and, worse, made Bell Bern and her coworkers feel just as low on the totem pole as they felt at work. “We could spot the hierarchy from a mile away and we were not into it,” she says.

Unions courting Millennials might do well to pay mind to that, as well as the fact that some young people want more than just better wages and benefits—many have a wider egalitarian vision that they would like to see realized, not just for themselves, but for others as well. Katy Fox-Hodess, a Ph.D. candidate in sociology at the University of California, Berkeley, is the former campus chair of UAW 2865. She has seen her fellow union members in California take their issues beyond the classroom and onto the campus grounds, staging a solidarity strike with a union representing janitors, gardeners, and other front-line workers.

“We see a real national trend of younger workers really pushing the labor movement to the left in a number of ways,” says Fox-Hodess. “We have to stand up on issues of racism, xenophobia, women’s issues, LGBT issues, foreign policy issues—we have to have a broader politics.”

This widened agenda could be an essential survival tool for unions. Ruth Milkman, a City University of New York sociologist specializing in labor issues, says that broad public support tends to force anti-union employers to back down and accept unionization. “Unions can be successful if they can build coalitions with larger groups,” says Milkman.

Another trend that might give unions traction is Millennials’ proficiency with communications technology. In its decision on Purple Communications, Inc., the National Labor Relations Board ruled that employees can use technology at work—such as their employer-provided email accounts and other means of electronic communications—for the purpose of forming a union. In addition, the NLRB issued new regulations that streamline the process of union elections, giving hostile employers less time and fewer opportunities to derail union drives.

These changes led three researchers at the Century Foundation, Mark Zuckerman, Richard Kahlenberg, and Moshe Marvit to write a report called “Virtual Labor Organizing,” in which they propose what would essentially be a TurboTax for joining a union. The platform the authors envision would connect its users to labor attorneys and experienced union organizers, who could help employees navigate the tricky technicalities of joining a union, the handling of which might otherwise hamper organizing efforts. In turn, unions would have a tool to expand their reach, connect to tech-savvy Millennials, and, of course, increase membership, all at very little cost.

The technology, the Century Foundation says, would turn the traditional model of union organizing on its head. Union organizing would be indigenous to workplaces, have a low barrier to entry, and be facilitated, rather than led by, larger unions.

But even though Millennials may have favorable views toward unions or want to join one, Ruth Milkman argues that national union-membership rates have little to do with any group’s desire to join one. What stands in the way of young people joining unions, generally speaking, is employers.

“It’s not about whether workers want to unionize. It’s really about whether it’s feasible to make that happen,” says Milkman. “In general, if you ask the majority of workers, ‘If you could have a union, would you like that?’ they say yes, but the opportunity to do that is rather limited.”

Walmart, known for decades for its aggressive anti-union practices, provided a striking example of employer opposition when one of its training videos was leaked this year. Actors in the video rattle off misleading information and falsehoods in an effort to convince new hires that, at bottom, Walmart is good and unions are bad. Ken Jacobs, the chairman of the University of California, Berkeley’s Labor Center, told The Atlantic that the video amounted to propaganda.

Walmart’s video captures an advantage that anti-labor employers have long had on their side: the ability to dedicate work hours to anti-union campaigns. When workers begin organizing, it’s not uncommon for employers to delay and deter the process with tried-and-true anti-union tactics such as captive-audience meetings, intimidation, and threats.  

Despite the longstanding protections of federal-labor law, employers illegally fire employees for union activity on a regular basis. A study by the Center for Economic and Policy Research found that about one out of every five union organizers are fired in retaliation for organizing. The study’s findings supported the view that aggressive, illegal employer behavior has played a significant role in the decline in private-sector unionization rates. And, as I’ve reported at The Atlantic, the penalties for violating long-standing labor laws are meager enough that many employers account for them in their budgets.

“Current law has given employers a powerful anti-union strategy,” the authors of the CEPR report wrote. “[F]ire one or more prominent pro-union employees...while intimidating the rest of the potential bargaining unit in advance of the NLRB-supervised election.”

The history of unions is full of difficult battles against hostile employers—not to mention militias. But while the violence may be gone, employers still oppose unions quite strongly. A study out of Cornell University looked at a random sampling of 1,004 union drives and found that union elections in which employers used numerous anti-union tactics more than doubled in comparison to the three earlier periods studied. Employers threatened to close plants in more than half of the campaigns and threatened to slash wages and benefits in 47 percent. In 63 percent of the cases, employers interrogated workers one-on-one about their support for the union campaign, despite the fact that it is illegal to do so.

In 2009, lawmakers introduced a bill aimed at leveling the playing field. Employers are able to respond to a union petition with a demand for a secret ballot, while campaigning against the union in the meantime, and the “Employee Free Choice Act” would have forced companies to recognize their workers’ unions once a majority of employees sign a petition in favor of joining one (this is what’s known as a “card check”). The EFCA would also have increased penalties for employers who discriminated against workers who tried to organize. But that legislation failed, and shows little sign of being resuscitated anytime soon.

If anything, legislation is moving in the opposite direction. “Right to Work” laws—which make it illegal for unions to require employees to pay dues—have passed in three states in the past three years, most famously in Wisconsin, despite massive protests. Unions are facing a serious threat in court, too. In Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association, the Supreme Court could rule that union members cannot be forced to pay union dues, leaving public-sector unions, which have the highest membership rates in the country, with few resources and little bargaining power.

Jake Rosenfeld, a professor of sociology at the University of Washington and author of the book “What Unions No Longer Do,” says that although there have been significant strides in the last few years, he doesn’t see a big labor revival on the way. “Gawker was interesting,” Rosenfeld wrote me in an email, “but for me to change my take on the matter further would require a major employer—say a Burger King—coming out and announcing something along the lines of, ‘You know what, we'd like to work with unions.’”

After Emma Bell Bern and her coworkers met with Peet’s representatives, the group’s momentum waned. While they made some progress by pressing their managers to address store-level issues, the broader questions they raised in their letter, regarding compensation structure and sick leave, went unaddressed. Bell Bern was fired some months later for being late three times in a year—per what her workers’ group called a selectively-enforced policy—while others left of their own volition. The combination of high turnover with the runaround from upper-level management, Bell Bern says, wore the group down.

It’s a complicated era for Bell Bern to revisit, as she feels pride for the challenge she and her group posed to the status quo, wondering at the same time whether the group could have taken bolder steps. Since then, her vision of progressive political action has broadened, and she feels that traditional union organizing is too narrow to create lasting change. She feels that any useful vision of labor organizing must account for a comprehensive view of oppression, based on gender, class, race, and other factors.

According to Ruth Milkman, the labor movement has always advanced in big bursts, so if Millennials were to revive the union, it would have to be in the form of a massive social uprising, or some other kind of major change. Small union victories like those at the WGA-E are good for labor, but they won’t change the big picture on their own. In the meantime, as income inequality rises, union membership dwindles, and challenges to organized labor pick up steam, what remains to be seen is what the future of unions will more closely resemble: Peet’s Coffee Shop or Gawker.  


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
Israeli Terrorists, Born in the USA Print
Monday, 07 September 2015 13:28

Hirschhorn writes: "After years of impunity for settlers who commit violent crimes, Israel's internal security agency, the Shin Bet, has now supposedly cracked down by rounding up a grand total of four youths believed to be connected to recent acts of settler terrorism - three of whom trace their origins to the United States."

A photograph of Ali Dawabsheh, the Palestinian toddler killed in an arson attack on his home in the West Bank village of Duma in July. (photo: Alaa Badarneh/EPA)
A photograph of Ali Dawabsheh, the Palestinian toddler killed in an arson attack on his home in the West Bank village of Duma in July. (photo: Alaa Badarneh/EPA)


ALSO SEE: France Committed to Labelling of Israeli Settlement Products

Israeli Terrorists, Born in the USA

By Sara Yael Hirschhorn, The New York Times

07 September 15

 

n July 31, in the West Bank village of Duma, 18-month-old Ali Dawabsheh was burned alive in a fire. All available evidence suggests that the blaze was a deliberate act of settler terrorism. More disturbingly, several of the alleged instigators, currently being detained indefinitely, are not native-born Israelis — they have American roots.

But there has been little outcry in their communities. Settler rabbis and the leaders of American immigrant communities in the West Bank have either played down their crime or offered muted criticism.

It’s worth recalling the response of the former prime minister Yitzhak Rabin to another heinous attack two decades ago, when an American-born doctor, Baruch Goldstein, gunned down dozens of Palestinians while they prayed in Hebron.

READ MORE


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
Time Is a Democracy Issue Print
Monday, 07 September 2015 13:24

Street writes: "The long-shot United States Democratic Party presidential candidate Bernie Sanders has been telling the large and angry crowds attending his rallies that American workers put in the longest hours in the industrialized world. He's on solid ground."

The Fight for Fifteen. (photo: FightFor15.org)
The Fight for Fifteen. (photo: FightFor15.org)


Time Is a Democracy Issue

By Paul Street, teleSUR

07 September 15

 

Presidential candidate Bernie Sanders might want to pay more attention to time as a democracy issue.

he long-shot United States Democratic Party presidential candidate Bernie Sanders has been telling the large and angry crowds attending his rallies that American workers put in the longest hours in the industrialized world. He’s on solid ground. According to the International Labor Organization, “Americans work 137 more hours per year than Japanese workers, 260 more hours per year than British workers, and 499 more hours per year than French workers.”

Eighty-six percent of employed U.S. males and 66 percent of employed U.S. females work more than 40 hours per week. In many U.S. professional sectors, work weeks of 60 to 70 hours and more are not uncommon. Add in brutal commutes and extensive car travel related to the nation’s sprawled-out residential and shopping patterns and it’s no surprise that hundreds of millions of U.S. citizens face a critical shortage of free time.

It’s nothing new. Workers in the U.S. overtook their Japanese counterparts in total annual employment hours back in the early 1990s. .

Why is this a problem? Overwork appears only briefly in Sanders’ stump speech. He cites it as an indication of the nation’s savage economic unfairness: more and more wealth and income has been flowing out of ordinary working people’s households and into the hands of the wealthy few in a time when U.S. labor productivity continues to rise and workers spend more time on the job than their counterparts in Europe and Japan. It’s outrageous.

Beyond the fairness issue, workers, journalists and academics have long reported that the unexpected decline of American leisure in the neoliberal era has taken a terrible toll on working people’s physical, emotional, and mental health. Overwork and the related vicious circle work, spend, and debt are critical factors in the endemic high-stress of American life and the low life span of Americans compared to people in other wealthy nations.

At the same time, Sanders might also want to mention that overwork and the loss of free time has a significant negative impact on the citizenry’s capacity for self-rule. Free time is among other things a democracy issue. In my experience, social and political movements in the U.S. founder again and again on the shoals of time-shortage and exhaustion: people simply lack the leisure and vigor required for meaningful activism and resistance. Without a reasonable abundance of time off the capitalist treadmill and “for what we will,” grassroots movements for social justice, environmental sustainability, and popular sovereignty cannot thrive and succeed. For what it’s worth, the 19th century pioneers of the U.S. labor movement talked and wrote about the demand for shorter hours – early American unions’ top issue by far – largely in terms of how overwork stole from citizen workers the time and energy essential for meaningful participation in the great experiment in popular governance that had supposedly been launched by the American Revolution.

Overwork is a democracy issue in another sense: it is not the working class majority’s choice. As the economist Juliet Schor noted nearly fifteen years ago, the long hours experienced by “the overworked American” (the title of her widely read first book) reflect U.S. employers’ preference for compensating workers (however imperfectly and it if at all) for productivity gains with money instead of with free time. Public opinion polls have long showed that most Americans would choose more leisure time over more money. They would, that is, if the choice was given to any significant degree. It isn’t. It isn’t because of the employer class’s preference for slack in the labor market – the bosses’ longstanding reluctance to face the enhanced marketplace bargaining power that the working class enjoys when employment is more widely shared out (as it would be if hours for individual workers were reduced to a reasonable level).

The business class’s ongoing war on unions – so fierce that the percentage of U.S. workers enrolled in unions has fallen from 35 percent in the mid-1950s to 20 percent to less than 12 percent today – is a strong related contributing factor. Organized labor has always been the leading and most effective historical force pushing for reduced working hours.

Their preferences for leisure over cash aside, U.S. workers who receive any extra rewards from their employers generally receive more money, not more free time. This encourages them to buy more stuff to more “efficiently” enjoy the comparably slight leisure time they get, something that feeds a “vicious circle of work and spend” (and borrowing) whereby people constantly work (and borrow) to “keep up with the Jones” – that is, to maintain social status as defined by the purchase of ever bigger and higher quality, suburban homes, SUVs, refrigerators, televisions, VCRs, vacuum cleaners, and the like.

There is no great mystery about what policies we need to overcome overwork and thereby help restore temporal space for democracy in the U.S. Some are quite direct: a significant upgrade in the U.S. minimum wage (which would make it possible for more working class households to forego second and third jobs); the re-legalization of union organizing to bring back the labor movement (“the people that brought you the weekend,” to quote a clever bumper sticker); the enforcement of rules on overtime pay; mandatory work-sharing to balance out the work week and provide jobs for the unemployed; giant federal jobs programs to build new environmentally sustainable infrastructure and create decent employment options. A re-expansion of the American social safety net would give millions of workers alternatives to long hours of low-wage work.

The single-payer universal, government-provided health insurance system that Sanders advocates – Improved Medicare for All – would have an especially welcome indirect leisure-enhancing impact. Besides freeing low wage-workers of the necessity of working second and third jobs to meet the outrageous costs of health insurance on the private market, it would release millions of workers from their current cringing dependence on employers for their own and often their families’ health insurance. Workers are unlikely to fight for shorter hours (or anything else) when they put their own and their families’ health care at risk by daring to resist employer demands. At the same time, single-payer would also take away a major structural incentive pushing employers to extract as much work as possible out of each of their full-time, benefit-receiving workers: the high costs of employee health care, equivalent to 40 percent of total compensation of salaried employees and paid per worker, not per hour worked.

Of course, Americans who want more time for leisure and, perhaps, democracy should buy less unnecessary stuff, something that will help them exit the rat-wheel of work and spend while helping the cause of livable ecology.

Sanders might want to pay more attention to time as a democracy issue. As he says in his campaign speech, if he were to semi-miraculously beat the high odds against his bid for the presidency (the U.S. election numbers guru Nate Silver gives him an at best 1 in 20 chance), his victory would be hollow without a great popular movement to push the progressive agenda after the election. Such movements require workers and citizens with the time and energy to engage in such activism, as the founders of the American labor movement knew.


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
<< Start < Prev 2341 2342 2343 2344 2345 2346 2347 2348 2349 2350 Next > End >>

Page 2346 of 3432

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.

RSNRSN