as above, so below

aaroncynic

aaroncynic
Location
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Birthday
December 31
Bio
I'm some things to a few people. Mostly a nuisance but sometimes a zine writer, internet radio host, blogger, musician, and project organizer. I run a small website where you can read mine and other fabulous contributor's words: www.diatribemedia.com and also contribute to the Chicagoist (www.chicagoist.com). When not shouting about the falling sky over the internet, reading about government conspiracies or watching b-rate sci-fi, you can find me singing for the band Burning Luck. Direction is only relative to your position in the grand scheme of things. Some day, I'll sort this all out.

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SEPTEMBER 4, 2010 8:18AM

Will You Be At Work Monday?

Rate: 1 Flag

It would be difficult to throw a stone in any direction and not find someone who vehemently opposes labor unions. Support for organized labor in America remains near an all time low – with only 52% of Americans saying they have a favorable view of unions. With the economy in the toilet and most of the middle and lower classes struggling to survive, ideas like collective bargaining, fighting for better wages, health care and workers rights in general seem distant and almost foreign. In fact, I often wonder how many younger Americans have actual experience with unions outside of political talking points.

When we couple the sheer amount of angry rhetoric we can find in the media lexicon regarding unions with the relative impotence of most unions and ice the cake with the corrupt ones, our disregard for organized labor isn’t surprising. With many Americans either behind desks or the counters at Walmart (if employed at all), basic concepts like an 8 hour day, health insurance, vacation time – even a fair wage – disappear fast from our minds.

Still, this weekend those of us not manning cash registers, pallet jacks or emergency vehicles will head to beaches and backyards, eat and drink with family and friends and perhaps enjoy sleeping in slightly on a Monday morning. Meanwhile, I wonder how many of those folks out there who like to believe that the labor movement is packed with nothing but lazy, self-entitled commies and socialists will be heading to work this Labor Day.

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Comments

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I have been thinking about the labor unions lately. Impotence is the right word, especially now when the employers have thumbed their noses at American labor in general and moved the jobs away. Labor unions are no help when there are no jobs.
labor unions were a wrong turn, an evolutionary dead-end. revolution to democracy and socialism might have worked better.

this may yet happen, when enough people are starving, but '1984' is looking the better bet.
Craze - good for you. The six figure presidents of various unions are in the same ship as the six and seven figure CEO's who not only make many times more than what their average worker makes, but have armies of lobbyists to keep politicians at their beck and call.

Ardee - While it's true that a union is less helpful when there's no job to work, one might think about the Republic Window and Door factory workers here in Chicago who occupied the factory floor in the face of the factory's closure. By uniting together, the workers were able to get a severance settlement that they would have otherwise not gotten.

In addition, the simple idea that an employee should have a say in their compensation and benefits for labor exchanged is one that Americans have sadly lost sight of.

Al - if it was an evolutionary dead-end, does that mean things like child labor and 12-16 hour workdays in deplorable conditions are the right direction? I'm not sure I understand what you're saying.