by Richard Mellor
Afscme local 444, retired
At the height of the Occupy Movement the support for these mostly young people was considerable. They were attacking the 1% and speaking out for all workers. Here in Oakland I remember being on the back of a flatbed truck about to speak on the day of the big strike that shut down three shifts at the port of Oakland and felt a tug at my ankle. It was my former boss.
At the height of the Occupy Movement the support for these mostly young people was considerable. They were attacking the 1% and speaking out for all workers. Here in Oakland I remember being on the back of a flatbed truck about to speak on the day of the big strike that shut down three shifts at the port of Oakland and felt a tug at my ankle. It was my former boss.
As I looked out in to the crowd, some estimates put at 30 to
40 thousand I saw co-workers and management personnel who I never see at events
like these. People have had enough. Thousands of decent jobs lost, people thrown
out of their homes in to the street, poor people cut off from public assistance
and those protesting the shutting down of fire stations in their neighborhoods
or the state parks where they took their families for the only affordable
vacation around, were there looking for some solution to this crisis that is
being shifted on to the shoulders of workers and the middle class. And this, after
we bailed out the bankers and dragged their system from the edge of the abyss. Older people, the disabled, youth, a Lucky
Stores worker earning $21 an hour after more than 40 years on the job described
how powerful the feeling was to be there that day and shut down the docks.
The wages of US workers have been driven so far back we are
now becoming attractive fare for global investors. Italian manufacturers have
threatened their employees that they will move to the US if they don’t accept
cuts. US firms in Canada have shut
plants and headed south in order to benefit from wages that are half that of
our Canadian brothers and sisters. The 1%
in the US has, with the help of their media waged an unprecedented war on US workers
and our organizations aided also by a leadership atop organized labor that has
cooperated all the way in the hope of a return to the good old days.
Power attracts as they say which is why the Occupy Movement
gained such widespread support among the population. Somebody was fighting back and fighting back
in a way that we would have to fight if we want to win. Defiance of the law and
mass action, occupations, pickets, generalizing the struggle and stopping
production is what works, it always has and always will in a society where the
wealth of that society has its origins in the labor process. (Occupy made some
serious mistakes too)
So we must recognize it for what it is when we read in their
mass media the not so subtle attacks on BART workers here in the Bay Area. Bart workers are not even the highest paid
workers but it is not in our interests, any workers interest to help the 1%
drive wages of any of us lower.
I have been a wage-worker all my life. I retired as a public
sector worker here in the Bay Area and I have a retirement I can live on, I am
not ashamed of it. I don’t clip coupons and earn a million a year doing that. I
don’t buy and sell currencies or speculate on the price of food, a human need.
I didn’t earn $5 billion dollars one year betting some older person, some poor
person wanting a roof over their heads would be overwhelmed by interest
payments and be kicked out of their home like John Paulson, a major coupon
clipper did.
I am like millions of us out there and very much like a BART
worker. We are not fools. I ask all my
class brothers and sisters to consider this.
The Daily Review continues the propaganda war against BART workers that
another bourgeois rag the Chronicle has been doing all week. It has all sorts of figures out today showing
how most members of the public oppose the workers and support BART management.
70% oppose the strike and 30% support it.
53% feel BART workers are overcompensated 16% think they’re
undercompensated. These papers are organs of the 1%. The contents are not written
for them by them, they are written by their paid mouthpieces for us, to
influence our views of the world around us.
al Qaeda is out to get us.
Foreigners are jealous of us. The
wars abroad are about freedom and defensive wars as opposed to predatory
offensive actions. There is no money in society to provide a decent life for
all, education, mass transit, health care etc. The figures above come from the
Bay Area Council, a business group. It is profits, profits, profits, they care
about, not inconveniencing the public.
The bosses are determined to win this one as they did with
auto and as they did with the events in Wisconsin where a movement of thousands
of workers was derailed and directed in to electoral politics and that black
hole we call the Democratic Party. This was
the strategy of the labor leadership and still is.
Negotiations are continuing through this weekend but the
unions are outnumbered as other representatives of the 1%, state and federal
mediators are in the room. The point has
been reached where nothing can be gained at the table if it is not backed up by
the power of the workers and our communities, as George Schultz pointed out, “Negotiations are a euphemism for
capitulation if the shadow of power is not cast across the bargaining table.” We
can learn from our enemies.
It is still possible that the union leaders could agree to
continue working and avoid a strike or California governor Jerry Brown could
intervene and call a 60-day cooling off period.
The Union leadership of the entire Bay Area are responsible if the
bosses have their way and defeat the BART workers. The objective is to privatize public transit
and at the same time undermine the workers in this field by
introducing anti-labor legislation.
“Working class people can’t afford this (strike)” says a representative of
the business council, “Our region can’t
afford it”. Once again, he is
referring to the business community, to profits and the incomes of the wealthy
and the 1%.
The present situation cannot go on indeed, it has to won by
them or by us but we can’t win it unless we change course and we know the union
leadership will not do that so the rank and file of the Unions cannot remain
passive followers when it comes to the policies of the leadership that have such
a profound affect on our lives.
What must be done if working people are not to suffer
another defeat in the bosses’ war on our living standards is that serious
demands must be put on the table including demands that relate to the traveling
public like free transportation for seniors, half fare for the unemployed and
those on public assistance. The corporation’s can pay and fares can be lowered
for all. We have to raise the stakes and demand what people need to live a
decent life as opposed to what is acceptable to the 1% and their
representatives in the Democratic Party. (If you would like a pdf of the flier
we handed out at Thursday’s rally explaining our views in more detail send an e
mail to we_know_whats_up@yahoo.com
As I explained in a previous commentary, bus drivers should
strike with BART workers. They are in
the same union. What good is a union if we can’t have this basic solidarity, if
we don’t take advantage of the power we have as workers to force the 1% to back
off. The leadership of the ATU at the highest levels refuses to do this because
they are unwilling to fight; they have the same world view as the 1%, they
worship the market and see it as the answer to all things including mass
transit and water. It’s like entering a boxing ring with one hand tied behind
our backs. A mass mobilization of workers can only lead to chaos from their point
of view and they will resist it ferociously.
This is why they appeal to mediators and the politicians as
opposed to relying on their own members and the power of workers in general.
Jerry Brown, a union busting Wall Street politician is supported by Bank of
America, Wal Mart, Facebook and billionaires like Steven Spielberg and Ari
Emanuel who is the brother Rahm Emanuel , Obama’s buddy who is savaging
Chicago’s public schools planning to close 150 of them.
Yet unions will support Brown in his efforts to stay in the
governor’s seat and some are like SEIU 1000 (SEIU also represents BART and City
of Oakland workers) that represents state workers who Brown has waged a vicious
war against. The policies of the present
heads of organized Labor have been a disaster for us. We cannot buy the favor
of Wall Street politicians like Brown or any of them. We can’t defeat capital with capital because
they have more of it. That’s why they’re
called capitalists. We can defeat them with labor, we have more of that, much
more which is why they divide us along race, gender and religious lines and why
they blame the poor for our predicament or public sector workers, immigrants or
foreigners, anything to turn one section of the working class against the
other, union against non union. Al Qaeda
would wish it could inflict the pain and misery on US society and workers that
our own 1% do.
Rely on our own strength. Demand what workers’ and the
public need not what is acceptable to the bosses, Wall Street and the Democrats
and use our power as workers to win it. Build a mass workers’ party as an
alternative to the two parties of Wall Street.
We are witnessing an historical battle going on in the Bay
Area. But we're fighting it with one hand tied behind out backs.
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