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Resistance
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Title: Wisconsin: Ground Zero to Save Public Worker Rights
Source: by author
URL Source: [None]
Published: Feb 23, 2011
Author: Stephen Lendman
Post Date: 2011-02-23 05:13:31 by Stephen Lendman
Keywords: None
Views: 179
Comments: 15

Wisconsin: Ground Zero to Save Public Worker Rights - by Stephen Lendman

Ronald Reagan was right saying:

"Government is not a solution to our problem, government is the problem."

His type governance, that is, and from administrations that followed, Democrats as ruthless as Republicans.

For decades, bipartisan consensus governed lawlessly, waging imperial wars, trashing human rights and civil liberty protections, unabashedly backing monied interests, letting them loot the federal treasury, fleecing working Americans, and targeting organized labor for destruction.

Washington is ground zero for government's assault. Outside the beltway, it's Wisconsin, but spreading fast to other states and cities. An unfair fight pits major media-supported federal, state and local governments allied with union bosses against American workers, largely on their own, relying on their grit and resourcefulness to survive in a very hostile environment.

Threatened are hard-won worker rights, including secure jobs, a living wage, essential benefits, and the right to bargain collectively with management to protect them. They're going, going, and soon gone unless mass grassroots activism saves them, what's so far absent. Wisconsin worker heroics are impressive, but not enough.

Much more is needed - there and across America, because workers in all states and communities are threatened, their rights being trashed and have been for decades, especially since the Carter administration drafted plans Reagan implemented:

Firing over 11,000 PATCO workers, jailing its leaders, fining the union millions of dollars, and effectively busting it for monied interests. It was a shot across organized labor's bow, a clear message to Wall Street and other corporate favorites - supported by then AFL-CIO president Lane Kirkland, one of many labor bosses who betrayed rank and file trust. They still do for their own self-interest. No wonder organized labor is a shadow of its former self, headed for extinction unless stopped.

Reagan's administration set the pattern. Union bosses conspired with management against their own membership. During bitter coal miner, steel worker, bus driver, airline worker, copper miner, auto worker, and meatpacking worker strikes, they denied rank and file support, assuring them defeat. At decade's end, trade unionism in America was decimated and kept declining since, heading for oblivion with little pressure to stop it.

Obama's war on labor shows he matches Republican harshness. He abandoned US auto workers for management forcing:

-- plant closures;

-- jobs shipped abroad;

-- permanent ones lost;

-- lower wages;

-- gutted work rules, including on-the-job health and safety protections; and

-- forfeited security through lost benefits and pensions, including for retirees, besides everything lost in 2007 under Bush.

Obama also abandoned the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) after promising support. If enacted, it would have been labor's most impressive triumph since passage of the landmark 1935 Wagner Act, letting labor bargain collectively for the first time with management on even terms.

It would have mandated good faith bargaining as a fundamental right, protected from management or government interference.

It also would have strengthened Wagner Act provisions to unionize, bargain collectively through chosen representatives, and provide other worker protections. It would have leveled the playing field to empower them more than since Taft-Hartley weakened them significantly.

It would have affirmed the 1937 Supreme Court Virginia Railway Co. v. Railway Employees decision that "employees (have) the right to organize and bargain collectively through a representative of their own selection, doing away with company interference and 'company union.' "

Also, the Courts 1937 National Labor Relations Board v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation ruling that J & L engaged in unfair labor practices by "discriminating against members of the union with regard to hire and tenure of employment, and was coercing and intimidating its employees in order to interfere with their self-organization." It said union representation "was essential (to) give laborers opportunity to deal (equally) with their employer," public workers afforded the same rights as private ones.

No longer. We've come a long way from New Deal policies and fair Justices. Today's Democrats, Republicans, and courts are supremely pro-business, especially the Roberts Court, selected to be anti- labor, in the tank for monied interests, and it shows.

Big Media Bashes Labor

On February 17, Media Matters headlined, "Right-Wing Media Freak Out Over Union Protests," quoting Fox News hosts and guests saying:

-- Glenn Beck calls union protests "riots" and "uprisings," adding that "Evil (is) spreading around the globe;"

-- Hard-right commentator Michelle Malkin said protesters "stormed" the Capitol, using students as "kiddie human shields....sacrificial lambs," also calling demonstrators "union thugs;"

-- Republican strategist Kate Obenshain told Sean Hannity: "We see something that's going on, say, in Wisconsin, where they have the rallies for the teachers, where teachers are yanking kids out of the classrooms and calling in sick - totally lying...;" and

-- Fox's Tracy Byrnes called Wisconsin protests "actually, borderline gonna get violent, it sounds like" when, in fact, they've been remarkably peaceful unlike how extremist right-wingers agitate.

CNN is just as bad, competing with Fox for bottom-of-the-barrel honors, but nothing on corporate TV or radio has merit. Nor in print; to wit, Time magazine's Joe Klein in his February 18 article headlined, "Wisconsin: The Hemlock Revolution," saying:

In the Middle East, "protesters are marching for democracy; in the middle west, they're protesting against it....trying to prevent a vote....(trying) to stymie majority rule...."

Republicans won, said Klein. "In a democracy, there are consequences to elections and no one, not even the public employees union, are exempt from that." Even labor contacts aren't sacrosanct he believes. "We hold elections to decide" those things. "And it seems to me that Governor Scott Walker's basic requests are modest ones...."

If Time prints this and similar op-eds, why should Fox surprise? America's entire corporate establishment, including big media, is united against labor rights, targeting them for destruction.

Even the New York Times opposes closed schools and public services blocked for any reason, no matter how important doing it is to force change, what's never possible without it and much more. Timidity yields nothing but tears.

Like other Wall Street Journal writers and its editorial staff, Steven Malanga is no friend of labor, his February 22 WSJ article headlined, "The Showdown Over Public Union Power," saying:

"Public unions (are) among the biggest players in national politics," contributing millions compared to billions from corporate donors way out-muscling them. "If Gov. Walker succeeds....other reformers will follow (to) restrict public-sector" union power. It "would give opponents around the country a new playbook to follow in countering the rich resources and deep influence of public unions over taxes and spending."

No wonder observers call WJS opinion writers the print version of Fox News, both Murdoch owned, his editorial policy rigorously enforced.

In spring 2009, the corporate media enthusiastically embraced Obama's assault on auto worker rights for decent jobs, a living wage and essential benefits, including pensions. The New York Times took the lead, supporting General Motors' "government-backed bankruptcy process," saying it would let GM "discard (its) liabilities and unwanted assets and produce a profitable, albeit smaller, car company," with thousands fewer employees.

The Financial Times agreed, listing preferred "liabilities" to be shed, including "legacy" ones, meaning pensions and healthcare benefits. The Washington Post said it's "important that the president did not flinch in demanding even deeper concessions from workers." The Wall Street Journal said it was "glad the Administration is at least talking a tougher line on bankruptcy than Mr. Bush (to) force the companies and their unions to make the hard decisions that politics may still let them avoid."

The unanimity of corporate managed news offered support then and now against worker rights they disdain, and why not. They're giants with large workforces they want without rights, beyond minimal ones too little to matter.

On August 20, 1999, New York Times writer Tom Friedman headlined, "Foreign Affairs; An American in Paris," saying:

"The most important thing (Ronald) Reagan did was break the 1981 air traffic controllers' strike, which helped break the hold of organized labor over the US economy." Crushing workers gave US corporations greater flexibility to invest in new labor-saving equipment, technology and methods to cut staff, pay less, and achieve great cost savings, said Friedman. He practically gloated about the collapse of labor rights, weaker now after a decade under Bush and Obama.

More recently on May 8, 2010, Friedman headlined, "Root Canal Politics," denouncing workers for believing in the "tooth fairy," expecting government services without paying for them. Baby boomers, he said, had "eaten through all that abundance like hungry locusts." After getting their way for decades, "it's now going to be, mostly, about taking things away. Goodbye Tooth Fairy politics, hello Root Canal politics." He barely concealed joy, crowing over worker pain like all pro-business columnists, even ones claiming progressive credentials.

On February 21, The Times featured commentaries from anti-union advocates like Professor Daniel DiSalvo headlining, "Hitting the Unions Where It Hurts," saying:

Walker wants "to dismantle (the) dysfunctional, circular relationship between unionized government employees, the politicians they help elect, and the rising wages and benefits to which they commit government." In fact, wages have stagnated for over three decades, and essential benefits have eroded.

Nonetheless, DiSalvo took sides, saying, "If successful, Walker's plan may (make) Wisconsin (more) like Texas or Virginia (where) most collective bargaining in the public sector is illegal and the percentage of unionized public employees is paltry." He hopes Wisconsin "will have as bright a fiscal outlook" as those states, affording workers there few or no rights.

Christian Schneider also got space headlining, "Fiscally Modest, Politically Bold," saying:

Walker only asks workers to "accept modest changes to their benefits, or face losing their jobs." False, layoffs are coming and without collective bargaining power no job or essential benefit is safe. "Public employee unions will continue to protest," said Schneider, "even though (Walker) is the first politician who has told them the truth in ages." In fact, Obama backs the same policies, enforcing them since taking office.

Even the hard-right Heritage Foundation got space, James Sherk headlining "FDR Warned Us," saying:

"Government workers....don't generate profits. They merely negotiate for more tax money." In fact, like private sector ones, they deserve similar rights. Moreover, unlike corporate predators, they earn, not steal what they get, what Sherk noticeably side-stepped. Instead, he hailed Walker's plan, saying it "reasserts voter control over government policy," perhaps forgetting public workers also vote and deserve officials treating them equitably.

A Final Comment

Mass protests in Wisconsin continue. Tuesday was day eight. Involved are over 200,000 state workers and supporters, including students and teachers. Key is preserving collective bargaining rights without which no others are safe. Neither side so far is budging, Walker ordered by Republican leaders to hold fast. Other states are watching, governors there to grab all Walker gets, or more like in Ohio where Governor Kasich's bill is even more draconian.

Though major demonstrations continue, the Wisconsin Education Association Council (WEAC), representing 98,000 teachers, told its members to return to work. Other unions also expect the bill's passage, perhaps before week's end. So far, absent Democrat senators remain secluded in neighboring Illinois, denying Republicans a quorum. They continue being hardline. Sooner or later expect Democrats to concede. When they return, Walker can declare victory.

Nonetheless, rank and file opposition remains strong, including among teachers, students and supporters traveling long distances to march and protest in Madison. The University of Wisconsin- Madison Teaching Assistants Association (TAA) called for a "teach-out," replacing a walkout saying, "We are calling for instructors to use their discretion to cancel classes, reschedule them or hold them off campus."

Demonstrations around the country support them from Maryland and New Hampshire to Nevada and Olympia, Washington, knowing workers there can expect their own moment of truth. It's spreading everywhere, pitting bought-and-paid-for-pols allied with union bosses against working Americans. They're fighting for hard-won rights fast eroding toward elimination unless mass activism draws the line and holds it, no matter what. Their choice now is fight or lose. There's no middle ground against forces unwilling to yield.

Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy listening.

http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.

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#1. To: Stephen Lendman (#0)

Key is preserving collective bargaining rights without which no others are safe.

Collective bargaining by state government employees is a privilege granted to those employees by the taxpayers of the state. In this case, Wisconsin.

In view of revenue shortfalls across all sectors and economies, and with the main alternative being the raising of state taxes yet again, the taxpayers are now revoking that privilege.

Kudos to the taxpayers and the right-thinking people of Wisconsin.

Wisconsin, It's a great place to be FROM !

Buzzard  posted on  2011-02-23   7:32:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Buzzard (#1)

Reagan fired many of my friends and former co workers and he was right.

That was NOT a LABOR UNION...Nor are these others Unions, they are all paid for and protected by TAX DOLLARS.

Fire the lot of them and start over again.

THEY ARE PAID WITH TAX DOLLARS.

Cynicom  posted on  2011-02-23   7:38:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Buzzard, Cynicom, Hook Nosed Lendman, 4 (#1)

Amen.

GE_CNBC just interviewed the Holy Right Reverend Jesse "Hymietown" Jackson, who is currently in Ohio for a new round of state protests. The well dressed, well fed, non worker, has apparently developed a more advanced speech impediment over the years. His message to the masses was a series of grunts and puffs, ended with some kind of rhyme. Yes it could be my hearing, but I heard the basketball game last night just fine, so I think it's him.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2011-02-23   8:30:43 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Stephen Lendman (#0)

A consensus means that everyone agrees to say collectively what no one believes individually. Wake up America, the elite are intentionally manufacturing these and almost all other conflicts to achieve their goals.

"Progress in the Hegelian State is through contrived conflict: the clash of opposites makes for progress. If you can control the opposites, you dominate the nature of the outcome" (Introduction to the 2002 edition of America's Secret Establishment: An Introduction to the Order of Skull & Bones)

Hegemony, hegelarian - political scientist, Hegel: "To synthesize a new order, it is first necessary to create opposites sides and then bring them into conflict." Hegelianism - the philosophy of Hegel, who maintained that every postulate or affirmation (thesis) evokes its natural opposite (antithesis), and that these two result in a unified whole (synthesis), which in turn reacts upon the original thesis.

members.iimetro.com.au/~hubbca/hegemony.htm

Creative Destruction

Creative Destruction is not a new concept. It is, however, a new-age term for the Hegelian Dialectic. Call it what you want, the global results are the same.

In order to achieve one-world governance, existing systems all over the globe had to be dismantled and eliminated. For instance, national sovereignty, national loyalty, national patriotism, personally selected lifestyles, individual beliefs and preferences, and naturally occurring communities versus socially engineered "communities" had to be dismantled, eliminated, and redefined by think tankers financed by philanthropic and government money.

In order to achieve such a tremendous undertaking, money (specifically wages) had to be strategically controlled. Hence, the wildly successful America had to eliminate its jobs. Jobs = wages. Wages = personally selected lifestyles, individual beliefs and preferences, and naturally occurring communities.

Next, the one-world think tankers told us that love of country and specifically patriotism led to "ethnic" battles, conflicts, and domestic terrorism. They also told us that the political expression of and belief in individual freedom was the religious concept of chronically stupid and terrorist-leaning radicals. Keeping in mind that America always accepted immigrants from every country - immigrants and their religious beliefs - the wealthy think tankers decided to incorporate illegal immigration in order that America could be far more "multicultural" and at the same time elevate "racism" to new definitions and levels.

Multi-million illegal immigrants + multi-million jobs eliminated + multi-million nationals losing jobs and homes = a new and improved recipe for racism. Why, you ask? The reasons why are obvious: 1) People are blamers by nature, 2) "race cards" have always been political manipulators and weapons for all kinds of people and agendas, and 3) all people are more comfortable around life-kinds, which is exactly why the world is divided up into like-kind regions. It is called human nature. In the natural world, it is called biology. However, in the world of social engineering on a global scale, it is called the collection of private property, individual freedom, privately owned guns, personal opinions, and middle class wages. It is called the assured collecting of global wealth and natural resources from the world's people. It is called socially engineered theft on a highly professional scale. The wealthy think tankers and the Caucasian powers behind them claim they stand for fairness and equity for the rabble work forces of the world. However, the world remains embroiled in non-stop wars, genocides, death by unusual disease and unnecessary hunger, and growing poverty--except for the world's top and constant one or two percent.

As we walk ourselves straight into another dark period of human history, freedom will disappear from our consciousness as we experience the Creative Destruction of the potential for global human freedom. Once the best government that the world ever produced is forgotten, and the last generation of Constitution-understanding people is gone, Socialism/Fascism/Communism, or as the wealthy think tankers like to call it - Communitarianism - will once again try to repress the world's masses by reducing them to useful (translation: lowly paid) laborers for the sole advantage of the world's one percent. This we call democracy.

Creative Destruction has produced world democracy. And this is why America now hires and operates a homeland paramilitary consisting of international forces - a new system which holds practice drills in our cities and rural areas in case of, what?...who knows? Ask the wealthy think tankers. My guess is the much advertised pandemic, which will make triple billionaires of even more pharmaceutical corporations while ensuring the democracy of massive global depopulation goals. At any rate, I'm sure the paramilitary connection is thoroughly mapped out as that reality continues to internationalize its growing forces.

www.newswithviews.com/Levant/nancy137.htm

www.thestrengthofamerica..../27/reckless-obamanomics/

bush_is_a_moonie  posted on  2011-02-23   9:12:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: bush_is_a_moonie (#4)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delphi_method

This is a very well written piece moonie, and let's add the use of the Delphi Method to the mix. This tactic is alive and well and in use impressively by most authoritarian states. That said, i still want to crush the skulls of the pro big government slobs that walk among us.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2011-02-23   9:23:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Jethro Tull (#5)

That said, i still want to crush the skulls of the pro big government slobs that walk among us.

I'd be glad to build you a tool to do that. I'll give you a helluva rate.

Just PM me some specs. You want pneumatic, electric, manual, what? What kind of throughput do you need? Stationary, mobile or portable? I've been looking for a project like this.

It'd be a great complement to my line of jew-burning stoves.

Godfrey Smith: Mike, I wouldn't worry. Prosperity is just around the corner.
Mike Flaherty: Yeah, it's been there a long time. I wish I knew which corner.
My Man Godfrey (1936)

Esso  posted on  2011-02-23   9:33:39 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Stephen Lendman (#0)

Even the war mongering, traitor FDR was against public employee collective bargaining.

www2.hernandotoday.com/co...7/ha-fdrs-warning-public- employee-unions-a-no-no/

Lysander_Spooner  posted on  2011-02-23   10:03:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Esso (#6)

It'd be a great complement to my line of jew-burning stoves.

Are you the inventor of the Jewbecue ?

Jethro Tull  posted on  2011-02-23   11:30:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: Esso (#6)

Nuclear tool.

bush_is_a_moonie  posted on  2011-02-23   20:21:36 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Jethro Tull (#5)

These super elite douche bags have so much money the only thing they have left that gives them satisfaction is controlling and harming those who are not part of their fanatical Pharisee cult.

bush_is_a_moonie  posted on  2011-02-23   20:24:31 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: Jethro Tull (#8)

Are you the inventor of the Jewbecue ?

Yes and no. Actually I stole the idea for the jew-B-Q from the bruthas in the 'hood that started cooking up the chosen ones, as soon as the financial meltdown started, in their smokers made out of used 275 gallon heating oil tanks cut in half with a hinge welded on one side.

Godfrey Smith: Mike, I wouldn't worry. Prosperity is just around the corner.
Mike Flaherty: Yeah, it's been there a long time. I wish I knew which corner.
My Man Godfrey (1936)

Esso  posted on  2011-02-23   20:43:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Cynicom (#2)

Fire the lot of them and start over again.

Amen.


Tough women come from New York, sweet women from Texas, prissy women from Southern California, but we NORTHERN CALIFORNIA WOMEN have fire & ice in our blood. We can ride 4-wheelers, be a princess, throw a left hook, pack heat, hunt with the men, bake a cake, love with passion, and if we have an opinion, you know you're going to hear it!!

farmfriend  posted on  2011-02-23   20:57:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: Stephen Lendman (#0)

Hey Steve

Wouldn't you be happier cutting sugarcane in Cuba?

I can make it happen, ping me.

Sincerely

Comrade Flint

"The person who agrees with you 80 percent of the time is a friend and an ally — not a 20 percent traitor" - Ronald Reagan

Flintlock  posted on  2011-02-23   21:03:11 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: Jethro Tull (#3)

GE_CNBC just interviewed the Holy Right Reverend Jesse "Hymietown" Jackson ...

You just made my day. I love your humor because it reminds me of all the laughter I had when I worked in NYC.

Hope you enjoy your Southern respite and bring back that same sense of humor.

Phant2000  posted on  2011-02-23   21:09:17 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: Flintlock (#13)

I can make it happen, ping me.

Can you make it happen if I ping you on behalf of Hooked Nose Lendman? If so, consider Lendman pinged you, okay?

Phant2000  posted on  2011-02-23   21:13:56 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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