Archive for the 'class' Category



25
Jul

letter writing sunday #13

You may remember the letter from a few weeks back when we wrote to the executives of Krug-Mondavi Winery. Krug-Mondavi was threatening to fire all of its workers in an attempt to flush out the United Farm Workers union. Despite public pressure, the company went through with the mass firing a couple of weeks ago.

I’m not the kind of persyn who writes a letter then forgets about the campaign. So i’m revisiting the issue again this week to support two letter-writing campaigns of the United Farm Workers. The first is a letter to the offices of Krug-Mondavi Winery regarding the boycott against the company. You can send an email (there is, of course, a form email you can send) from the UFW’s campaign page. The second letter is to Longs Drug Stores, a distributor of Krug-Mondavi wines, asking them to put pressure on Krug-Mondavi to bring back the workers and return to the negotiating table. Longs purports a tradition of “treating others as we, ourselves, would like to be treated.” Take a minute and send the company an email from this page.

17
Jul

letter writing sunday #12

I used to live in the Southern Appalachian mountains. While there, i became aware of the struggles going on in coal country. It was while involved in these struggles that i learned of the true hystory of the term Redneck. Before, i had believed that the word was a derogatory term for farmworkers. Now, i know that it was the name of the coal miners who took over Blair Mountain in the Fall of 1921. One of the largest armed uprising in US hystory, some 10,000 coal miners confronted state and federal troops in an attempt to unionize the coal mines of West Virginia. The month-long battle was deemed the Red Neck Wars because of the red bandanas that the miners wore around their necks. One of the most notable of the battle’s union organizers was Mother Jones.

Although the miners lost the battle and more than 900 were indicted, they never lost their spirit for struggle and justice. To this day, the coal fields remain a tense ground for struggle between miners, the corporate executives, and coal company thugs (yup, they still got their own thugs).

One things that has changed, however, is the battle. While safety standards remain high on the list of priorities, a new era in coal mining has brought together union and environmental activist. The new foe, mountaintop removal (referred to as strip mining by the industry), threatens the region’s biosphere on a very large scale by cutting off the tops of mountains to access coal and filling nearby valleys with the rocks and soil removed. To see one of these projects up close is heart-wrenching.

As you can imagine, the soil is completely destroyed leaving the land unable to regenerate. So what do you put in nature’s place? Coal companies have a quick response to that one: the new flat ground is perfect for a Walmart or a new prison facility. And that is exactly how the industry is marketing these newely destroyed lands to local and state officials.

Unfortunately, that is also the future for the coal miners, as well. With mountaintop removal, a job that used to take over a hundred people can now be done with just three low-skilled workers. This has reeked havoc on union membership and the ability of the union to increase health and safety standards. Coal companies are also finding it easier to undermine unions by exploiting the undocumented immigrant workforce. Considering the fact that mountaintop removal has destroyed not only land but also homes, schools, roads and entire towns, the many former coal miners that are unable to find work as Walmart greeters or prison guards are sure to find themselves filling one of the privately-owned prison cells.

This week’s letter will not be written to the coal companies. As powerful as they are, we will be writing to a far more powerful influence in our nation: Oprah. This month’s issue of O Magazine featured a story, entitled “You fight for what you got, even if its only worth a dime,” of some of the incredible wimmin in Appalachia who are standing up against the devastation of mountaintop removal. I’ve had the privilege of meeting and working with several of these wimmin and that’s why i want to continue to support them even if i no longer live in the area.

The letter-writing campaign is being organized by EarthJustice. It is a positive campaign in that it is meant to thank the people at the magazine for including the report, but also to encourage Oprah to have some of these wimmin on her show so that millions of others can hear their stories of loss and struggle (one family’s three-year-old son was crushed to death in his sleep by a boulder that was knocked loose by a coal truck that was working illegally one night - the company was given a small fine for working illegally but was not implicated in the child’s death).

As brownfemipower stated months ago, Oprah can be a tool for radical change. She sees herself as such a tool. It is up to us to bring to her attention the struggles of working-class wimmin so that she may share their stories with the nation. Please take a moment and visit EarthJustice’s campaign page to see a sample letter. Then head over to Oprah’s website and submit your letter to the producers. It will take you five minutes for something that can change the lives of thousands and help protect the world’s oldest mountains.

20
Jun

assault on dissent pt.2

I know i said i was going to focus on the US, but this one is just too messed up not to give it some space. And considering the US’s attempt to greatly weaken labor rights in Mexico, i figured it was still pertinent to the US assault on dissent.

via Indymedia

Today, June 14 at 4:30 a.m., some 3000 elements from the ministerial police, preventive police and Oaxaca state firemen began to violently remove a sit-in of 70,000 workers from Section 22 of the National Union of Education Workers (SNTE) with tear gas, smoke grenade, stun grenades and firearms. Thus far there are 13 reported detentions, 4 injured persons, 5 bullet wounds and between 6 and 9 dead. The Teachers Union office building was also broken into and the installations of Radio Plantón were destroyed (Radio Planton is a free/un-licensed community radio station that has been a point of reference for social movements in Oaxaca).

With 3 weeks until elections and with the events in San Salvador Atenco still present (with 28 persons charged and jailed), once again the use of force instead of dialogue is the privileged response to citizens exercising their constitutional rights.

Since May 15, the first day of the present period of action in the teachers’ struggle, an atmosphere of hostility and confrontation against the teachers union has been sown within Oaxacan society. This, far from fortifying the search for a peaceful and negotiated solution to the teachers’ demands, has encouraged the conditions of scaled-up violence against this sector.

May 22 was the first day of Section 22 of the SNTE teacher-working class actions (some of the teachers are adherents to The Other Campaign) to support the educational demands of the people of Oaxaca. 70,000 teachers begin an extended sit-in in the center of the city in front of the old Government Palace and in 56 surrounding streets, to ask for fulfillment of their list of demands (first presented on May 1) that includes improvements to educational infrastructure (construction of classrooms, laboratories and workshops; uniforms; free student breakfasts; and more funding for scholarships and staff hiring), legal recognition of Radio Plantón, salary increases and recognition of the legitimacy of the union.

On June 1, the State Congress closes off dialogue without explanation and demands that all teachers return to their classrooms by June 5 or face salary sanctions and cancellation of labor contracts. An express request is also made to national public security organs to intervene and proceed with the removal of the thousands of men and women teachers maintaining the sit-in in the center of the city (3500 federal preventive police (PFP), state Preventive Police, the Special Police Operations Unit (UPOE, an elite grouping) and Municipal Police are moved to Oaxaca City). These decisions are endorsed on June 2 by more than 300 municipal presidents that make up the State Coordinating Body in Favor of Education. Section 22 of the SNTE decides during its assembly no to accept the ultimátum and to continue with the sit-in and resistance actions: road blocks; closures of the airport, PEMEX installations, the Chamber of Deputies, and the State Prosecutor’s Office; takeover of a highway toll booth; removal of parking meters, connections to city drainage and security cameras in the center of the city; the burning of election propaganda; and massive mobilizations (120,000 people participated in actions on June 7). They also demanded the resignation of the governor for refusing to dialogue.




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