• Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • DCMA
  • Sitemap
  • Submit
Regional Posts
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sports
    • Politics
  • Business
    • Crypto
    • Marketing
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Food
  • Tech
    • Gaming
    • Gadgets
  • Science
  • Health
  • Travel
  • World
Regional Posts
  • News
    • Sports
    • Politics
  • Business
    • Crypto
    • Marketing
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Food
  • Tech
    • Gaming
    • Gadgets
  • Science
  • Health
  • Travel
  • World
No Result
View All Result
Regional Posts
No Result
View All Result
Home Politics

Why Labor Organization Should Be The Focus In The Fight For Democracy

by Staff Writer
January 17, 2022
in Politics
0
Why Labor Organization Should Be The Focus In The Fight For Democracy
551
SHARES
3.7k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The “Great Resignation” has certainly come to be a trending news cycle hashtag—and one that reflects an indubitable reality. Indeed, over four million people in each of the months of August and September, quit their jobs.

READ ALSO

“Judge Dismisses Bogus Defamation Lawsuit Against Foxconn Critic”

China’s fragility feeds the doom-mongers in Davos

And when it comes to Americans being empowered to say, “Take this job and shove it!”—well, more power to them. For decades wages have stagnated and workers have increasingly lost their voice and power in the workplace, as the percentage of workers represented by unions has declined by nearly half since 1983. This decline overwhelmingly benefits the profit margins of employers, as unionized workers bring home wages roughly 19% higher than workers bereft of union representation and the worker solidarity such representation fosters.

A labor market experiencing a stark shortage of workers paired with relief monies are two key factors among many that have enabled Americans to re-assess their work situations and conclude, with an abundance of higher-paying jobs open, that they no longer need to suffer the abuse of poor working conditions and less-than-livable wages.

Liberating workers from the coercion of economic necessity that left them squarely and vulnerably in the grip of employers and corporations seeking profits at the expense of human welfare, this development, this opportunity to re-assess their employment, is a key step toward actually endowing Americans concretely with this condition of being we call freedom and tend to talk about so abstractly.

And we know from the current labor conditions, the “war for workers,” that the unlivable wages and exploitation American workers endured were indeed a function of this coercion rather than a matter of necessity and survival for businesses.

Indeed, as Eric Rosenbaum wrote for CNBC on the heels of Target and Walmart announcing they will cover 100% of employees’ college tuition, “The war for workers isn’t only benefiting the labor force in the form of higher employee wages, but a benefit arguably as, if not more, important to their economic mobility and long-term success: access to education.”

What we see in this current war for workers, leading to higher wages, is not that businesses can’t or couldn’t afford to remunerate workers with better wages and benefits but that they were in a position of power where they didn’t have to.

We often hear businesses cry that they will have to shut down if they have to pay workers a decent or livable wage.

Now we see that isn’t the case at all. Indeed, even as wages rise, corporate profits are hitting record highs.

Businesses have simply been behaving according to the chief value or priority of the U.S. market economy, which is achieving and maximizing profit rather than meeting need.

Still, we need to recognize that the empowerment of individual American workers we’ve witnessed during this Great Resignation is likely a passing condition resulting from temporary fluctuation in the labor market resulting from an unusual confluence of historical and economic factors. This empowerment of individuals due to temporary conditions is not in itself sustainable; we need to recognize the need to institutionalize and concretize—make permanent–worker rights in social, political, and cultural organizational forms—like ones we already have: unions.

And to do this, it would really help if our media focused on how workers have been able to secure better wages, benefits, conditions in the jobs they have, in their current workplaces because they representation and voice, because they have power that guarantees some modicum of workplace democracy.

The story of the underdog American workers being able to tell a boss to ‘Take this job and shove it!” tends to be a feel-good tale, but it’s not log lasting; and it doesn’t guarantee that the job one worker was able to leave will get better for another.

As we approach the day to celebrate the life of Martin Luther King, Junior, we should remember his assertion that “all labor has dignity.”

While some employers may create poor working conditions and pay low wages, that’s not because the work isn’t important or dignified—or to use a current term, “essential.” It’s because we as a society let those employers get away with exploiting people.

It would have been nice to see our media—including progressive but nonetheless corporate-produced shows like those of Rachel Maddow, Chris Hayes, Lawrence O’Donnell, and Joy Reid—invest in close coverage of the weeks-long strikes by workers at John Deere and Kellogg’s, or cover the successful unionization efforts by Starbucks’ workers.

In particular what we saw in the strikes at John Deere and Kellogg’s was workers who were unwilling to allow management to create two tiers of workers in which new and more recently-hired employees would not have pensions and would not receive the same level of compensation and wage increases.

Meanwhile, John Deere and Kellogg’s were experiencing flourishing profits; they just felt no need out of any basic value of fairness and decency to share that wealth with the people on the ground actually producing the product and generating the wealth.

Their solution was not resign but to follow another important and much less often-told tale in America—that of collective organization and unionization, as we are seeing with the workers at Starbucks.

The workers at John Deere and Kellogg’s understood the value and dignity of the work they did, and they fought for that dignity and value to be recognized.

This recognition that “all labor has dignity” is key for democracy and empowering workers.

The words of Casey Moore, a Starbucks employee who took part in the unionization effort, makes this point clearly.

The unionization struggle, as she describes it, is key for American just to realize they deserve democratic rights. Just listen to this:

“My dad is in the teachers union, but I had only ever really associated unions with teachers and nurses and mainly construction workers in the building trades. So when I first started I was like, ‘Really, a union for baristas?’ But then the more I learned about it, the more I thought, ‘Why not?’ There’s no reason that baristas shouldn’t get the same benefits and quality of life that other workers do.”

All workers deserve workplace democracy and a livable wage, not to mention a fair share of the wealth they help produce.

And we need to tell the story of unionization and collective action at least as much as we tell the story of resignation.

 

 

 

Tim Libretti is a professor of U.S. literature and culture at a state university in Chicago. A long-time progressive voice, he has published many academic and journalistic articles on culture, class, race, gender, and politics, for which he has received awards from the Working Class Studies Association, the International Labor Communications Association, the National Federation of Press Women, and the Illinois Woman’s Press Association.

Source by www.politicususa.com

Share220Tweet138
Previous Post

Warren Buffett says these are the best businesses to own — 3 examples from Berkshire’s portfolio

Next Post

Barbie and Balmain Want to Make Toys the Next Big Fashion Frontier

Related Posts

"Judge Dismisses Bogus Defamation Lawsuit Against Foxconn Critic"
Politics

“Judge Dismisses Bogus Defamation Lawsuit Against Foxconn Critic”

May 26, 2022
A man reads the list of station closures as a woman walks away from the locked gate of a closed subway station.
Politics

China’s fragility feeds the doom-mongers in Davos

May 26, 2022
Trump expressed support for hanging Pence during Capitol riot, Jan. 6 panel told
Politics

Trump expressed support for hanging Pence during Capitol riot, Jan. 6 panel told

May 26, 2022
Biden Press Secretary Jen Psaki Officially Joins MSNBC
Politics

Biden Press Secretary Jen Psaki Officially Joins MSNBC

May 25, 2022
The Truth About the $40 Billion in US Aid Ostensibly Being spent to arm Ukraine
Politics

The Truth About the $40 Billion in US Aid Ostensibly Being spent to arm Ukraine

May 25, 2022
Michigan Republicans Rocked By Petition Fraud Scandal That Could Wipe Out Half Of Governor Candidates
Politics

Michigan Republicans Rocked By Petition Fraud Scandal That Could Wipe Out Half Of Governor Candidates

May 25, 2022

POPULAR NEWS

5 Email Templates For a Performance Management Process

5 Email Templates For a Performance Management Process

November 1, 2021
Florida Tik Tok star Damaury Mikula, 18, was arrested on Friday after he led Pasco County Police on a 100-mile-per-hour high speed chase

Florida TikTok star, 18, is arrested provoking police into high speed chase

November 1, 2021
The Best New Podcasts Coming in 2022

The Best New Podcasts Coming in 2022

December 30, 2021
sex

How To Increase Male And Female Sexual Desire

November 26, 2021
cyberbullying legal consequences

5 Ways to Report Cyberbullying

June 18, 2021

EDITOR'S PICK

How Stretching Air Helps Nor’easters Bury Towns Under Mountains Of Snow

How Stretching Air Helps Nor’easters Bury Towns Under Mountains Of Snow

January 30, 2022
A British teacher has lost the use of her legs and hands after falling 20ft when a balcony collapsed during an end-of-term party in Thailand

British teacher, 47, loses use of her legs and hands after falling 20ft from a balcony in Thailand

December 29, 2021
All of the Things I Was Left Wondering After Binging 'The Woman in the House'

All of the Things I Was Left Wondering After Binging ‘The Woman in the House’

February 8, 2022
5 Cheap and Easy Dinners That Start with the Freezer Aisle

5 Cheap and Easy Dinners That Start with the Freezer Aisle

April 30, 2022

About

REGIONAL POSTS Web Magazine is an online magazine covering international news, politics, technology, health, education, and much more.Read More.

Follow Us

Submit a News | Write For Us

Feel free to contact us for submission queries. via contact form or email us at : [email protected]

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • DCMA
  • Sitemap
  • Submit

© 2021 Regionalposts.com

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sports
    • Politics
  • Business
    • Crypto
    • Marketing
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Food
  • Tech
    • Gaming
    • Gadgets
  • Science
  • Health
  • Travel
  • World

© 2021 Regionalposts.com