Re: OT: Longshore Workers strike todayTPS wrote:
> Those shipping docks must seem awful quiet.
> * seattlepi.nwsource . com /opinion/361087 mayday.html
>
> Longshore union strikes against war
> Last updated April 29, 2008 9:01 p.m. PT
>
> BY PETER COLE
> GUEST COLUMNIST
>
> On Thursday, May Day, the International Longshore and Warehouse Union
> will declare an eight-hour strike to protest the war in Iraq. Since
> the ILWU controls every port along the U.S. Pacific Coast, including
> Seattle and Tacoma, this strike demonstrates the collective power of
> workers willing to use it.
>
> The ILWU is demanding "an immediate end to the war and occupation in
> Iraq and Afghanistan and the withdrawal of U.S. troops from the Middle
> East." Although the majority of Americans repeatedly have expressed
> their desire to end the war, President Bush has not obliged us, so it
> drags on. Because our leaders refuse to listen, ILWU members are
> taking the next logical step for workers: Strike.
>
> For those unfamiliar, the ILWU is perhaps the most militant and
> politicized worker organization in the nation. It operates in one of
> the most important sectors of the world economy -- marine transport --
> and, thus, is in a strategic location to put peace above profits.
>
> Forged in the fires of 1930s worker struggles to gain basic rights,
> the ILWU was born in 1934 when longshoremen (there were no women in
> the industry then, though there are now) performed the incredibly
> hard, dangerous and important work of loading and unloading ships. To
> improve their wages and wrest some control over their lives, men all
> along the coast struck -- and in a few instances died -- to gain union
> recognition.
>
> The ILWU is highly democratic. A caucus of more than 100 longshore
> workers representing every union local establishes policies for the
> Longshore Division. It was this caucus that voted to declare the May
> Day strike.
>
> Dockworkers, including those in the ILWU, have a proud tradition of
> political action. For example, in the 1980s the ILWU respected the
> strike of British dockworkers by refusing to unload a ship worked by
> scab labor. Just last week, union longshoremen in South Africa refused
> to unload a Chinese vessel carrying military supplies destined for
> autocratic Zimbabwe -- a tremendous example of solidarity.
>
> That the ILWU chose International Workers' Day to declare this strike
> suggests its political commitment and internationalism. Around the
> world, workers honor labor by taking a holiday. What few Americans
> know is that the tradition of a May Day strike originated not in the
> Soviet Union in the 1950s but the United States of the 1880s.
>
> These days, such examples of worker power are increasingly rare in the
> U.S. The tragedy is that, historically, labor activism gave us the 40-
> hour workweek (and the weekend) and helped humanize the exploitative
> excesses of unregulated capitalism. As income inequality continues to
> grow in the United States, it is wise to remember how, in the past,
> strong unions created a larger middle class as well as a more
> democratic and egalitarian nation.
>
> The ILWU strike also reminds us that unions still have an important
> role in public discussions beyond the workplace. As a democratic
> institution, the ILWU is precisely the sort of "civic society" that
> the Bush administration has been trying to create in Iraq. On May 1,
> dockworkers will speak loud and clear -- end the endless war in Iraq.
> Other American workers who want to support our troops by bringing them
> home can make their voices heard by joining with the brave men and
> women of the ILWU and taking the day off.
>
> Peter Cole is an associate professor of history at Western Illinois
> University in Macomb, Ill. His book "Wobblies on the Waterfront:
> Interracial Unionism in Progressive-Era Philadelphia" was published by
> the University of Illinois Press.
>
> © 1998-2008 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Cool. BIG CHANGE from the Vietnam War days of "Hard Hats" and "Love It
or Leave It". This is a bright spot indicative of how very much America
*has* changed on a fundamental level.
A few neocon dinosaurs living in some never-existed mentalscape must be
curling a wrinkly lip at this one. mvm