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“One year from now, we have the chance to tell all those corporate lobbyists that the days of them setting the agenda in Washington are over. I have done more to take on lobbyists than any other candidate in this race - and I've won. I don't take a dime of their money, and when I am President, they won't find a job in my White House. Because real change isn't another four years of defending lobbyists who don't represent real Americans - it's standing with working Americans who have seen their jobs disappear and their wages decline and their hope for the future slip further and further away. That's the change we can offer in 2008.
When I am President, I will end the tax giveaways to companies that ship our jobs overseas, and I will put the money in the pockets of working Americans, and seniors, and homeowners who deserve a break. I won't wait ten years to raise the minimum wage - I'll raise it to keep pace every single year. And if American workers are being denied their right to organize when I'm in the White House, I will put on a comfortable pair of shoes and I will walk on that picket line with you as President of the United States."
-Candidate Obama, November 3, 2007 in Spartanburg, South Carolina.
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George Santayana said in Reason in Common Sense, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." Looking back 100 years, there were no unions, no EPA, no OSHA. The robber barons were in charge. You worked for a company who paid you in scrip that you used to purchase your personal needs from the company store, which were seriously overpriced, you went deeply into debt with no way to come out from under, unless, of course, you had something the company boss wanted.
Before organized labor, there was no middle class. It took FDR to finally stand for labor and make it a priority. Funny thing is, what few people don't realize is, FDR was alive when both Russia and China fell to Communism. He saw what happened when people were starving. I know he ran charities, but I believe more that he supported labor to protect himself from a major labor revolt. We were in the middle of the Great Depression, with little way out of it. People were starving. Unemployme nt was about what it is now. Thanks to the labor laws, we had the greatest prosperity we have known as a nation. This ran from the end of World War II through the 1960's. Then there was the initial underminin g of unions here and there. Word had to get out and be repeated very often to make people believe it (and my dad always said, believe none of what you hear, little more of what you read, and only half of what you see) that unions were BAD AND EVIL.
Except that union insurance paid for my godfather's wife's cancer treatment and home care. When his son was in a car accident, it paid for his full treatment, including almost two weeks in the hospital. He worked hard, but he was paid decently and could give his family a nice home. I forgot that. I forgot that people got decent wages because of unions, and now the only way for the robber barons to get back in power was to under-cut the unions one step at a time. Yes, there is corruption in some unions. But you can say that about anything -- corporatio n, politics, churches. Where there are human beings, there is the potential for corruption . There is also the potential for great good.
Unclear to millions of unorganized workers is whether or not they should care. Thanks to years of right wing propaganda -- and labor union inertia -- millions of Americans are "union skeptics," unsure as to the nature of the union animal. These fence-stra ddlers have no direct experience with organized labor, but they will be absolutely crucial participan ts in this war of corporate power versus working people.
Why is a war against labor unions a war against working people at large? At bottom, unions represent the human right to work with respect, to receive decent wages and benefits, and to organize with your co-workers to ensure this right is enforced.
As millions of working people in America understand, a non-union work site typically means living with poor wages, poor or nonexisten t benefits, and zero job security. The boss can fire you for glancing at him with a less than kind look, or because you complained about a workplace safety issue, etc. Unions empower workers to perform their jobs with dignity, without fear of the boss.
Unions have made life better for all working Americans by helping to pass laws ending child labor, establishing the eight-hour day, protecting workers' safety and health and helping create Social Security, unemployme nt insurance and the minimum wage.
The right wing cannot answer the above arguments, so they avoid them, focusing instead on the greedy "union boss." Unfortunately, partial truths aid this right wing attack on unions; some labor leaders in the US today act as self-servi ng rulers over their union kingdom, collecting large salaries via dues money while ignoring the demands of their members and the needs of unorganize d working people.
This insular thinking of some union leaders has helped distance the labor movement from the rest of the working class, at the expense of both. The rightwing is now exploiting this separation, painting labor unions as "ruining America" while corporatio ns claim they cannot afford the high wages of union workers, and state and federal government s blame union workers for their budget problems.
Unions have become the rightwing's ultimate scapegoat for the recession in their attempts to funnel the rage that many working people feel against labor unions. The rightwing maniacally works to shift attention away from those who caused the recession and even benefited from it -- the banks and corporatio ns -- to those who suffer from it -- workers, immigrants , and the poor. It is the classic syndrome of blaming the victim.
Only one factor effectively moves workers who are in subordinat e positions to actively cope with hazards: membership in an independen t labor union. These findings suggest that union growth could indirectly reduce job stress by giving workers the voice to cope effectivel y with job hazards.