OccuWorld , to Random stuff
@OccuWorld@syzito.xyz avatar

UC Academic Workers Authorize Strike Against Attacks on Student Protests for Gaza

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D6fpwDbpJLM&ab_channel=BreakThroughNews

48,000 academic workers and members of the United Auto Workers (UAW) Local 4811 have authorized a against the brutal crackdown on the Palestine at , filing charges against the UC system, after many graduate student workers in the union were subjected to violent police attacks at their place of work.

susurros , to palestine group
@susurros@kolektiva.social avatar

"The union representing 48,000 academic workers across the University of California said Friday that its members at UC Santa Cruz will go on strike Monday over alleged worker rights and free speech violations, potentially dealing a blow to campus operations at a critical time during the final weeks of the spring quarter.

"The Santa Cruz strike would be the first of potentially several work stoppages that the union intends to launch one by one across campuses based on how receptive administrations are to pro-Palestinian activists’ demands."

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-05-17/uc-academic-student-workers-santa-cruz-strike

@palestine

MakeLove_NotWar , to palestine group
@MakeLove_NotWar@wehavecookies.social avatar
jonny , to Random stuff
@jonny@neuromatch.social avatar

UAW 4811's strike authorization vote passed -

19,780 votes cast
ASEs (grad students): 80% yes
Postdocs: 74% yes
Academic Researchers: 73%

This authorizes the eboard to call a stand up strike similar to UAW's autoworkers strike last year. Our initial demands include amnesty for all students and workers who are facing any disciplinary action for protest, divestment from "weapons manufacturers, military contractors, and companies profiting from Israel's war on Gaza," disclosure of all investments, and the ability for researchers to opt out from funding from sources tied to the military or oppression of Palestinians (including a transitional fund for those people).

This strike is in response to our employer first allowing a vigilante mob to brutalize our students and workers, and then calling the police to further brutalize them the following night. Our union is responding to a pattern of employer violence that's as old as unions themselves, allying with police-aligned vigilantes to chill and crush organizing.

More information:
Strike vote FAQ: https://www.uaw4811.org/sav-faq
ULP landing page: https://www.uaw4811.org/2024-ulp-charges
ULP itself: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1obRNFpuF_8K5Xx1k4DKMB8RooT7aUsKK/

MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History May 9, 1907: Big Bill Haywood went on trial for murder in the bombing death of former Idaho governor Frank Steunenberg. Clarence Darrow defended Haywood and got him acquitted. Steunenberg had brutally suppressed the state’s miners. Haywood had been framed by a Pinkerton agent provocateur named James McParland, the same man who infiltrated the Pennsylvania miners’ union in the 1870s and got 20 innocent men executed as Molly Maguires. You can read about that in my novel, “Anywhere But Schuylkill.”

Read my article on Pinkertons here: https://michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/04/union-busting-by-the-pinkertons/
And my article on the Molly Maguires here: https://michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/13/the-myth-of-the-molly-maguires/

@bookstadon

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  • susurros , to Random stuff
    @susurros@kolektiva.social avatar

    On May 15, teachers belonging to the National Coordinator of Education Workers (CNTE) plan to launch a nationwide strike in Mexico.

    The CNTE is a smaller, more radical union within the corrupt and coopted National Union of Education Workers (SNTE). Members of the CNTE make up the majority of teachers in places such as Guerrero, Oaxaca, Chiapas, Tabasco, and Mexico City.

    They have put forward 11 demands, including the overturning of the neoliberal educational reform passed in 2013, better wages, improvements to classrooms and schools, and justice in cases such as the disappeared of Ayotzinapa.

    The last time the CNTE held a national strike was in 2016, which saw the Nochixtlán Massacre, the jailing of union leaders, the mass firing of teachers, and more. For those interested, I covered those events in-depth for @igd_news when I was writing the column "Insumisión."

    https://itsgoingdown.org/category/columns/insumision/

    Here's an article in Spanish with more details on the upcoming strike:

    https://piedepagina.mx/cnte-rumbo-al-paro-indefinido/

    MikeDunnAuthor , to Random stuff
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today In Labor History May 1, 1830: Mary Harris "Mother" Jones was born. Mother Jones was renowned for her militancy and fiery oration, as well as her many juicy quotes. She once said, “I’m no lady. I’m a hell-raiser.” She also was an internationalist, saying “My address is wherever there is a fight against oppression.” Despite the difficulties of constant travel, poor living and jail, she lived to be 100. She was also a cofounder of the anarchosyndicalist IWW.

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar
    blogdiva , to Random stuff
    @blogdiva@mastodon.social avatar

    — pssst... pssst.... hey, kid, you.. do you want an "S"?

    — an S? what for?

    — an S like in STRIKE.

    — strike? like baseball?

    — No! an S like in STRIKE!

    (muppets in a picket line suddenly appear)

    — STRIKE! STRIKE! STRIKE!

    (THUNDER)

    — YAHAHA! ONE TWO STRIKES! THREE STRIKES! THREE MARVELOUS STRIKES AND A PICKET LINE!

    (THUNDER)

    — YAHAHAHAHA!

    (EXUNT)

    'Sesame Street' Writers Unanimously Support Strike Authorization Vote
    https://variety.com/2024/tv/news/sesame-street-writers-strike-authorization-vote-wga-east-1235972886/

    MikeDunnAuthor , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History April 14, 1930: Over 100 Mexican and Filipino farm workers were arrested for union activities in Imperial Valley, CA. 8 were convicted of “criminal syndicalism.”

    MikeDunnAuthor , to Random stuff
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History April 14, 1917: IWW sailors went on strike in Philadelphia and won a ten dollar per month raise. Ben Fletcher, an African-American IWW organizer, was instrumental in organizing the Philadelphia waterfront. Fletcher was born in Philly in 1890. He joined the Wobblies (IWW) in 1912, became secretary of the IWW District Council in 1913. He also co-founded the interracial Local 8 in 1913.

    In 1913, Fletcher led 10,000 IWW Philly dockworkers on a strike. Within two weeks, they won 10-hr day, overtime pay, & created one of the most successful antiracist, anticapitalist union locals in the U.S. At the time, roughly one-third of the dockers on the Philadelphia waterfront were black. Another 33% were Irish. And about 33% were Polish and Lithuanian. Prior to the IWW organizing drive, the employers routinely pitted black workers against white, and Polish against Irish. The IWW was one of the only unions of the era that organized workers into the same locals, regardless of race or ethnicity. And its main leader in Philadelphia was an African American, Ben Fletcher.

    By 1916, thanks in large part to Fletcher’s organizing skill, all but two of Philadelphia’s docks were controlled by the IWW. And the union maintained control of the Philly waterfront for about a decade. At that time, roughly 10% of the IWW’s 1 million members were African American. Most had been rejected from other unions because of their skin color.

    Fletcher also traveled up and down the east coast organizing dockers. However, he was nearly lynched in Norfolk, Virginia in 1917. And in 1918, the state arrested him, sentencing him to ten years for the crime of organizing workers during wartime. He served three years.

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    MikeDunnAuthor , to France
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History April 2, 1840: Émile Zola, French novelist, playwright, journalist was born. He was also a liberal activist, playing a significant role in the political liberalization of France, and in the exoneration of Alfred Dreyfus, the Jewish army officer falsely convicted and imprisoned on trumped up, antisemitic charges of espionage. He was also a significant influence on mid-20th century journalist-authors, like Thom Wolfe, Truman Capote, Hunter S. Thompson, Norman Mailer and Joan Didion. Wolfe said that his goal in writing fiction was to document contemporary society in the tradition of Steinbeck, Dickens, and Zola.

    Zola wrote dozens of novels, but his most famous, Germinal, about a violently repressed coalminers’ strike, is one of the greatest books ever written about working class rebellion. It had a huge influence on future radicals, especially anarchists. Some anarchists named their children Germinal. Rudolf Rocker had a Yiddish-language anarchist journal in London called Germinal, in the 1910s. There were also anarchist papers called Germinal in Mexico and Brazil in the 1910s.

    @bookstadon

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History April 1, 1929: Textile workers struck at the Loray Mill, in Gastonia, N.C. Textile mills started moving from New England, to the South, in the 1890s, to avoid the unions. This escalated after the 1909 Shirtwaist strike (which preceded the infamous Triangle Shirtwaist fire), the IWW-led Lawrence (1912) and (1913) Patterson strikes, which were led by Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, Big Bill Haywood and Carlo Tresca. The Gastonia strike was violent and bloody. Dozens of strikers were imprisoned. A pregnant white woman, Ella Mae Wiggins, wrote and performed songs during the strike. She also lived with and organized African American workers, one of the worst crimes a poor white woman could commit in the South. The strike ended soon after goons murdered her. Woody Guthrie called Wiggins the pioneer of the protest ballad and one of the great folk song writers.

    Wiley Cash wrote a wonderful novel about Ella Mae Wiggins and the Gastonia strike, “The Last Ballad.” Jess Walter wrote a really great novel about the Spokane free speech fight, featuring Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, called “The Cold Millions.” Other novels about the Gastonia strike include Sherwood Anderson’s, “Beyond Desire,” and Mary Heaton Vorse’s, “Strike!”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dJj65ZmjnS8

    @bookstadon

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    “There was a time in the history of France when the poor found themselves oppressed to such an extent that forbearance ceased to be a virtue, and hundreds of heads tumbled into the basket. That time may have arrived with us.”

    A cooper said this to a crowd of 10,000 workers in St. Louis, Missouri in July, 1877. He was referring to the Paris Commune, which happened just six years prior. Like the Parisian workers, the Saint Louis strikers openly called for the use of arms, not only to defend themselves against the violence of the militias and police who were sent to crush their strike, but for outright revolutionary aims:

    You can read my full essay about the Great Upheaval at https://michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/03/31/the-great-upheaval/

    @bookstadon

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History March 31, 1883: Cowboys in the Texas panhandle began a 2-and-a-half-month strike for higher wages.

    @bookstadon

    pluralistic , to Random stuff
    @pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

    The promise of feudal security: "Surrender control over your digital life so that we, the wise, giant corporation, can ensure that you aren't tricked into catastrophic blunders that expose you to harm":

    https://locusmag.com/2021/01/cory-doctorow-neofeudalism-and-the-digital-manor/

    --

    If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:

    https://pluralistic.net/2024/03/29/boobytrap/#device-lock-controller

    1/

    18+ pluralistic OP ,
    @pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

    Do this right and the borrower will pay you several times the value of the loan, and still owe you a bundle. If the borrower ever earns anything, you'll have a claim on it. Think of Americans who borrowed $79,000 to go to university, paid back $190,000 and still owe $236,000:

    https://pluralistic.net/2020/12/04/kawaski-trawick/#strike-debt

    This kind of loan-sharking is profitable, but labor-intensive. It requires that the debtor make payments they fundamentally can't afford.

    23/

    tagesschau , to Random stuff German
    @tagesschau@ard.social avatar

    GDL und Deutsche Bahn vereinbaren 35-Stunden-Woche bis 2029

    Beim Tarifkompromiss zwischen Deutscher Bahn und der Lokführergewerkschaft GDL ist der Konzern beim Thema Arbeitszeit weit entgegengekommen. Die 35-Stunden-Woche soll demnach bis 2029 umgesetzt werden.

    ➡️ https://www.tagesschau.de/wirtschaft/unternehmen/bahn-gdl-35-stunden-woche-100.html?at_medium=mastodon&at_campaign=tagesschau.de

    everton137 ,
    @everton137@vivaldi.net avatar

    @tagesschau good news for someone traveling abroad by train today. I was already bringing my work computer, in case Deutsch Bahn announced some new strike and I couldn't come back.

    MakeLove_NotWar , to Random stuff
    @MakeLove_NotWar@wehavecookies.social avatar

    So..It’s time for a change…
    Raise your voice to the air
    It’s time for a change
    Revolution is here
    This is our song,
    our rights now expressed
    There’s power in our voice
    There’s strength in our words
    When the whole world is silent,
    Our voice must be heard.
    This is our song is set
    For the festival of the
    https://yt.artemislena.eu/watch?v=9F_coLFmerg


    MikeDunnAuthor , to Philippines, the Pearl of the Orient Seas
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History March 17, 1966: 100 striking Mexican American and Filipino farmworkers marched from Delano, California to Sacramento to pressure the growers and the state government to answer their demands for better working conditions and higher wages, which were, at the time, below the federal minimum wage. By the time the marchers arrived, on Easter Sunday, April 11, the crowd had grown to 10,000 protesters and their supporters. A few months later, the two unions that represented them, the National Farm Workers Association, led by César Chávez, and the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee, joined to form the United Farm Workers. The strike was launched on September 8, 1965, by Filipino grape pickers. Mexicans were initially hired as scabs. So, Filipino strike leader Larry Itliong approached Cesar Chavez to get the support of the National Farm Workers Association, and on September 16, 1965, the Mexican farm workers joined the strike. During the strike, the growers and their vigilantes would physically assault the workers and drive their cars and trucks into the picket lines. They also sprayed strikers with pesticides. The strikers persevered nonviolently. They went to the Oakland docks and convinced the longshore workers to support them by refusing to load grapes. This resulted in the spoilage of 1,000 ten-ton cases of grapes. The success of this tactic led to the decision to launch a national grape boycott, which would ultimately help them win the struggle against the growers.

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History March 12, 1912: The IWW won their Bread and Roses textile strike in Lawrence, MA. This was the first strike to use the moving picket line, implemented to avoid arrest for loitering. The workers came from 51 different nationalities and spoke 22 different languages. The mainstream unions, including the American Federation of Labor, all believed it was impossible to organize such a diverse workforce. However, the IWW organized workers by linguistic group and trained organizers who could speak each of the languages. Each language group got a delegate on the strike committee and had complete autonomy. Big Bill Haywood and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn masterminded the strategy of sending hundreds of the strikers' hungry children to sympathetic families in New York, New Jersey, and Vermont, drawing widespread sympathy, especially after police violently stopped a further exodus. 3 workers were killed by police during the strike. Nearly 300 were arrested.

    The 1911 verse, by Poet James Oppenheim, has been associated with the strike, particularly after Upton Sinclair made the connection in his 1915 labor anthology, “The Cry for Justice: An Anthology of the Literature of Social Protest”

    As we come marching, marching, we battle too for men,
    For they are women's children, and we mother them again.
    Our lives shall not be sweated from birth until life closes;
    Hearts starve as well as bodies; give us bread, but give us roses!

    @bookstadon

    MikeDunnAuthor , to Random stuff
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History March 9, 1911: Frank Little and other free-speech fighters were released from jail in Fresno, California, where they had been fighting for the right to speak to and organize workers on public streets. Little was a Cherokee miner and IWW union organizer. He helped organize oil workers, timber workers and migrant farm workers in California. He participated in free speech fights in Missoula, Spokane and Fresno, and helped pioneer many of the passive resistance techniques later used by the Civil Rights movement. He was also an anti-war activist, calling U.S. soldiers “Uncle Sam’s scabs in uniforms.” 1917, he helped organize the Speculator Mine strike in Butte, Montana. Vigilantes broke into his boarding house, dragged him through the streets while tied to the back of a car, and then lynched him from a railroad trestle. Prior to Little’s assassination, Author Dashiell Hammett had been asked by the Pinkerton Detective Agency to murder him. Hammett declined.

    freespeech

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History March 5, 1917: Members of the IWW went on trial in Everett, Washington for the Everett Massacre, which occurred on November 5, 1916. In reality, they were the victims of an assault by a mob of drunken, vigilantes, led by Sheriff McRae. The IWW members had come to support the 5-month long strike by shingle workers. When their boat, the Verona, arrived, the Sheriff asked who their leader was. They replied, “We are all leaders.” Then the vigilantes began firing at their boat. They killed 12 IWW members and 2 of their own, who they accidentally shot in the back. Before the killings, 40 IWW street speakers had been taken by deputies to Beverly Park, where they were brutally beaten and run out of town. In his “USA” trilogy, John Dos Passos mentions Everett as “no place for the working man.” And Jack Kerouac references the Everett Massacre in his novel, “Dharma Bums.”

    @bookstadon

    raymondpert , to Korea
    @raymondpert@mstdn.social avatar

    Thousands of Korean doctors face license suspensions as Seoul moves to prosecute strike leaders

    > Thousands of striking junior doctors in South Korea faced proceedings to suspend their medical licenses Tuesday, as authorities are pushing for police investigations targeting leaders of the walkouts that have disrupted hospital operations.
    https://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireStory/thousands-korean-doctors-face-license-suspensions-seoul-moves-107799206

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Welcome to Day 5 of our blog tour for

    ·Anywhere But Schuylkill·
    by Michael Dunn!

    Check out our tour stops today, sharing intriguing excerpts & spotlights from this fascinating novel!

    https://thecoffeepotbookclub.blogspot.com/.../blog-tour...

    @bookstadon

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History February 27, 1902: John Steinbeck was born on this date in Salinas, California. He wrote numerous novels from the perspective of farmers and working-class people, including “The Grapes of Wrath,” “Tortilla Flats” “Of Mice and Men,” “Cannery Row,” and “East of Eden.” In 1935, he joined the communist League of American Writers. He faced contempt charges for refusing to cooperate with HUAC. The FBI and the IRS harassed him throughout his career. Yet he wrote glowingly about U.S. troops during the Vietnam War. He won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1962 and the Pulitzer in 1939.

    @bookstadon

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