September 6, 2007
- Issue 243 |
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Labor Day
Hypocrisy By Stephen Lendman Guest Commentator |
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Labor Day
has been commemorated on the first Monday in September each year, since
the first one was celebrated in Labor Day became a national federal
holiday when Congress passed legislation for it in June, 1894, at a
time when working people had few rights, management had the upper hand,
only wanted to exploit workers for profit, and got away with it. It
took many painful years of organizing, taking to the streets, going
on strike, holding boycotts, battling police and National Guard forces,
and paying with blood and lives before real gains were won. Workers
got an eight-hour day, a living wage, on-the-job benefits and the pinnacle
of labor's triumph in the 1930s, with the passage of the landmark Wagner
Act, establishing the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). It guaranteed
labor the right to bargain collectively on equal terms with management,
for the first time ever. All of it was won [by action at] the
grass-roots level. Management gave nothing until forced to, and neither
did government. It always sides with business, never yielding a thing
unless threatened with disruptive work stoppages or possible insurrection.
All this is in a democracy that claims to be a government of the people,
by the people and for the people - most of whom are ordinary working-class
ones. Since a worried Congress passed the
1935 Wagner Act during the Great Depression, the state of organized
labor declined, especially post-WW II. The decline accelerated precipitously
during the Reagan years under an administration openly hostile to worker
rights in its one-sided support for management. It continued unabated
under Republican and Democratic administrations, and today stands at
a multi-generational low. Under George Bush, conditions got
much worse. Since coming into office in 2001, he openly sided with
management on policies to strip workers of their right to organize
and bargain for a living wage and essential benefits. He hired anti-union
officials, denied millions overtime pay, cut pay raises for 1.8 million
federal workers - claiming a "national emergency" - and schemed
to end Social Security as we know it by plotting (unsuccessfully so
far) to let Wall Street sharks take it over. Since labor's ascendancy decades earlier,
corporate Even worse, most jobs are low-pay
service sector positions because the nation's manufacturing base and
many higher-paying jobs in finance and technology have been sent offshore
to low-wage, developing nations. Workers there can be hired for a fraction
of the pay scales here, or as virtual serfs at below-poverty wages
as low as $2 a day or less and with no benefits. Companies fill legions
of sweatshop factory jobs in countries prohibiting unions and fair
worker standards, [piling] Wal-Mart's "Always low prices" on
the backs of ruthlessly exploited working people. Nonetheless, on the first Monday each
September, this nation "remembers" working Americans with
a federally mandated holiday in their "honor." Who's celebrating,
when it's disingenuously commemorated at a time when worker rights
are threatened, ignored, forgotten and uncared about by heartless governments
beholden to capital. They scorn working people who are no longer as
deceived with meaningless bread and circus droppings at the expense
of what they need most: good jobs at good pay, essential benefits,
job security and a government on their side, doing what counts most
- supporting their rights with worker-friendly legislation. Workers are reminded every day that
backing like that is off the table by governments shamelessly mocking
their day. It's commemorated in name only by a nation beholden to capital,
the corporate giants controlling it, and the best democracy their money
can buy for them, alone. This article was originally published
as a Truthout editorial. Stephen Lendman lives in |
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