A Labor Day Commitment to the Common Good

by: Jim Hightower, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

A Labor Day Commitment to the Common Good
(Photo: Elyce Feliz / Flickr)

America's corporate chieftains must love poor people, for they're doing all they can to create millions more of them.

They're knocking down wages, offshoring everything from manufacturing jobs to high tech, reducing full-time work to part-time, downsizing our workplaces, busting unions, cutting health care coverage and canceling pensions -- while also lobbying in Washington to privatize Social Security, eliminate job safety protections, restrict unemployment benefits, kill job-creating programs and increase corporate control of our elections.

It's said that the poor and the rich will always be among us. But nowhere is it written that the middle-class will always be there. In fact, it is a very recent creation in our society (and an unavailable dream for most people in the world). America's great middle class literally arose with the rise of labor unions and populist political movements in the 1800s, finally culminating in democratic economic reforms implemented from the 1930s into the 1960s.

Social Security, wage AND hour laws, collective bargaining rights, unemployment compensation, the GI Bill, the interstate highway program, civil rights laws, Medicare, Head Start -- and more -- provided the national framework necessary to sustain a middle class for the American Majority.

This essential framework was not "given" to us by corporate executives and politicians -- indeed, they sputtered, spewed and fought every piece of it tooth and nail. Rather, it came from union-led grassroots movements, organizing for structural change.

This Labor Day, we see corporate executives and their politicians relentlessly dismantling that framework, piece by piece -- and we see the middle class disappearing and poverty rising with each dismantled piece. But as labor icon Joe Hill said just before he was executed by Utah authorities for his unionizing activities, "Don't mourn, organize." It's time for working families to organize again for the revitalization of the middle class.

Who'll take a stand these days for restoring America's founding ethic of the common good?

You won't get this leadership from Washington -- and damned sure not from those in the corporate suites who're ruthlessly pushing an ethic of uncommon greed, saying to the middle class, "Adios, chumps."

Instead, look to places like Williamson, a town in upstate New York. This is apple country, home to a sprawling Mott's apple processing plant. Generations of families have worked at this plant, and there had not been a labor dispute in over 50 years. But the Mott family is long gone -- and so is the sense of shared purpose that had unified owners and workers.

In 2008, Mott's became a subsidiary of Dr. Pepper Snapple, a giant Texas conglomerate that also owns 7Up, Hawaiian Punch and dozens of other brands. DPS, as it's known, is doing very well, having banked a record profit of half-a-billion dollars last year. But its honchos apparently missed that basic kindergarten lesson about sharing. Indeed, the new owners introduced themselves to the area by eliminating the company's annual summer picnic, the children's Christmas party and other community-building touches.

Then, this March, DPS bosses abruptly demanded pay cuts averaging about $3,000 per worker, while also slashing pensions and hiking employee costs for health care. Why? Because they asserted that Mott's 300 workers were paid more than others in the area and should simply lower their standard of living accordingly. This from a corporation that paid its CEO $6.5 million last year! Adding insult to injury, the plant manager called workers "a commodity like soybeans" that can easily be replaced. Take the cuts -- or else, demanded DPS.

The workers chose "else." As we celebrate Labor Day at the beach or at backyard barbeques, they are on a strike for middle-class survival that's now in its fourth month.

This is not just about them, but about what kind of country America will be. If DPS succeeds in knocking down these skilled, experienced, loyal workers, other profitable corporations will follow. The Mott workers are taking a courageous stand for the middle class and our country's commitment to economic justice. To stand with them, go to www.ufcw.org.

National radio commentator, writer, public speaker, and author of the book, Swim Against The Current: Even A Dead Fish Can Go With The Flow, Jim Hightower has spent three decades battling the Powers That Be on behalf of the Powers That Ought To Be - consumers, working families, environmentalists, small businesses, and just-plain-folks.

Copyright 2010 Creators.com 

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In the spirit of this

In the spirit of this article by Jim Hightower, Truthout should do an article on the One Nation March for Jobs and Equality to take place on Saturday Oct 2 at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC. It's sponsored by unions, the NAACP and many other groups. It's essential that we get a big turnout to combat the impression that it's only the right that has something to tell our lawmakers.

More information Google up One Nation.



Presently existing unions,

Presently existing unions, except for possibly the Teamsters, are no more helpful to workers than the bosses with whom the stewards cozy up on golf courses and at lodge meetings. The average union has become just another source of grief to workers whose wages and pensions they've negotiated away over the last 35 years. Capitalism and its allies among Big Labor are equal enemies to those who are, at best, treading water in America. European Fascists never did so well at tyrannizing working people as these racketeers have done.



Why weren't these corporate

Why weren't these corporate chieftains knocking down wages, off-shoring everything, reducing full-time work to part-time, downsizing our workplaces, busting unions, cutting health care coverage and canceling pensions a long time ago? I mean, they've always been greedy, haven't they?

Supply and demand... learn about it.



History ... learn about it.

History ... learn about it.



The article is pertinent.

The article is pertinent. Laborers have nothing to celebrate here and worldwide. We should just celebrate the “corporation day” instead. The workers have lost all the benefits they gained fighting with their unions and organized. Some people blame the unions for the problems of some corporations. But unions do not make decision. Decisions are made by amateur, incompetent, arrogant, megalomaniac and greedy and cruel CEOs who have a “management” recipe as outlined above in the article. Most have no idea how to make their corporations ultra-profitable. Workers have to pay for their mistakes and workers have to subsidy their salaries. One of the main pillars of “neoliberalism” has been the dissolution of unions. The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, acting on behalf of the corporations have coerced other countries to adopt it. The number of union leaders “disappeared” is high in many developing countries. Some corporations have been involved in those “disappearances”. We do not celebrate Labor Day with the rest of the world, on the First of May. We are the exception, because we did not want to be paired with the Soviet Union. As far as I remember.



->20:07/Leanaboutit: yes, we

->20:07/Leanaboutit: yes, we know all KNOW about supply & demand & it is not gravity either.Profits can decline too, including the CEO' recompensation, At least they should take it like men!! As long as all expenses are covered, profits going down is NOT a bit deal. Expansion need not be all the time.



This is precisely why

This is precisely why workers must unite and demand better treatment. Capitalism is inherently bad, as it operates with the goal of maximizing profits at any expense. There is no more morality in a capitalist system anymore. The assets of the top three billionaires are more than the combined gross national income of all the least developed countries - with their combined population of 600 million people. It is a sad state of affairs that will only get worse.

http://www.fugginsuggin.com/2010/09/good-ole-labor-day.html



So why doesn't every other

So why doesn't every other union in the US go out on sympathetic strike to support the apple union? Folks, you've got to act in solidarity with your brothers and sisters. 7 % of the work force is significant, and I and many others would join you, I think. All unions out on strike!



Truth be told, the plight of

Truth be told, the plight of capitalism and the loss of jobs and benefits are indicative of the need to rectify what were once good laws and change those that are outdated.

America needs a face-lift in every sense of the word, which includes the word's morality and national pride.

When Americans, begin to work together, as a people, and stop bickering on political party lines; when they decide to stand-up for what is right, as proud Americans, positive change will appear and America the country and her people will be better for it.



>>>Supply and demand...

>>>Supply and demand... learn about it.

Actually, that's a huge part of the problem, since under the brutal and stupid oppressive medieval capitalist model, it's really Demand VS Supply--a coercive pricing system that encourages bosses and corporate hacks to use their dictatorial control over business and capital (which they take off the backs of workers and consumers) to drive down or seek out even cheaper labour to maximize profit margins.

That's why they love and support brutal dictatorships and mass-murdering regimes that repress democracy and unions and pimp out their people to profiteering parasitic corporations.

The other aspect here is that the US economy and its industrial and manufacturing sectors, where most union workers worked, were intentionally rapidly down-sized and destroyed by the same corporate bosses via the newly formed Trilateral Commission, which got the Nixon-Ford regime to adopt all sorts of rules encouraging runaway industry to sweatshop dictatorships in Asia.

What's need is not only for USers to start organizing unions like they did before (which won us most of the freedoms and living standards we once enjoyed), but to demand and initiate democratization measures of our economy via cooperatives and worker-run businesses, union and community sponsored enterprise and similar democratic socialistic ventures (which have helped create the highest living standards and freedoms in the world in the countries where they are practiced the most, like in Scandinavia)--and eventually eliminate capitalists and similar blackmailing, parasitic dictatorial bureaucracies over our economy and governments.



George G. Stradtman, Jr.,

George G. Stradtman, Jr., you are the worst of liars, poisoners of the well . . . you're doing soft-core racketeering while accusing some amorphous blob of "union bosses" - who may or may not even exist - of same. Confess as to who pays you to publish this anachronistic balderdash, or go elsewhere.



Dear Dr. Cole at

Dear Dr. Cole at Ekos-squared: Please get a TRO on Palin and Beck.