Heavy rotation (July 2005)

My current sonic diet includes:

The White Stripes Get Behind Me

Shelby Lynne Suit Yourself

Robert Cray Twenty

Dwight Yoakam Blame the Vain [video for “Intentional Heartache”]

M. Ward

Tommy Guerrero & Gadget and The Jazz Cannon The “You’ll Never Take Us Alive” Battle (EP)

Frank Black Honeycomb

Thievery Corporation The Cosmic Game

Jim White Presents Music from Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus and Drill A Hole in that Substrate and Tell Me What You See [Check out the video for “If Jesus Drove a Motorhome”]

A3 Last Train to Mashville, Vol. 2 [Check out the video for A3’s single “Hello I’m Johnny Cash”]

Vic Chesnutt Ghetto Bells

M.I.A. Arular

Beck Guero

The Beatles Past Masters, Volumes 1 & 2

Amos Lee

Everything by Tommy Guerrero and Guided By Voices

Bad Reilgion, The Empire Strikes First

Coldplay X & Y [Sorry about that, the album is so pleasantly bland I can’t stop listening; no links provided to resist Chris Martin’s efforts to become ruler of the world.]

Labor smackdown in Chicago

The AFL-CIO will hold it 50th convention in Chicago starting July 25. Will the convention be the end of the AFL-CIO as we know it? Is the internal crisis threatening to split the federation really a battle between the status quo union bureaucrats and union leaders committed to building a strong labor movement?

Joann Wypijewski puts it all into perpsective in this piece from Counterpunch and it ain’t pretty.

July 22, 2005

Showdown in Chicago

Is This Really an “Insurgency ” to Shake Up the Labor Movement?

By JOANN WYPIJEWSKI

The day nears for the 50th national convention of the AFL-CIO, opening in Chicago on July 25. The meeting is being heralded as a possibly fateful encounter, in which forces of enlightenment and reaction will wrestle in momentous debate over the future of organized labor.

On the one side, so the story goes, we have the dynamic “organizing” unions with vivid blueprints for revitalization; on the other side, the dinosaur unions and leadership of the AFL-CIO, content with the status quo even as union membership dips to its lowest level in 70 years. We are primed for heated words and, perhaps, a turbulent exit by some of labor’s biggest players, who haven’t yet secured the votes to control the convention floor or to unseat John Sweeney as president of the 13 million-member labor federation.

It would be pleasant to set forth the impending showdown in Chicago as one in which the mutineers have a convincing plan for regenerating a labor movement, a plan made credible and compelling by their own past achievements. God knows, organized labor needs shaking up. The clich

Hard left turn for labor

Interview with Bill Fletcher by David Bacon for Truthout.

Posted to the Working Class Studies mailing list today:

LABOR NEEDS A HARD LEFT TURN
Bill Fletcher Says the Current Debate Over Labor’s Future is Dominated by an Outdated Conservatism
Interview by David Bacon
TruthOut/Interview 7/21/05

Bill Fletcher is president of TransAfrica, a national policy organization in Washington dealing with issues surrounding Africa. After the reform administration of John Sweeney was elected in 1995, Fletcher became the labor federation’s director of education, and later an assistant to AFLCIO President John Sweeney. Forced out over his radical politics, Fletcher has since proposed a wide-ranging set of ideas for a truly new direction for US unions. They clearly need it. As the AFL-CIO prepares to meet in Chicago on Monday, the percentage of organized workers in the US (overall 10%) is lower than it’s been since the 1920s. While unions are debating structural changes, and some threaten to leave the AFL-CIO entirely, Fletcher says labor’s problems arise because unions have stopped being the radical organizations they once were. The current debate is too limited, he says. Instead, the labor movement needs a profound change in political direction. He was interviewed this week by labor journalist David Bacon.

Q: I’d like to ask you about the criticism you’ve been leveling at the debate itself, more than either of the two parties in it. You say the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) and the AFL-CIO itself are not really fighting about the right issues. Quoting from your most recent piece, you say, “these contentious debates make a dangerous assumption: that the decline of unions is largely the fault of the structure of the AFL-CIO and/or how the AFL-CIO has operated.” What do you mean by that?

A: First, the bulk of the resources in the union movement don’t exist at the level of the AFL-CIO, while individual unions themselves are responsible for organizing. This is a prerogative they have cherished very deeply. In this debate about the AFL-CIO and its structures, there’s very little discussion about the actual practice of the various affiliate unions.

What I feel is missing from this debate, is a thoughtful, rigorous analysis of the economic and political conditions we’re facing and the implications they have for the kinds of organizing unions should be doing, and the structures they need to accomplish that. In the absence of that analysis you can make all kinds of structural suggestions but they may not necessarily get to the problem.

Our problems include what’s happening externally – the economic and political situation – and the lethargy that exists within the labor movement. Our unions suffer from a profound conservatism, a failure to recognize the kinds of changes that are going on, and therefore our need for a very visionary movement.

Q: You mention the conservatism of the US labor movement. I think for anybody who’s had much contact with unions from South Africa to Central America, even Canada, we seem quite conservative by comparison. During the Cold War, those people who really did have a radical vision were mostly driven out of our labor movement. So aren’t’ you expecting a lot? Where would a more radical vision, like the one you’re describing, come from?

A: I am expecting a lot, but what I’m suggesting is what I believe is necessary, not simply wishful thinking. If we’re going to have a renewed labor movement, these are steps we need to take. As they say, we can keep rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic, but the ship is sinking. My concern is, what do we do? What kind of analysis do we need? And, therefore, what changes do we need in the practice of trade unionism in order to succeed and build power?

Does that mean radical solutions? Damn right it does! We need a different kind of leadership. Most of the leaders in the labor movement really should retire. Unfortunately, people have gotten very comfortable, but, more important than that, they’ve made certain wrong assumptions about the politics and economics of this country. Unions are not accepted in this country by the governing elite. They’re not accepted by capital.
Q: One of the issues you point to is globalization, and how unions approach the way capitalism operates on an international scale. The Service Employees have a proposal in their 10-point list that talks about how unions should conduct their international relationships. It calls for unions to find partners in other countries, even to organize them, in order to face common employers. That’s what I heard AFL-CIO Secretary Treasurer Richard Trumka say in New York ten years ago, when the Sweeney administration was in the process of being elected. At the time this seemed like a big change from the Cold War, that unions would cooperate with anyone willing to fight against our common employers. Now this doesn’t seem so radical. What’s the limitation there that you’re pointing out?

A: You’re right, it’s not radical anymore. A number of unions have been doing this, like the UE and the Steel Workers. It’s an important example of what I call “pragmatic solidarity,” and it should be done. But what’s missing from this discussion is a response from the labor movement to US foreign policy.

Q: Like the war for instance?

A: Exactly, like the war, because the international situation is about more than multinational corporations. Corporate globalization and military intervention are intertwined. In the labor movement there’s an absence of understanding about the relationship between the two. That’s why we get manipulated in the response to 9/11, by justifications for the war. Unions in the rest of the world are not simply asking us whether we will stand with them against General Electric, General Motors, or Mitsubishi. They want to know: What is your stand about the US empire, about aggressive wars or coups de etat? If we have nothing to say about these things, how can we expect to have any credibility?

Q: In some ways it seems to me that US corporations operating in a country like Mexico or El Salvador are, in some ways, opportunistic. They’re taking advantage of an existing economic system, and trying to make it function to produce profits. They’ll exploit the difference in wages for instance, or their ability to require concessions from governments in order to set up factories in their countries. The question unions rarely ask is what causes poverty in a country like El Salvador? What drives a worker into a factory that, looking at it from the United States, we call a sweatshop? What role does the US play in creating that system of poverty?

A: You’ve got it. In our union movement, we don’t have that kind of discussion. We destroy education departments, or we turn education into simply a technical matter. We don’t really work with our members to develop a framework to answer these questions. So our movement becomes ineffective in fighting around these issues. This is part of what is missing entirely from this current debate over how our unions are structured. Simple solutions are being put forward for very complex problems, often with a high level of arrogance, from both sides.

Q: I see the AFL-CIO campaigning in Washington against CAFTA, for instance. Labor lobbyists will go up to Capital Hill and mobilize pressure on Congress to defeat it. To a certain extent, unions will go out to their local affiliates and will ask that members make phone calls or write letters to Congress. But what seems to be missing is what you’re pointing to – a kind of education at the base of the labor movement. Actions in Washington often don’t have a lot of force behind them because there’s so little effort to create a conscious, educated union membership that’s prepared to take action.

A: The root of this problem is a kind of American pragmatism that disparages education. There’s also fear that an educated membership may rise up and demand change. But that’s why, in this current situation, people need to demand more from both sides of the debate.

For one, the whole notion of threatening to pull out of the AFL-CIO is, at best, a tactical mistake. Those people who want change lose credibility and the moral high ground. That’s turned this debate towards an extremely personalized exchange, like firing missiles across the demilitarized zone. What’s needed right now, desperately, are voices saying, let’s pull back for a moment and engage in the kind of discussion we need. For example, I read a letter from Tom Buffenbarger, president of the Machinists Union. I disagree with him on virtually everything, but he asked a very important question. What percentage of the workforce do we actually need to unionize to make a qualitative change in our situation? It leads to asking ourselves, what do we mean by power?

Q: You mean people say we need more members, but don’t say how many or in what industries?

A: Exactly, and if you say we need to organize 30% of the workforce to make a qualitative change, that’s an enormous difference from where we are. But at least if you ask the question, then you can start talking about the structure unions might need, or the strategic implication of that objective. Those who are talking a lot about restructuring might have to propose even more radical ideas in order to accomplish a goal like that. But as the saying goes: if you don’t know where you’re going, any road will get you there. When you have various structural solutions that are put forward in the absence of clear strategic objectives, it’s really just a gut-level response.

Q: Talking about organizing 30% of the workforce seems so far away that I think it’s hard for people to imagine what might really be necessary to make such an advance. Despite the best, even spoken, intentions, since Sweeney came in 10 years ago there was only one year in which the AFL-CIO increased the percentage of union members in the US work force. Every year other than that we’ve still gone down. And I don’t think it’s for lack of trying, although we can talk about what trying consists of, and what the drawbacks to those efforts were. Nevertheless, I remember when I was an organizer in the late 1970s and 1980s. There was no consensus then in the US labor movement that we even needed to organize new members at all. So let’s take one of the barriers that inhibit that kind of growth – racism in the US workforce, and racism in the US labor movement as well. How should the labor movement discuss that issue, that would be different from the kind of debate going on right now?

A: The discussion of gender or race right now mainly ends up focusing on diversity – how many people are at the table, how many people are in leadership? This is a discussion of whether or not the racial and sex complexion of the leadership of the labor movement reflects its base. While that’s important, the more fundamental discussion is one of inclusion. Who is making the decisions? You can have a union executive board where 30% of the leaders are people of color. But if mostly white people are still making the decisions, it’s basically window dressing.

What I don’t hear is a discussion about changing the culture of unions, so that we change the decision-makers, and are really inclusive. That would represent a dramatic change. Moving against racism, against sexism, means changing the way we do business within unions. The informal networks of the people who actually make decisions now will have to be broken up.

Q: What else would be different?

A: One common experience for most workers of color is that we are often asking community-based organizations to do something for us. But it’s not always a two-way street. We have to start building partnerships with communities of color, and that means back and forth. It does not mean we are going to agree all the time, but it means unions need to be there around issues communities feel are important. Years ago in St. Louis and Boston, union locals actually started and helped to build organizations in working-class communities. They took the issue of race very seriously.

Unions have missed the boat by not taking up an urban strategy. Right now working class people have to fight just to stay in the cities. They’re being driven out, and this has a disproportionate impact on workers of color. Unions and central labor councils need to look at economic development, and issues of housing and job creation. That would start to give us something we lack, a compelling vision – something people will rally to. I find the current debate very disturbing because it often feels technical and corporate. What’s missing is any sense of why hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of unorganized workers should rally to unions. Unions were once a source of inspiration to community-based organizations, particularly in the ’30s and ’40s. You don’t feel that today. We need a very different approach if we are going to organize millions of unorganized workers.

Q: Of course, these days joining a union usually means risking your job. You talk about what the labor movement puts in from of workers to inspire them to do this. Primarily, the kinds of arguments made to workers are economic – that they need a wage raise, more security, and pensions that aren’t going to disappear. They need healthcare coverage, which is becoming increasingly unavailable. These are all pretty important items. But you’re talking about a kind of vision that goes beyond that, aren’t you?

A: I definitely am. We absolutely need to appeal to people to act on their immediate economic interests. But we’re also talking about a movement that inspires people with a broader vision of social justice, not simply what happens in the workplace. So we also need to be flexible about the forms of organizations people join. Sometimes it might be associations, or groups based on occupation. At other times people join groups based on industry, or craft.

Q: Are you saying that you want workers to be against the system? Do you think that that’s too much?

A: I think we have to take on the system. We have to be prepared to talk about something we’ve been afraid to say out loud – that capitalism is harmful to the health of workers. It crushes workers every day. Our standard of living is declining. People are fighting everyday to pay for health insurance, if they even have it. Workers often have to choose between paying their rent, or their mortgage, and having healthcare. So yes, it means taking on the system. There’s something fundamentally wrong with the priorities of this society, and we have to be courageous enough to say it.

Q: Looking back at labor’s history, there were two eras when a substantial section of the labor movement did say things like that. During the period of the Wobblies in the early 1900s, or the period of the CIO during the 1930s, the left was strong. There were organized political parties critical of capitalism, which called for other kinds of social systems. Today that kind of left in the United States is very weak and small. So who is able to put forth that kind of vision? The labor movement itself? Who can do what left wing parties did in that earlier time?

A: We need left-wing political parties, desperately. We need a voice that’s explicitly anti-capital, with no apologies. But we can’t sit back and wait to build them, before we can do anything else. Within the union movement, we can have that struggle too. In the past, the Wobblies and the CIO were also influenced by the existence of radical workers, who were looking for radical answers. That’s one reason why we need to be open about having debates about how the way this country, or even the planet, is going.

Q: Do you think the debate that’s taking place in the AFL-CIO now, over structure, could become a larger debate over politics?

A: It has to be revamped. Currently, it doesn’t hold a candle to what we’ve had in the past, or what we need now. The current debate is not only of very little use, but it’s potentially very destructive. In the absence of real political discussion, personal attacks have emerged. So we end up with assaults on John Sweeney, or Andy Stern. The debate ends up becoming very personal, rather than a real discussion of substance, about the future of our unions.

On the changing nature of university work

In today’s issue MRZine Michael D. Yates ruminates on the changing nature of university work:

Most people think that college teaching is about as good as work gets. There is no doubt that, compared to most jobs, it is. Teachers have considerable control over what they do, how they do it, and when they work. When I began to teach, in 1969, most teachers could reasonably expect to secure tenure after a six-year probationary period, and this meant that a teacher could not be fired except for cause. Every seven years, a teacher could also expect a sabbatical leave — a half-year at full pay or an entire year at half pay. Every teacher was entitled to be reimbursed for expenses when traveling to professional conferences. All of these things combined to give a teacher high status and automatic respect from students and the general public.

“Copy our music”

BBC: ‘Copy our music’ urges rock band

A new rock group featuring former members of The Clash and Generation X has taken a novel approach to the issue of piracy by urging their fans to copy their music.

Carbon Silicon make all their recordings freely available online, and actively encourage bootlegging or filming of their gigs.

They even attack the current waves of litigation surrounding illegally copied music in their song Gangs Of England, which includes the line, “if you want the record, press record”.

“What we’re talking about here is fans who are sharing music,” Tony James, formally of Sigue Sigue Sputnik and Generation X – who formed the group with ex-Clash guitarist Mick Jones – told BBC World Service’s The Music Biz programme.

“It’s just like you did when you were young, when you made a cassette of your favourite tracks you’d love, and would give it to a friend and say ‘listen to this.’

“Everyone’s going to say, ‘hang on – if they’ve got it already, why are they going to buy the record?’ But what we find is actually, people really like buying the records.”

Demos online

The music industry has been grappling with issues of piracy over the last few years, in particular since broadband became popular.

Artists who have backed anti-piracy campaigns, include Metallica, Tatu and Peter Gabriel.

But James said that he considered the internet to be the “most exciting thing that’s happened to rock and roll”.

In particular, he pointed out that people could now record songs in their bedrooms and make them available to the world, and new artists no longer needed “a label, or a manager, or a BBC Radio playlist”.

Carbon Silicon use their website to show the development of their songs. Demos are put on the web so people can track how they came together.

“We feel that it’s almost like if I could go and watch Lennon and McCartney in the studio making Sgt Pepper, and watch them on the internet making that record, that would be a really exciting thing,” James explained.

“So I think what we’ll see in the future is people will pay to be there – to be part of the creative process. That’s a really exciting thing.

“Our ideas of copyright, and what constitutes a record, will change in the future.”:

The 10 worst places to be black

From The Black Commentator the 10 worst states in the US to be black.

The pervasive corporate media bubble, which grossly distorts the views most Americans have of the world beyond their shores, and of life in America’s black one-eighth, operates to fool African Americans, too. While a fortunate few of us are doing very well indeed, and many more are hanging on as best we can, the conditions of life for a substantial chunk of black America are not substantially improving, and appear to be getting much worse. This is a truth which can’t be found anywhere in the corporate media, but it is nevertheless one with which we must familiarize ourselves in preparation for the upcoming national black dialogue. It is high time to begin constructing useful indices with which to measure the quality of life, not just for a fortunate few, but for the broad masses of our people in America’s black one-eighth.

Measuring the quality of life in black America

Painting an accurate picture is not difficult. Useful measures of family income and cohesiveness, of home ownership, life expectancy, education levels, of unemployment and underemployment abound. But among all the relevant data on the state of black America today one factor stands out: the growth of America’s public policy of racially selective policing, prosecution, and mass imprisonment of its black citizens over the past 30 years. The operation of the crime control industry has left a distinctive, multidimensional and devastating mark on the lives of millions of black families and on the economic and social fabric of the communities in which they live.