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Journal of the Plague Year (#25)

Berkeley, CA September 7, 2020 – Labor Day!

Tens of thousands of people, tired and stressed by pandemic protocols, are now doing minimally and maximally dangerous things. Some do them deliberately, and then feel badly afterward. Some feel worse than badly, they feel sick. Like N.Y. Times ur-liberal and COVID-19 positive Roger Cohen, who squeezes out an op-ed column (9/5/2020 “ Fighting the Virus in Trump’s Plague”) in which he confesses, “My daughter and her husband, both doctors, say I have a moderate case. I think I picked it up in a crowded Paris bar watching a soccer match. Whether soccer or life is more important is an open question to me.”

Yes, he really wrote that. 

If it’s an “open question” for you, whether to be silly and stupid like Roger Cohen, well, you have lots of company. And lots of potential excuses. (“I’m confused by all the contradictory data, advice and attitudes out there;” … “I have a friend who just went to a crowded…beach, party…church service…and is OK;” “Masks are ugly;” “I try to not get pushed around by politicians;” “If COVID-19 goes away there’s always going to be another something like it;” “I prayed and talked to God,” etc.)

You can also be lulled into semi-oblivion about important matters like work, unions, and economic survival by noticing that on Labor Day weekend 2020 the S.F. Chronicle’s list of “things to do” includes not a single labor or union activity. The “East Bay Times” tells us about a dozen places where you can get take-out barbecue for your Labor Day picnic. Barbecue? Filthy smoke adding to our unbreathable air? Highly endangered slaughterhouse workers in virus-prone environments? Pigs, naturally smart and gentle animals, cultivated in horribly cruel captivity so that humans can eat the worst imaginable meat, filled with fat and chemicals? Who cares? Let’s Party! Like Free People!

Maybe some peoples’ attention may be gotten as some very scattered enforcement measures are being implemented for public health. It can now cost you a $250 fine in the City of Alameda if police see you on the street, any street, without a mask. Not in San Francisco, or Oakland, or just about anyplace else. Including dear “liberal” Berkeley, where elected officials stumble over each other to assure us they’re making statements, forming special committees, issuing proclamations about how Black Lives Matter. While “listening” to the business community about opening outdoor dining, and “listening” to landlords advocating suppression of code requirements thereby enabling the march of more and more ugly, space-grabbing residential structures., outward and upward in this now much less livable city

Labor Day. The Trump administration’s Labor Department Secretary, has the family name, Scalia, like his late father, the Supreme Court Justice. Another nepotistic swamp dweller thriving under a President who vowed to “drain the swamp.” He has this to say – surprise, surprise! - : “Today’s jobs report is encouraging news for American workers heading into Labor Day. The report significantly beat expectations, with the unemployment rate dropping to 8.4 percent even as more Americans entered the labor force. Unemployment fell across all demographics, and the 1.4 million jobs added showed increases across most industry sectors”.

As with so many other statements about important matters in the Trump era, this is inaccurate. Forbes Magazine (“Capitalist Tool”) recognizes that: “Even with the positive job results the past two months, the unemployment rate and the number of unemployed people under President Trump are still at worse levels than at any time during President Obama and the Great Recession. During the Great Recession the official unemployment rate peaked at 10.0% in October 2009, which was nine months after Obama was inaugurated. The rate’s high mark was 17.2%, two months later in December 2009. The highest unemployment rate under Trump was 27.6%.”

One in three people whose jobs went away and have managed to find other work are earning less than they did before. As always, non-white, non-male workers are especially disadvantaged; “Wage theft” is pandemic, as the Labor Department fails to enforce laws protecting worker rights. (“Stiffing Employees on Compensation Worsens in Recession” N.Y. Times 9/4/2020).

Instead of trying to do anything real to help the tens of millions of people in economic distress, Trump and his hand-picked right-wing ideologues at Homeland Security and the Department of Justice are waging as wide and as loud an effort as they can to change the subject. And blame the occasional, relatively minor violence that has occurred as Black Lives Matter and various other anti-racist, anti-Trump organizations have taken to the streets. Trump has tried to raise the temperature further, by climbing onto the latest “Black Helicopter” hoax sightings of the 1970’s. On the Fox News and web echo chambers, Trumpkins allege that masses of armed “”socialist” people tried to descend on Washington during the August Republican Convention . There is no evidence to back this up. New Hampshire police and elected officials are alternatively amused, angered, and horrified that such actions could have been taken in their state without them knowing about it. (New Hampshire is where the paranoiacs say planeloads of people boarded for D.C.)

Of course, what is real and provable is that when a state government, like New York, wants to wash its hands of responsibility for yet another atrocity, it can count on elected officials to help them. And then finger-point and contradict each other as the story sometimes, backed by witnesses and video, begins to unfold. This week we learned more about Rochester, N.Y. and the sad saga of Daniel Prude. Who died in March - handcuffed, naked and raving - unarmed and not resisting police who held him down. He was put in a “spit hood,” by eight police officers. Relatives and neighbors weren’t allowed to help or comfort him as he died of asphyxiation. 

Rochester’s (Black) police chief and its (Black) mayor and the (Black) New York State Attorney General have been busily saying someone did or didn’t do what they say they did or didn’t do. The dance of avoidance continued until a video of the incident surfaced, thanks largely to the persistence of the N.Y. Times. Now the mayor apologizes. Not for the incident but for her reaction to it, where she says she had “the mindset of an attorney, and not necessarily in the mindset of a human being. What I saw in that video was a man who needed compassion, a man who needed humanity, a man who we should have respected, a man who was in crisis. Our response was wrong.”

Ah, well. Let’s Sing! (Video available on You Tube if you want to sing along….)

The Last American Worker

©2011 Rod MacDonald Blue Flute Music/ASCAP

He was born in a land of plenty, served his country overseas

Worked hard to raise his family and have some security

He was looking forward to retirement, a little condo somewhere in the sun

Now they say we just can’t afford him ‘cause all of the money is gone

Chorus:

He’s the last American worker

And they’ve got him dead in their sights

They’re taking away everything that he worked for

Somebody turn out the lights

He invested his savings on Wall Street, now they’re worth 2 cents on the dime

The boys who lost all his money got a bonus and a bailout at the same time

His house is worth less than his mortgage, and he can’t make the payments anymore

And the bank is talking foreclosure since they shipped his job off to Bangalore.

Chorus

He used to go and see a doctor before his waistline got thick

Now his insurance costs half his income, still won’t cover him when he gets sick

They passed a national health program for all of the people to share

Now they say we just can’t afford it and gave a tax cut to all the millionaires

Chorus

Now the Governor had a vision of the future: all the children in public schools.

Staring at the same onscreen teacher broadcasting from Bombay or Fanjul

They all memorize the same test answers, they grow up a nation of fools

And re-elect the same politicians who send their own kids off to private schools

Chorus

He still votes in every election for God-fearing candidates each and every one

They tell him they’re gonna end abortion and they’re never gonna take away his gun

Then they go off to Washington or Tallahassee, play the corporate ‘n millionaires game

They send his kids off to war ‘til there’s no money anymore

Then they tell him he’s the one to blame

Chorus

 “I’m a Union Card” 

@by Kenny Winfree

Well, I was thumbing through my wallet just the other day

Well, I came to a certain spot, and I coulda swore I heard someone say

"Hey, I'm your union card; now don't you forget about me"

Now listen to this story and just see if you don't agree.

You may not know it but I do a lot for you

I protect your benefits and all your wages too

I might even keep you from getting fired

Praise the Lord that I'm a union card

Praise the Lord that I'm a union card

Could have been a Visa, could have been a Master Charge

Don't worry about your money long as I'm on guard

Just praise the Lord that I'm a union card

Could have been the joker, could have been the old maid

Could have been the rooker, could have been the ace of spades

Living in your wallet here, it sure is hard

But praise the Lord that I'm a union card

Praise the Lord that I'm a union card

Could have been a Visa, could have been a Master Charge

Don't worry about your money long as I'm on guard

Just praise the Lord that I'm a union card

I'm a postal worker who delivers mail to you

I'm a textile worker and I work on airplanes too

I'm carried by millions over near and far

Just praise the Lord that I'm a union card

Praise the Lord that I'm a union card

Could have been a Visa, could have been a Master Charge

Don't worry about your money long as I'm on guard

Just praise the Lord that I'm a union card

Just praise the Lord that I'm a union card

Memories on Labor Day. A long time ago – 1979 – I spent over a month in Nicaragua as producer/co-director of a documentary shown on PBS the following year. (“Nicaragua: These Same Hands.”) This was pre-video. Everything had to be shot with large, heavy cameras and the film later developed and hand-spliced. A complicated and very expensive process.

On a ruined street in central Managua, damaged in the 1972 earthquake and never rebuilt - international funding to do so had been stolen by the U.S. sponsored dictatorship – was a shabby building with a small sign “Labor Tribunal.” Outside, a few men lingered on benches with awnings that provided some shelter from the overwhelming heat. Only one man was inside, a polite elderly official who told us he’d been there thirty years, wanted to retire, but as he was the only one able to navigate the thousands of case files stuffed into every room, he felt obligated to stay on. 

We asked him to walk us through a file. I’ve lost the details and the notes that I must have taken. But I do remember seeing page after page of typescripts, each with an official stamp. And initialed – often with just an “X.” “Most people who come here can’t read or write,” the nice man told us. To provide the typed evidence, they had to find a “public scribe.” You saw many of them taking dictation in the widespread poorest neighborhoods, rickety typewriters poised on rickety tables. But only a few petitioners could afford the (very small) scribe’s fee, as the average income at the time was $1 day.

The “Labor Tribunal” had existed since the 1930’s, we were told, and had received economic assistance from Unions abroad, as the Somoza family dictatorship wouldn’t support it. It’s worth remembering this Labor Day because the six principles it was tasked with enforcing still need enforcing, from China to Russia to Brazil to India and of course right here at home.

  1. Decent Working Conditions
  2. Freedom of Association
  3. Collective Bargaining
  4. Elimination of Forced Labor and Compulsory Overtime
  5. Elimination of Discrimination
  6. Elimination of Child Labor

(“An Examination of Six Basic Labor Rights in Nicaragua” Cornell University)

One can easily guess at the fate of those thousands of files and the people represented in them. After the 1990 Nicaraguan elections when the once-revolutionary government was replaced by another U.S. sponsored politician, unions declined from approximately 600 to 150. Membership went down to 17% of its previous total. Tens of thousands of jobs were lost as U.S. agribusiness tightened its exploitation. 

Can’t happen here? Take another look at our artificially bloated economy. Take another look at what the Labor Department does any more. Take another look at the vastly outspent efforts to get Uber and Lyft drivers protection under the six basic labor rights in that decades-old Nicaraguan document.

Take another look.

One Comment

  1. Douglas Coulter September 21, 2020

    Labor is the enemy of state!
    Howard Zinn helped make this clear.
    Marx had an idea based on empathy but in practice power destroyed every attempt at communal governments. Only small central based, well led communes survive.
    Capitalism is based upon greed and labor is always the wild card. Workers do not need to eat! Slavery is more honest. Work or die!
    A new slavery is invented and just like every form of rape, no really means yes

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