Posted on 15 March 2005.
Dear John: Since the AFL-CIO meeting in Vegas, I had a chance to look over your statement of March 2nd. I was thrilled to see you say that the AFL-CIO has a plan to INCREASE the labor movement’s investment in helping workers organize. Actually, you made this point twice in four paragraphs. But, why does […]
Posted in General Interest, The Future Of Labor0 Comments
Posted on 15 March 2005.
Just before heading out to a D.C. meeting on organizing professional workers (I’ll post some thoughts about that also), I can’t help but digress from my usual topics to take note of a laugher in The New York Times. In Sunday’s Week In Review, David Kirkpatrick wrote a story about a spit at the neocons […]
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Posted on 14 March 2005.
You gotta give the boys in Bentonville their due: they try to figure out every way possible to wriggle off the hook. In the current issue of Business Week (requires subscription), senior writer and long-time labor reporter Aaron Bernstein describes how Wal-Mart lawyers are trying to completely eviscerate the framework of class action lawsuits for […]
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Posted on 13 March 2005.
I’m all behind the fight to keep Wall Street’s hands of Social Security but there’s a more silent attack on retirement: the destruction of the private pension system. Though I’ve written about this before, I was reminded of the problem today after reading Mary Williams Walsh’s piece in The New York Times on the government’s […]
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Posted on 12 March 2005.
So, here’s the dishonor roll of the pathetic 18 Democrats who voted for the bankruptcy bill. No one should give a dime to these DINOs (Democrats In Name Only). Geez, even Joe “Can I Hug You George” Lieberman voted against it: Baucus (D-MT) Bayh (D-IN) Biden (D-DE) Bingaman (D-NM) Byrd (D-WV) Carper (D-DE) Conrad (D-ND) […]
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Posted on 11 March 2005.
Pension power and China on my mind this morning. On pension, kudos to Bill Patterson and his band of pension-fund activists at the AFL-CIO. They forced Waddell & Reed, a Kansas-based financial services firm, to pull out of the business-funded (ready for an Orwellian-sounding title) Alliance for Worker Retirement Security (AWRS), the coalition pouring millions […]
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Posted on 10 March 2005.
I think this one got under the radar screen and wasn’t picked up by the media here or in Canada but the Beast of Bentonville got slapped by the Canadians a few weeks ago. Here’s the press release from Ontario’s Workplace Safety and Insurance Board: Wal-Mart to pay fines totalling $500,000 for multiple Workplace Safety […]
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Posted on 10 March 2005.
Welcome to the age of Remote Control Journalism—that’s what Pete Szekely, who is the chairman of the Reuters unit of the Newspaper Guild, calls the news we’re going to get from sources like Reuters. I ran into Pete yesterday. He reminded me of an important development that’s worth updating: Reuters is moving a number of […]
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Posted on 09 March 2005.
A couple of days ago, this message arrived, commenting on my dispatches from Las Vegas. It’s from Greg Junemann, President of the International Federation of Professional & Technical Engineers, which has 75,000 members. In his message, his reference to the “five unions” is to the rebel group that has united around a set of principles […]
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Posted on 08 March 2005.
I’m taking a brief break here from the goings-on at the AFL-CIO to raise the specter of the looming Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA). For some time, I’ve referred to CAFTA-like deals as so-called “free trade” deals because they have little to do with the theory of free trade and a whole lot more […]
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