Posted on 18 November 2020. Tags: Arizona, COVID-19, Poultry Workers, Pramila Jayapal, Teachers
Ideology is in the way of a simple plan to end the pandemic in 30 days. Yes, 30 days: Lock down the country and pay everyone up to an annual wage of $90,000 to stay home. I’m resurrecting the argument I made months ago because the debate about a stimulus is on the agenda again—after […]
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Posted in Audio, Current Events, Economy, Podcast, Workers
Posted on 11 November 2020. Tags: Arizona, David Lujan, Democrats, Elections, Georgia, Teachers, Tom Perez
Three questions post-election are on the menu this week. First, how does Tom Perez, the chair of the DNC, still have a job? Perez has been incompetent for a very long time. He was the choice of the Democratic Party elites back in 2016—a guy who knows zippo about the mechanics of an election. And, […]
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Posted in Audio, Economy, Podcast, Politics
Posted on 02 October 2019. Tags: Amy Hanauer, Chicago, Ohio, Teachers
Teachers are on the ramparts again. This time in Chicago where the members of the Chicago Teachers Union are gearing up for a possible strike if they can’t get a decent contract to improve wages, win a hard cap on class size and increase staffing. To talk more about the struggle for a good contract, […]
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Posted in Audio, Economy, Labor, Podcast
Posted on 08 May 2019. Tags: Child Tax Credit, Coal, Education, Meg Wiehe, Mine Workers, Oregon Education Association, Pensions, Phil Smith, RedForEd, Teachers
Just hours ago, 25,000 teachers and their supporters massed in Portland, Oregon to demand a fully-funded education system—it’s another moment in the incredible teacher organizing that has swept the country over the past year. With the energy of thousands of revved up teachers pulsing in the background, I chat at the rally with teacher/union leaders, […]
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Posted in Audio, Economy, Labor, Podcast
Posted on 10 April 2019. Tags: David Fisher, Fed Ingram, Florida Education Association, NEA, Red for Ed, Sacramento City Teachers Association, Teachers
Everyone measures the morality or immorality of society based on different criteria. For some, it’s the huge numbers of people who pay outrageous amounts for prescription drugs or just go bankrupt because of health care costs. For others, it’s racism permeating our economic and social fabric or the permanent war economy the country has had […]
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Posted in Audio, Economy, Labor, Podcast
Posted on 23 January 2019. Tags: Climate Change, Daphne Wysham, DPE, Jennifer Dorning, Risk Bonding, Teachers, UTLA
Just as we were wrapping up the podcast episode, the striking teachers in Los Angeles won a new contract. I review the highlights, and underscore the smart strategy the union used in the campaign that generated overwhelming support for the teachers. Then, I chat with climate warrior Daphne Wysham about “risk bonding”, a demand that […]
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Posted in Audio, Economy, Labor, Podcast
Posted on 16 January 2019. Tags: Bernie Sanders, Eileen Appelbaum, Severance Pay, Teachers, UTLA
A lot of people are wondering: should Bernie Sanders run? Is Bernie going to run? In today’s episode, I consider the notion that Bernie would become the most powerful politician in the country, and it could be better for the progressive movement, if maybe he sidestepped running for president. Whoa! Then, I check in with […]
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Posted in Audio, Economy, Labor, Podcast, Politics
Posted on 05 September 2018. Tags: Alicia Priest, APWU, Mark Dimondstein, Minor Sinclair, Oklahoma, Oxfam, Postal Workers, Primavera, Teachers
Curious which states have a better work environment? We have the answer thanks to Oxfam which unveils a ranking based on wages, worker protections and the right to organize a union. I chat about the details with Oxfam’s Minor Sinclair. I, then, welcome back Alicia Priest, president of the Oklahoma Education Association, for a chat […]
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Posted in Audio, Economy, Labor, Podcast, Politics
Posted on 15 August 2018. Tags: AFT, Dish Network, ITEP, Randi Weingarten, Richard Phillips, Taxes, Teachers
The destruction of our education system hasn’t just been a natural phenomena like the sun rising in the east. It’s been a determined assault on our schools and teachers by right-wing ideological zealots. To get the facts about this campaign of destruction, I talk to Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, about […]
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Posted in Audio, Economy, Labor, Podcast, Politics
Posted on 11 July 2018. Tags: "Free Market", Black Lives Matter, Dorothy Gasque, Teachers
I recently posted a column, which I talk a bit about in the opening of the episode, predicting that the recent teachers’ uprisings (which have been featured a lot on the podcast) will have far more lasting impact on the country’s economic policies than any one electoral race—and those uprisings may blow up the Big […]
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Posted in Audio, Economy, Podcast, Politics