toritto's Blog

ehh....what town in Italy is your family from?

toritto

toritto
Location
tampa bay metro, Florida,
Birthday
September 10
Bio
I was born in year 4 of the reign of the Emperor Tiberius Claudius and raised on 66th Street and 13th Ave. in Brooklyn. And Coney Island, Traveled the world. Married my high school sweetheart and stayed together 40 years. Now a retired old widower crank living in Florida with my cat. Author of "Initial Verses" - a collection of poems on love, loss, poverty and war" and "Toritto's Blog - a Memoir of a life in posts."

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AUGUST 19, 2012 11:45AM

Labor Day! Yaay!! We're "Honoring" labor! Really?

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Reader's Pick - Yaay!! 

 

0512-0701-1818-4801

  

Two girls wearing banners with slogan "ABOLISH CHILD SLAVERY!!" in English and Yiddish, one carrying American flag.   May 1, 1909,

It’s Labor Day!

End of Summer, back to school, put away the barbecue in New England, last day for white shoes, three day shopping weekend!

Honoring labor!!  Yaay!

Huh?

The first Labor Day in the United States was celebrated on September 5, 1882 in New York City.  Where else?  It became a federal holiday in 1894, when, after a number of workers were shot down by their own government during the Pullman Strike, President Grover Cleveland made reconciliation with the labor movement a top political priority.  Workers were pissed; seems the government had a habit of shooting down strikers.  Fearing further conflict, legislation making Labor Day a national holiday was rushed through Congress unanimously and signed into law a mere six days after the end of the strike - and the gunning down of workers.

Amazing how quickly government can work when it is scared shitless.

The September date was chosen as Cleveland was concerned that aligning an American labor holiday with existing international May Day celebrations would remind American workers of the Haymarket Affair when American workers were also shot down by their own government.   All 50 U.S. states have made Labor Day a holiday - even Texas.

march6i

March 6, 1930 - thousands demonstrate for unemployment insurance in Union Square and nationwide - led by the communists.  Did you think government just gave it to you?  Wake up and smell the coffee.

The New York Times front page on 7 March 1930, the day following the march

The day after - March 7, 1930

Unemployment insurance as a "red" thing.

Anyone notice any "honoring" of labor lately? 

Who are the members of the "working class" we supposedly "honor" on "Labor Day"?  Meet anyone who calls him or herself "working class" lately?  If you have then he or she is probably a pinko commie/anarchist.

We like to think we have three classes of folks - the super rich, the "middle class" and the "poor".

Everyone thinks they are "middle class" - from those washing dishes to a bank loan officer making say $85G a year.  Nobody wants to be "poor" i.e. unemployed for long periods, although we have more officially "poor" now than we have had in decades.

Does anyone call themself a member of the "working class"?  By definition everyone who doesn't live on his wealth and has to work for a living is working class but no one considers himself a "worker".

And the loan officer making that $85G a year, who could be laid off tomorrow for any reason or no reason, thinks he has nothing in common with the guy washing dishes.  The banker doesn't think he's a "worker"  He's middle class, even if he has only two weeks worth of savings.  He's bought into the "American Dream" and feels no solidarity with all the others who have nothing to sell but their labor.  "Solidarity" is a "red" word.  When he loses his job he will find out how much he has in common with the dish washer.

Childlabourcoal

Child labor in the coal mines.



My old Italian father was a member of the International Hod Carriers Union - he knew what he was - a worker. He carried cement in a wheel barrow to the brick layers. He had no illusions about being other than what he was.   He wasn't "middle class" or "white collar".  He had no way to make a living but to sell his labor.  He knew he was a worker and in solidarity with all others who had no accumulated wealth to live on.  Because of the union he earned a living wage.  He had the dignity of knowing he could take care of his wife and three sons.

It was all he ever wanted.  A fair wage, a little house, education and a future for his children; a comfortable old age.

Seems to me the loan officer and the dish washer have much more in common than either thinks.  Both are workers but have no consciousness of class.  The loan officer thinks he is a cut above the dishwasher and the hod carrier - its when he loses his job, his whole identity, he finds out he is not.

Meanwhile, as we "honor" labor. attacks on private and public sector unions go on - seems like the best way to honor labor is to make absolutely sure that individual workers  never band together to face the power of corporations or government on a more equal footing.    That's Red.  Red is bad.

It's perfectly reasonable for employers to have all the power over your livlihood and for you to have none.  It is perfectly reasonable for employers to strive to lower wages and benefits as far as they can but not reasonable for workers to try to raise them.  It is perfectly reasonable for employers to expect workers to do more with less each passing year.  It is perfectly reasonable for workers in a company not to have a say on a corporate Board of Directors. 

So what exactly are we honoring on Labor Day? 

Labor Day no longer honors labor and hasn't for decades.  It is just the End of Summer - Back to School - Three Day holiday.  Even the workers don’t honor it 'cause maybe deep inside they know it's a scam and most have no consciousness that they are "labor".    Labor is dèclassè.

It's just a day off unless, of course, you have to work on Labor Day.

Attempting to abolish it might give some "middle class" folks some real class consciousness.  Let's rename it.  How about  "First Day of Christmas Season!"  It will be good for the economy.  Then you will know that neither corporations nor government give a rat's ass about you, your job or your labor

 

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Unfortunately true...but so well put, T. Gorgeous prose. I can feel your personal attachment to the issue, and I love it when you bring in the stories of your Italian roots.
How depressing Frank, but true. I loved the line
"Amazing how quickly government can work when it is scared shitless."
BTW: I did a post on Italy today!
Bang on!
Most Americans, Canadians, Brits, and others, would brown up their tightie-whities if they knew how much they owe to communists and anarchists for their protective laws and strong unions. Those guys were ALWAYS in the front lines taking the beatings and bullets on behalf of the working man.

How things change. Now the children and grandchildren of those courageous men and women wear suits to their 'office', consider themselves better than those who still labour for a living, and spend their days as loyal company sheeple working to find ways to make the rich even richer.

I doubt that the rich personally do much ripping off of the working people anymore. Their loyal minions - the middle class - takes care of that on their behalf; and gets well paid for it too! The 1% isn't half the enemy that the middle management suits are to most of the population.

Anything for a buck......

.
One of my grandfathers was a card-carrying, dues-paying member of the Stovefitters Union who earned every damn cent he made after he joined following First War service. He retired at 72. My father-in-law is a UAW/CAW retiree.

I still have my CAW card, and did my small bit to organise the Guild at the newspaper where I was then working. I refused one time to scab at striking paper, and was blacklisted when I subsequently quit; The Redhead told another paper to take a hike when they wanted her to do the same as a freelancer.

So, yeah, Labour Day means something. If only to me.
Booner - just seems like very few of us left. Unfortunately half the government pays labor no honor with their anti-labor activities. The "friends of labor" pay it lip service and little else.

Regards.
"Amazing how quickly government can work when it is scared shitless..." so what do we have to do to scare the shit out of this crew?
jmac - Oh I don't know. Maybe a hundred thousand rioters on Wall Street with red flags throwing rocks through the windows at Goldman Sachs, and refusing to go home when the cops tell them to?

:-)
Thanks for remembering, Toritto. All of my family members, on both sides, were working class. My grandfather was a coal miner. I was the first in my family EVER to graduate from college. Yet, because of this economy, my husband and I (both college grads with decades of professional experience in our respective fields) have learned just how expendable we really are. Every day I see young people working and driving around in luxury cars who truly believe they are successful only because of their hard work, and not because they know the right people or because their parents gave them a step up in the world. These days, youth in and of itself gives people a step up. Wealth creates wealth. If you were lucky enough to be born into a "true" middle-class or upper middle-class family, and your family has held onto its money and social circles, it goes without saying that life will be much easier for you.

One thing this economy has taught me is just how truly difficult it is for a family to move up a notch in social standing. My husband and I have moved up from our parents, but we are barely holding onto our "middle-class" dream, even though we have worked hard and played by the rules. It's getting harder and harder to move up in the world. As a neighbor once told me after we both lost our jobs in the last recession, "There are no guarantees in life." At the time his words seemed cold and offered little comfort, but I see the truth in his comment now. Many of us are living in a house of cards. Some of us know about it because we've learned the hard way, others still have not yet learned that lesson. All it takes is one bad boss, a bad work situation, a missed social connection, or a layoff due to a bad economy.

Rated for your clarity of heart and mind.
"It was all he ever wanted. A fair wage, a little house, education and a future for his children; a comfortable old age."

Today this is, for so many, an impossible dream.

Great post, T!
Like V said and this is a great post./r
How very true and sad that the rich don't seem to think they can be affected by big management...Very well done!
so true!!
well done!
read my recent post I will post the link next after this comment
http://open.salon.com/blog/kenmi1/2012/08/05/attitude_toward_gm_reveals_cancer_eating_the_country
People are starting to drop off the unemployment rolls now, the numbers show it. Shouldn't be long now before people figure it out. Nothing wakes you up like reality.
Brilliant post. May Day, which originated in America,has been transformed into Law & Order Day, Respect Your Betters Day, or Know Your Place Day, or some such. And now the Right Wing in America sneers at working people as "parasites". It's been a long time, over a century, since working people were disdained and disrespected with such open contempt as they are in today's America. The ruling class no longer fears workers will turn to a socialist or communist alternative. I think that's the reason. They believe, "They'll have to take our shit laying down. They now have no alternative."
You make a very important point about how all Americans have been conditioned to see themselves as "middle class' and not working class. I've been railing about this for years. You touch on so many themes but I'll stop here. Thanks for this! [r]
This post has won a Readers' Picks award.
The oligarchy is so firmly entrenched that I don't know if we will ever be a democratic country where everyone has a chance. Right now, the nation seems to be in the grip of a mental illness that it is too ill to try to cure.
Ellen - you are so right. I no longer recognize my country.