Labor is extending support to the
Occupy Wall Street Movement. With arrest of hundreds of the protesters and
their release, the protesters’ uninterrupted brave presence, increasing support
to them from wider society, and spread of the movement to other parts of the US
the Occupy Movement is facilitating widen public space in political life. The
time, it seems, is vibrant with movements, and democratic spirits and
aspiration.
Richard Trumka, AFL-CIO president said: “Wall Street’s out of
control”. On the Occupy Wall Street Movement he said: “[I]t’s a […] valid
tactic to call attention to a problem.” (John Nichols, The Nation, Sept. 30,
2011) Leo W. Gerard, international president of the United Steelworkers (USW)
extended support to the Occupy Wall Street Movement. The USW is North America’s
largest industrial union representing workers employed in metals, rubber,
chemicals, paper, oil refining, atomic energy, airline, health care, service
and public sectors with 1.2 million active and retired members in the US,
Canada, and the Caribbean. In a statement on September 30, Leo W. Gerard said:
The United Steelworkers union stands in solidarity with and
strongly supports Occupy Wall Street. The brave men and women, many of them
young people without jobs, who have been demonstrating around-the-clock for
nearly two weeks in New York City are speaking out for the many in our world.
We are fed up with the corporate greed, corruption and arrogance that have
inflicted pain on far too many for far too long.
Our union has been standing up and fighting these captains of
finance who promote Wall Street over Main Street. We know firsthand the
devastation caused by a global economy where workers, their families, the
environment and our futures are sacrificed so that a privileged few can make
more money on everyone’s labor but their own.
Wall Street and its counterparts on Bay Street (Toronto), The
City (London) and across the world tanked our economy in 2008. They caused a
crisis that we’re still suffering from - record job losses, home foreclosures,
cuts to schools, public services, police, fire and so much more. They’ve
gambled with our pension funds and our futures for far too long.
They should have gone to jail. Instead, they got bailed out, while we got left out. And now they want us to go down the same path.
The Occupy Wall Street Movement represents what most Americans believe: Enough is enough! It’s time to hold those who caused our economic crisis accountable, to ensure they don’t get away with it again, and to demand that everyone pay their fair share. It’s time to stand and fight for the creation of real wealth by focusing on making real things and creating family- and community-supporting jobs.
They should have gone to jail. Instead, they got bailed out, while we got left out. And now they want us to go down the same path.
The Occupy Wall Street Movement represents what most Americans believe: Enough is enough! It’s time to hold those who caused our economic crisis accountable, to ensure they don’t get away with it again, and to demand that everyone pay their fair share. It’s time to stand and fight for the creation of real wealth by focusing on making real things and creating family- and community-supporting jobs.
The USW is proud to join with the brothers and sisters of the
Occupy Wall Street Movement as we continue this important fight for a more just
economy and a brighter tomorrow.
According to Village Voice, the historically militant Transport
Workers Union that primarily represents workers in the public transportation
system and at some private bus lines in the New York City metropolitan area has
unanimously voted to back, and provide food and services to the Occupy Wall
Street Movement. The TWU plans to assemble on October 5 and march to Zuccotti
Park, the place the protesters are staying. The union counts 38,000 active
members and covers 26,000 retirees.
In a statement the union applauded the courage of the young
people on Wall Street, and said: “the shared sacrifice preached by government
officials looks awfully like a one-way street. Workers and ordinary citizens
are putting up all the sacrifice, and the financiers who imploded our economy
are getting away scot-free, increasing their holdings and bonuses. Young people
face a bleak future with high unemployment, and minimum wage jobs. Public
sector workers face Mayors and Governors who demand massive wage and benefits
givebacks or face thousands of layoffs. That’s not bargaining. That’s
blackmail.”
The statement said that the union’s Executive Board is united
in their “determination that this state of affairs is dangerous for America and
destructive to its citizenry. We support the Wall Street protesters and their
goal to reduce inequality and support every American’s right to a decent job,
health care, and retirement security.”
The TWU’s October 5-March is being co-sponsored by eight labor
and community outreach organizations having a total membership of over 1
million. These are United NY, Strong Economy for All Coalition, Working
Families Party, VOCAL-NY, Community Voices Heard, Alliance for Quality
Education, New York Communities for Change and Coalition for the Homeless.
Terry O’Sullivan, General President of the Laborers’
International Union of North America (LIUNA), on September 30 in a statement on
Occupy Wall Street said: “The workers who build America – the half-million men
and women of LIUNA – are united behind the fight against corporate tyranny and
for economic prosperity for all and stand with the Occupy Wall Street Movement
in New York City and across the United States.” It should be mentioned that the
half-million members of LIUNA are on the forefront of the construction
industry, a powerhouse of workers.
He said:
The most valuable asset in America isn’t Wall Street, it is
working people. Yet in America today, millions of working people are jobless
and are losing their homes, their hopes and their dreams. Meanwhile,
corporations are making record profits and the most profitable among them pay
no taxes, shifting more wealth from the working and middle class to the rich.
This ill-gotten wealth is being used to finance an unprecedented assault on
working people and unions in states across the country and in Washington, D.C.
Wall Street caused our economic crisis, and yet corporations are attempting to
force working people to pay for it. The only way to turn back the assault is to
strengthen unions and build movements, such as Occupy Wall Street.
Professors at the City University of New York affiliated with
the Professional Staff Congress union have taken a number of labor-oriented
solidarity actions. Their group, Solidarity with OWS, is organizing demonstration
against police abuse. Their academic allies include Frances Fox Piven,
Christian Parenti, and Stanley Aronowitz. (Michelle Chen, “Labor Movement Rolls
Into Wall Street Occupation”, In These Times, September 30, 2011)
Huffington Post informed: the trade union representing doormen,
security guards and maintenance workers with about 70,000 members (New York
Metro SEIU 32BJ) was “re-purposing a previously planned rally on Oct. 12 to
express solidarity with the Occupy Wall Street protesters”. Kwame Patterson,
the 32BJ spokesperson said: “The call went out over a month ago, before
actually the occupancy of Wall Street took place.” Now, “we’re all coming under
one cause, even though we have our different initiatives.”
Crain's New York Business informed: local unions are
collaborating with community-based groups that include Make the Road New York,
Coalition for the Homeless and Community Voices Heard. These organizations are
involved with the struggles of the poor and working-class.
The movement is spreading. The main stream media (MSM) now
inform this fact. ABC News said: “The protests have spread across the country,
with events popping up in Boston and Chicago in solidarity with Occupy Wall
Street. … [E]vents in Boston will continue with a ‘Take Back the Block’
festival. At least 1,500 have registered for the festival. Along with New York
and Boston, an Occupy Chicago movement has emerged, with nearly 100 people
gathering in front of the Chicago Federal Reserve Bank. The protests have been
peaceful and no arrests have been reported. Occupy Los Angeles protests which
have also been small in numbers, has called for a march today ...” (Oct 1,
2011) The Telegraph/UK carried news with the headline “Occupy Wall Street
Protests Spread across US”. It said: “Inspired by the events in New York City,
protesters begin assembling in several cities across the U.S. … [M]ore
demonstrations began to spring up across the U.S. In Los Angeles, protesters
gathered in front of City Hall and danced on buses with ‘peace’ emblazoned on the
side. A smaller protest was held in Chicago’s financial district where
protesters held placards demanding ‘Jobs Not Cuts’. Protesters also turned out
in Denver, gathering downtown before marching into the city chanting, ‘Occupy
the streets’.” (Oct. 2, 2011)
The protest organizers/sympathetic websites claimed that many
events, demonstrations, and assemblies were held around the US including in
Atlanta, San Diego, and San Jose in solidarity with the Occupy Wall Street
Movement. Around 200 protesters in Boston took to the streets. An Occupy
Chicago event also began on Sept. 23. At least 52 cities in America are
occupied or organizing as the protesters claimed. Web sites are cropping up in
increasing number that reflects the expansion of the movement. Occupy Together
is playing a role of broader banner.
Sister campaigns with names like Occupy Chicago, the protesters
claimed, have emerged in Albuquerque, Arkansas, Austin, Binghamton, Birmingham,
Boise, Charlotte, Cincinnati, Clarksville, Cleveland, Columbus, Colorado
Springs, Columbus, D.C., Dallas, Daytona Beach, Durham, Eugene, Hartford,
Houston, Indiana, Indianapolis, Jacksonville, Kansas City, Knoxville, Las
Vegas, Lexington, Los Angeles, Louisville, Maine, Memphis, Miami, Michigan,
Minnesota, Mississippi, Nashville, New Jersey, New Orleans, OKC, Orlando,
Olympia, Omaha, OSU (Stillwater), Philadelphia, Phoenix, Pittsburgh,
Providence, Richmond, Rochester, St. Louis, Sacramento, Salt Lake City, San
Diego, San Jose, Santa Cruz, Seattle, Spokane, Tulsa, Tampa, Tallahassee,
Tucson, Vermont, Winston Salem, Wisconsin.
San Francisco: Occupy the San Francisco Financial District
kicked off outside the Bank of America (BoA) building, also known as the “Wall
Street of the West.” Approximately 150 people including members of US Uncut and
the Revolutionary Poets Brigade, as well as people of all ages and students
participated in the opening rally. After a couple of hours, one group marched
through a street while the other met in a public assembly. Then, a small group
of campers formed and stayed the night. A small camp came up. The camp is
growing. There are now daily meetings at the camp and General Assemblies every
Saturday.
Huffington Post reported Mayoral candidate and city Supervisor John Avalos initiated the San Francisco march with a speech: “[T]his [BoA] building right here is a symbol of the incredible greed and wealth that has accumulated into fewer and fewer hands. And how do they stay wealthy? They took our tax dollars. They got bailed out.” He urged the crowd to withdraw their money from national banks and invest in small, community-like banks. The demonstrators marched down to Charles Schwab, surrounding the building and chanting, “Charles Schwab, give us our money back”. The San Francisco protesters ended the day at Chase Bank. Six demonstrators walked into the branch and staged a sit-in in the lobby. They were arrested, and eventually released, after they refused requests to leave. (International Business Times, Sept. 30, 2011)
Portland: Occupy Portland, a nonviolent movement for accountability in the US government plans to assemble on October 6, 2011. The assembly will be in solidarity with the Occupy Wall Street, and the increasing “number of cities whose people will no longer sit back watching corporate and special interests run their government.”
Huffington Post reported Mayoral candidate and city Supervisor John Avalos initiated the San Francisco march with a speech: “[T]his [BoA] building right here is a symbol of the incredible greed and wealth that has accumulated into fewer and fewer hands. And how do they stay wealthy? They took our tax dollars. They got bailed out.” He urged the crowd to withdraw their money from national banks and invest in small, community-like banks. The demonstrators marched down to Charles Schwab, surrounding the building and chanting, “Charles Schwab, give us our money back”. The San Francisco protesters ended the day at Chase Bank. Six demonstrators walked into the branch and staged a sit-in in the lobby. They were arrested, and eventually released, after they refused requests to leave. (International Business Times, Sept. 30, 2011)
Portland: Occupy Portland, a nonviolent movement for accountability in the US government plans to assemble on October 6, 2011. The assembly will be in solidarity with the Occupy Wall Street, and the increasing “number of cities whose people will no longer sit back watching corporate and special interests run their government.”
Berkley: An AP news report datelined Berkeley, Sept. 22, 2011
said: Students occupied a building on the University of California, Berkeley
campus to protest tuition hikes and state budget cuts. There was a confrontation
between police and protestors. Later, the student demonstration dispersed. One
protester was arrested. “Resistance Social,” a group, organized the protest.
“Protesters say”, the news report cited, “the University of California is
becoming increasingly unaffordable as the 10-campus UC system raises tuition in
response to state cuts to higher education.” (“UC Berkeley Classrooms Occupied
By Tuition Hike Protesters”)
Global: The Wall Street protesters pronounce: “This is really a
global movement.” According to their claim there were more than 35 events
around the world in solidarity of the movement. These include Occupy Brisbane,
Occupy Frankfurt, Occupy Hamburg, Occupy Manchester, Occupy Melbourne, Occupy
Perth, Occupy the London Stock Exchange, Occupy Toronto Market Exchange, and
Occupy Vancouver.
Horizontally connected, broader coalitions are coming up
through the movement. The coalitions include community, environment, youth and
rights organizations. Organizations against predatory lending, and elder persons’
organizations are also joining.
Movement’s Media: The MSM tried to black out news of the
movement. The protest was ignored. But the MSM-silence could not be sustained.
Now, MSM is giving up space to the Occupy Movement. At the same time, the MSM’s
unwillingness to accommodate the movement led the movement participants to
devise their medium to communicate. Now, there is The Occupied Wall Street
Journal. “It debuted on [October 1] with a print run of 50,000, after two
independent journalists in New York started a campaign using the online
fund-raising platform Kickstarter. The four-page broadsheet includes a story
[…] headlined ‘The Revolution Begins at Home’, an essay by the former New York
Times war correspondent Chris Hedges urging people to participate in the
protests, and a ‘Declaration of the Occupation’ approved at a meeting of
protesters on Sept. 29.” The initiators of the newspaper raised more than
$12,000 within eight hours. (New York Times, Oct. 3, 2011)
Communiqué: Communiqués of the protesters are disseminating
hard facts. In their Fifth Communiqué the 99 percent cited the following
information:
On September 21, 2011, the richest 400 Americans owned more
wealth than half of the country’s population; about 80% of Americans thought
the country was on the wrong track; about one-sixth of Americans did not have
work; the same ratio lived in poverty; about 50 million Americans were without
health insurance; the US had military bases in around 130 out of 165 countries;
and the US was at war with the world.
With this background, the movement demands end of wealth
inequality, poverty, joblessness, health-profiteering, political corruption,
corporate censorship, modern gilded age, American imperialism and war.
It is true, the movement, a very smaller one in terms of
number, is in its formative stage. It is also true, there are a lot of
weaknesses and weak connections. Many factors are yet to be identified. It will
be an illusion that the movement will provide people a full fledged public
space, and compel capital’s greed to compromise within a short time. But it’s
part of a learning process, which is essential for expanding people’s scopes.
Already it has produced important lessons and learning “materials”. Even,
societies far away can learn from the movement. Socially and politically, the
movement is significant. Even, its mistakes will be valuable assets as these
will act as teacher. The voice of the section of labor, a part of broader
society, extending its support to the movement is significant also.
“The movements suggest”, Michelle Chen writes, “a general
trajectory of grassroots organizing: a spark of protest led by younger
activists, followed by the support of labor organizations, bringing up the rear
and then moving to the fore.” “[T]he movement is organically structured, with
no formal ‘list of demands’ yet […] Not everyone came to Wall Street knowing
exactly what they wanted, but everyone there today knows they’ve had enough,
and that they’re not the only ones. […] After decades of a one-sided class war,
the fightback has begun.” (“Labor Movement Rolls Into Wall Street Occupation”,
In These Times, September 30, 2011)
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