Right to Work Wrong For Michigan! – – A No Struggle, No Development Production! By KennySnod *
Published on Dec 17, 2012
Right to Work Has Got To Go! The people of Michigan are fighting for our families and our future. Dick Devos will pay the cost for taking our rights away! Please protect the rights of our working families, don’t let them be hurt by this “Right To Work Bill.” We need to build a strong middle class, Dick Devos. Tell the Republicans “No” to the so called “Right to work bill” which will only hurt our families, our cities, our union and our work place. Dick Devos, why do you and the Republicans want to hurt the American families to make yourself rich? Please protect the rights of our working class families, the 99%! Let’s send a loud message to our Lansing politicians that the Right To Work bill is WRONG for Michigan.
No Struggle, No Development Productions!
By Kenny Snodgrass, Activist, Photographer, Videographer, Author of
1} From Victimization To Empowerment–The Challenge Of African American Leadership; The Need of Real Power”
… www.trafford.com/07-0913
eBook available at www.ebookstore.sony.com
2} The World As I’ve Seen It! My Greatest Experience! {Photo Book}
YouTube: I have over 360 Video’s, over 118,500 hits averaging 5,000 a month on my YouTube channel @ www.YouTube.com/KennySnod
Internal change bases External, Qualitative change bring Quantitative, Universal connection Opposites, Negation of Negation
ORIGINS OF MICHIGAN’S ‘RIGHT-TO-WORK’ UNION-BUSTING LAW
December 21, 2012
The passage of the union-busting “right-to-work” law in Michigan is a severe legal setback for the labor movement and for the workers, the oppressed and all the progressive masses in the state. If not turned around, it will encourage right-wing, anti-labor forces across the country.
However, it must be emphasized at the outset that so far this is purely a legislative setback. It has not been implemented. The working class has not been defeated in the class struggle. Rather, the labor leadership was politically outmaneuvered by a cabal of right-wing billionaires and their political puppets in the legislature and the governor’s mansion. These forces conspired to put this reactionary legislation on the fast track without even giving the legally required time and processes for the masses to mobilize against it.
The worst thing the labor movement can do now is accept this reactionary legislation as a fait accompli and look to the electoral arena in 2014 — a distant attempt to regain ground lost in the legislature.
Right to Work Bill, Is Wrong For The 99%! – – A No Struggle, No Development Production! By KennySnod * (video above)
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There’s a lesson to be learned from the earlier failure of the Wisconsin so-called recall movement. In this period, as the billionaire Koch brothers and their like pour massive funds into the electoral arena and into advertising and propaganda, the labor movement is at a distinct disadvantage fighting on electoral territory alone. To be on much more solid ground, the movement must rely on its real strength — the mobilization of the workers, the communities, the students and all the oppressed in the class struggle.
To delay the struggle until the 2014 elections and fail to mobilize the workers for struggle now would allow this legislation to be enforced, so that a legislative sleight of hand is turned into a real and profound setback for the workers. Such a delay would result in a totally demoralizing, one-sided class struggle, in which right-wing billionaires are allowed to bust unions.
From Wisconsin to Lansing, struggle & fightback
The unions should take their cue from the fact that between 15,000 and 20,000 workers and their allies from around the state and other parts of the country turned out in Lansing on short notice to try to stop the legislation. They were in a militant, fighting mood, even though they were confronted by an emergency situation in which the approval of the legislation was virtually assured.
The unions should also bear in mind the heroic phase of the Wisconsin struggle when workers, students and community activists occupied the Capitol, while tens of thousands of workers and activists from all over the country poured into Madison. For two weeks they tried to stop the attempt to outlaw collective bargaining among public sector workers. Support for the Wisconsin struggle came from all over the world, including Europe and as far away as Egypt.
At that time, the question of a general strike was posed for the first time in decades by the labor movement — although it was quickly abandoned.
That struggle was never allowed to reach its potential because it was diverted into a “recall” struggle, which was really a gubernatorial election by another name. And the bosses — who had been on the run while the occupation and the mass demonstrations continued to grow — were back in charge in the electoral arena with their millions in campaign funds to bolster Gov. Scott Walker.
It is still a question whether, if Walker had been defeated in the recall by the Democratic Party candidate, Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barnett, the law would have been overturned.
The Michigan law, dubbed “right-to-work-for-less” by the unions, is potentially an even-more-sweeping challenge to workers’ rights than the Wisconsin law. To bank on an electoral challenge in 2014, or a recall, or winning a legal challenge in the courts is folly and dangerous.
Lansing should be beginning, not end
Say Yes To “Collective Bargaining!” – – A No Struggle, No Development Production! By KennySnod * * Say Yes To “Collective Bargaining!” No to “Right To Work” (Video above)
In both Wisconsin and Michigan, the workers have shown their willingness to rise to the occasion if given the chance and the resources. It is more fruitful to look upon the Lansing mobilization as a beginning of the mass struggle, not the end.
Admittedly, it will be a long and strenuous road to build the kind of struggle required to overturn the Michigan law. But the basis for such a mobilization exists. The right-to-work law is not the only reactionary legislation being rammed through.
The Republican-controlled Michigan legislature passed dozens of bills in its final sessions, including a bill revising the vicious “emergency manager” bill that had been defeated at the polls in November.
The revised bill, like the previous one, still gives the governor the right to appoint what amounts to a municipal dictator, called a manager, with the power to override city laws and elected officials and tear up union contracts, among other powers. Continue reading