Monday, September 3, 2012

A Working Class Hero is Something to Be

Labor Day weekend is an annual milestone which marks, if not the official seasonal end of summer, then at least its symbolic conclusion.

The holiday’s name has become something of a misnomer.  The United States is one of the few countries that does not observe its worker’s holiday on the first of May.  In fact, the first weekend in September was chosen by its founders specifically to distance labor from May Day and its association with the age-old bogey of socialism.  Over time, the Labor Day holiday has gone from recognizing the sacrifices and contributions of workers to being yet another excuse to consume.  

Perhaps it’s just as well.  The labor movement in the United States is in sorry shape.  One key reason is that American workers have made a unilateral suicide pact with the Right.  For a generation the gains made by organized labor have been steadily eroded by the relentless implementation of the Republican economic agenda and the impotence of Democrats in Congress and the state houses.  And for some perverse reason, workers, caught on the twin horns of false consciousness and false needs, have bought into the baldfaced lie of the crooks who own and run the country that this has all been done for their own good.

The demonization of union workers has gotten strident lately, particularly after Gov. Scott Walker’s assault on public employees’ collective bargaining rights in Wisconsin.  Economic policy has become all about relieving “job creators” of their grievous tax burden while slashing such benefits for the middle and working classes as funded pension plans and subsidized public higher education.  The American labor movement itself is partly to blame, resting on the laurels of decades-old achievements while failing to demonstrate its relevance to today’s workers. 

Even in the face of the conservative propaganda machine, organized labor should have been able to hold its ground better than it has.  Union membership in the U.S. has declined to a depressing 11% of all employees (and only 7% of private sector workers), from a high of 34% in 1954.  The current business opposition to federal “card check” legislation is only the latest episode in the long war on unions.

Resistance is futile, it seems—whether it’s resistance to the 1% or resistance to public apathy.  Occupy Wall Street, which appeared to have the makings of a genuine mass movement at its inception just a short year ago, has become a punch line not only for the SUV-and-tract-house set but also among the very people who should have been its natural allies.  By dismissing the OWS protestors as unkempt pot smoking freaks, mainstream society ignores the ice rapidly melting under its own feet. 

In retrospect Occupy was more street theater than political force.  Its message was that substantive change can occur only if each of us takes responsibility for safeguarding our personal and collective rights.  (That last phrase needs to be spoken more often.  It sends a chill of dread down capitalists’ spines.) 

As the national discourse turns into a right-wing monologue, controversy over trivial utterances such as the President’s recent “you didn’t build that” remark illustrates a fact frequently missed: The heroic businessman (or woman) lauded in our culture can accomplish nothing without the efforts of their employees.  Confronting declining work conditions and the growing lack of available skilled jobs, workers must struggle to preserve their human dignity and fight being considered as little more than beasts of burden.  The struggle can only be effective when conscientization is followed by organization.

Enjoy your rights while you still have them.

Happy Labor Day.

© 2012 The Unassuming Scholar

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