UnionBook

The social network for trade unionists - a LabourStart project.

Information

Boycott & Strike!

A group to post information & take action on boycotts & strikes!

Location: General
Members: 62
Latest Activity: May 14

Discussion Forum

Strikes and community assemblies in solidarity

In Australia, even with a lawful strike, an effective picket stopping scabs etc is unlawful and employers get court injunctions against union officials. But that is where the community assembly steps…Continue

Tags: in, solidarity, assemblies, community, and

Started by Chris White May 14.

Support Australian construction workers against union busting Grocon

Corporate construction giant Grocon headed by Grollo launched an anti-union attack on Australian union CFMEU. The issues include the right to wear a union logo, the right for union members to have…Continue

Tags: unionism, strike, workers, struggle, rights

Started by Chris D White Sep 3, 2012.

The State of Georgia is Trying to Criminalize Picketing, Urgent!

You read that right. Anti-worker state lawmakers in Georgia want to criminalize our basic right to freedom of speech. They're pushing a bill to impose a $10,000 fine or a year in prison or both for…Continue

Started by alexandria Knox Feb 28, 2012.

General Strike in North America on May 1st? 1 Reply

This is a link to a pdf of the General Strike flier released by Denver/Boulder IWW GMB for May 1st in English and Spanish. Any thoughts on this? Are there resources for this action continent-wide? We…Continue

Started by Evan Herzoff. Last reply by alexandria Knox Feb 28, 2012.

Comment Wall

Add a Comment

You need to be a member of Boycott & Strike! to add comments!

Comment by Joe Balkis on June 6, 2012 at 16:13

Thursday, June 7,
Noon
Strike!
Sycamore History Museum, 1730 N. Main
St, Sycamore
Dr. Rosemary Feurer and former Anaconda employees on the 1968
strike in Sycamore. MORE INFORMATION

Comment by Joe Balkis on June 6, 2012 at 16:11

Wednesday, June 6, 6 PM
to 7 PM
Something to Strike
About?

Anthony Cappetta and Sarah Jane Rhee on issues
facing Chicago public school teachers today. MORE INFORMATION.

Comment by Joe Balkis on May 26, 2012 at 22:26

Machinists Strike as Caterpillar
Demands Non-Union Wage Rates 

Do workers need a union to negotiate "market-based" wages? Machinists at a Caterpillar factory in Joliet, Illinois, struck May 1 to tell the heavy-equipment giant they deserve better.

Comment by Joe Balkis on May 26, 2012 at 22:17

Hour Before Release, Palestinian Prisoner Sent to Admin Detention • Hunger Strike Continues

Comment by Joe Balkis on May 24, 2012 at 18:10

Hi brothers and sisters,
I'm sharing an article about the solidarity rally with striking Caterpillar workers, a struggle with great implications for all workers.
In solidarity,
John Bachtell
Strikers blast Caterpillar greed, reject concessions
JOLIET, Ill. - Unabashed corporate greed, is how striking workers are describing Caterpillar's efforts to slash wages and benefits while eliminating pensions and seniority rights at their plant here.
Over 1000 striking workers, their families and supporters rallied in an impressive show of solidarity at the plant gate May 11. They were greeted by a constant blare of horns from passing trucks and motorists.
Article continues: http://www.peoplesworld.org/strikers-blast-caterpillar-greed-reject...
Caterpillar workers strike against take back contract http://peoplesworld.org/caterpillar-workers-strike-against-take-bac...

You may also be interested in the following analysis by CPUSA labor secretary and SOAR leader Scott Marshall:
Labor fightback in the Great Recession
"Ten thousand times has the labor movement stumbled and bruised itself. We have been enjoined by the courts, assaulted by thugs, charged by the militia, traduced by the press, frowned upon in public opinion, and deceived by politicians. But notwithstanding all this and all these, labor is today the most vital and potential power this planet has ever known, and its historic mission is as certain of ultimate realization as is the setting of the sun." - Eugene V. Debs
Reading this quotation today, over 100 years later, you are struck by two things. How appropriate, how up to date, and how well it fits labor's situation today. At the same time, 108 years later, you are bound to wonder, how is it that labor can be so bruised and battered yet again?
Article continues: http://peoplesworld.org/labor-fightback-in-the-great-recession/

Comment by Joe Balkis on May 24, 2012 at 18:07

Palestinian Prisoners Score Heroic Victory Struggle to End Israel’s Oppression and International Complicity Continues

Israeli authorities were forced to comply with the prisoners’ demands. Coinciding with the Palestinian commemoration of the Nakba, the campaign of ethnic cleansing that uprooted most Palestinians from their homeland around 1948, the prisoners’ victory has heightened hope about the prospects for Palestinian freedom, justice, self determination and the return of refugees. This triumph for the Palestinian struggle couldn't have been reached without the resolve of the prisoners themselves, grassroots mobilization in their support in Palestine, and the wave of solidarity and calls for holding Israel accountable that the strike has triggered around the world. More than a thousand people around the globe have pledged to undertake a 24-hour hunger strike in solidarity with the prisoners.  While the solidarity hunger-strike has been called off, due to the prisoners' victory, illegal repression continue in Israeli prisons. Emphasizing imprisonment as a critical component of Israel’s system of occupation practiced against the Palestinian people, Palestinian and human rights organizations have called for intensifying the global Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign to target corporations profiting directly from the Israeli prison system. We call for action to be taken to hold to account G4S, the world’s largest international security corporation, which helps to maintain and profit from Israels prison system, for its complicity with violations of international law. Please click here to demand G4S ends its involvement in the  prison system and its complicity in violations of human rights.

Comment by Joe Balkis on May 24, 2012 at 4:59

Quebec Suspends Civil Liberties in Response to the Student Strike Elizabeth Leier, Truthout: "Since the global financial meltdown of 2008, many Western countries have experienced widespread protesting and even, in some cases, rioting in the streets. This has been the year of the Occupy movement, a cry for solidarity in the face of ever-growing crony capitalism and belt tightening from governments. In Canada's francophone Province of Quebec, it is students that have mobilized this year to combat growing austerity plans and, in particular, a post-secondary tuition hike of 82 percent spread over seven years." Read the Article

Comment by Joe Balkis on May 13, 2012 at 13:16

On the 64th anniversary of Al-Nakba: there is no more time to wait, there is no more time to spare, NOW is the time for action!
https://www.facebook.com/ events/237334053037149/
WHAT: Candlelight Vigil in Support of Palestinian Political Prisoners on Hunger Strike in Israeli prisons
WHEN: Monday, May 14th, 2012             7:30 PM
WHERE: The Water Tower Park                806 N. Michigan Ave.                (corner of Chicago & Michigan Aves.)
WHY: In support of the prisoners' demands:
1. An immediate end to administrative detention, the Israeli policy of imprisoning Palestinian activists and organizers for months, and sometimes years, without any formal charges.
2. An end to the policy of solitary confinement and isolation, which have been used to deprive Palestinian prisoners of their rights for more than a decade.
3. To allow the families of prisoners from the Gaza Strip to visit. This right has been denied to all families for more than 6 years.
4. An improvement in the living conditions of prisoners and an end to the "Shalit" law, which outlaws prisoners' access to newspapers, learning materials, and many TV channels.
5. An end to the the policies of humiliation which are suffered by prisoners and their families, such as strip searches, nightly raids, and collective punishment.
The condition of the 2500+ Palestinian political prisoners on hunger strike is rapidly deteriorating.  Two of the prisoners, Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahleh, have passed their 70th day refusing food, putting them in critical condition and close to death. The people of Palestine have stood in solidarity with the strikers; on May 9th, Palestinian youth blocked the UN offices in Ramallah, demanding that the U.N. take a stand to save the lives of the striking prisoners. Take action now to support the demands of the prisoners, which are basic and all in accordance with Geneva Conventions.                                   The forces of the Israeli occupation in the prisons, known as the Israeli Prison Service, have done everything they can to crush the strike, including cutting off the inmates from their lawyers and refusing the strikers access to the medical clinic unless they end the hunger strike.  In addition to these measures, they have also instituted a system of collective punishment of strikers, which includes solitary confinement, daily fines up to 500 NIS ($131 USD),  and random body and cell searches. 
Despite all of this repression, the prisoners remain steadfast, most recently stating in their fourth official communication: “We vow to live with dignity or die.” 

Comment by Joe Balkis on March 23, 2012 at 5:36

IUF
Uniting food, farm and hotel workers world-wide

Spanish unions are united as never before in their mobilization against labour law 'reforms' which gut workplace protection and trade union rights and in defense of public services. A 24-hour national general strike has been called for March 29.
Spain's trade union movement is fighting back not only against their own government, but against the European-wide austerity drive which is transferring wealth and destroying public services on a massive scale. You can support their struggle by sending a message of support to the IUF's Spanish affiliates, telling them you are with them on March 29 and for as long as it takes for the government to change course.
Click here to send a message

For more information click here.
Ron Oswald General Secretary, IUF
International Union of Food, Agricultural, Hotel, Restaurant, Catering, Tobacco and Allied Workers' Associations (IUF)
8, rampe du Pont-Rouge 1213 Petit Lancy, Switzerland Tel: +41 22 793 22 33 Fax: +41 22 793 22 38 website: www.iuf.org

Comment by Joe Balkis on March 1, 2012 at 10:03

General Strike in India vs. Privatization

From:
View contact details
To:
"Joseph Balkis" <brojoe705@yahoo.com>

See related site concerning Illinois at:  http://www.ctariders.org/Brochure.html
 
The union Public Services Internatonal opposed the “downsizing, outsourcing, contractualisation, corporatisation and privatisation of government function.” They demand protection for the right to strike, regulation of the use of “casual” labor, and measures to “Keep the public utilities in public hand.”
 
http://www.inthesetimes.com/working/entry/12813/in_general_strike_i...
 
In All-India General Strike, Workers Go All Out Against Neoliberalism


By Michelle Chen

Trade union activists participate in a rally to show support for the All India General Strike, in Siliguri on February 27, 2012. (Diptendu Dutta/AFP/Getty Images)  

 

India’s economic ascent seems like it should be the envy of the world’s richest nations; with rocketing growth rates and gargantuan consumer and labor markets, India's destiny as Asia's next superstar looks beyond a doubt. Except Indian workers just gave the boosters of global capitalism a few million second thoughts.
 
The all-India general strike of February 28 brought together workers of various sectors and political stripes, civil servants along with rickshaw drivers, united under a banner of opposition to neoliberal policies of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's government. The labor movement of the world’s largest democracy issued a stark challenge to the idea of deregulation as an economic cure.
 
AFP quoted All India Trade Union Congress general secretary Gurudas Dasgupta: “We are fighting for our rights against a government that is anti-people,”
 
The core grievances center around government corruption, rising costs of living, labor violations, privatization, and the general rush to hand the economy over to the talons free enterprise and shred the welfare state.
 
Public Services International, a global union that works with public employees in India, articulated a broad agenda of social and economic protection:
 
The common demands are (a) gaining the same rights and protection for temporary and contract workers as that of permanent workers, (b) raising and extending the minimum wage, (c) resisting the attacks on trade unions, (d) stopping price rise, (e) the creation of a national social security fund, (f) increase in pensions, (g) combating corruption.
 
In addition, public sector advocates oppose the “downsizing, outsourcing, contractualisation, corporatisation and privatisation of government function.” They demand protection for the right to strike, regulation of the use of “casual” labor, and measures to “Keep the public utilities in public hand.”
 
Other rallying points of the strike include pressing the government to ratify key international labor accords and to provide social security for all workers, including the irregular laborers often subjected to exploitation, discrimination and outright slavery.
 
Since the start of India’s neoliberal reform push in 1991, the country has reportedly seen fourteen general strikes. Like the mass protests against the proposed expansion of Wal-Mart into India late last year, this general strike is an affront to a governing party that has tried to project an image of populism and now faces weakening growth rates.
 
The Indian workforce remains socially and politically stratified, and not all workers participated in the union-led strike. But for at least a little while, legions of workers aligned to put the brakes on the public and private sectors. Transit services were blockaded in some areas, and many bank employees struck to jam up the country's financial engine.
 
J. S. R. Prasad, director of India’s Union Development and Organising Centre (UNIDOC), an affiliate of UNI Global Union, told In These Times that the strike marked “a firm step in opposing the Government’s policies dealing with workers in India” and displayed unprecedented alliances. “For the first time the INTUC, the Trade Union Federation affiliated with ruling Congress party, also participated along with communist controlled Trade Union Federations in India,” he noted.
 
Still, though the general strike involved both white and blue collar workers, the country’s vast labor force is awash with unregulated, unorganized laborers relegated to the shadows of the economy, lacking even the most basic regulatory protections. As long as this cheap labor pool fuels India’s explosive “development,” all workers will spiral deeper into a capitalist freefall, accelerated by policies aimed at luring in the vultures of foreign investment.
 
In a recent analysis of labor issues in India, the International Trade Union Confederation reported that many of the most oppressed workers are children, who “can be found in a wide variety of industries, sometimes undertaking hazardous tasks, including in mining and quarrying, textiles, leather and garment factories, fireworks factories and many others.” In general, according to the report, “forced labour is a problem in agriculture, mining, commercial sexual exploitation, and other sectors. Overall law enforcement is poor and judicial capacities are not effective in addressing the problem.”
 
Yet even in mainstream sectors, the free-market development agenda is steamrolling workers’ rights. A report issued by PSI’s India Office describes how India's “new economic policy,” which embodied the free-market ideology that has shaped "development" across the Global South, has systematically eroded the economic security of government workers:
 
The system of outsourcing, contractualisation and casualisation of workforce started in 1993-94. During 1995 the total number of permanent central government employees was 3.98 million whereas in 2008 it came down to 3.11 million. Nearly 22% of permanent jobs were lost, which were replaced by casual workers including on jobs of permanent nature.
 
Though the general strike suggests that labor groups are being galvanized by shared economic struggles, Prasad said that “division among working class” is still a major impediment to organizing that “loosens their united strength and bargaining power.  This is where the government and managements take full advantage and deny their legitimate demands.”
 
The destruction of workers’ collective power is an old story. India’s path to modernization is trailed by long historical threads of imperialism, from the first waves of colonization to the current tides of neoliberalism and political profiteering. Yet as a response to those inequalities, the general strike reveals a common battlefront emerging for all workers, from child factory workers to bank clerks, all facing a global assault on human rights.
 

Members (62)

 
 
 

© 2013   Created by Eric Lee.

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service