Back to work tomorrow, the summer officially over, the political campaign to begin in earnest. You mean, all those Tea Party protests weren't a political campaign?
Labor Day is supposed to celebrate workers. As Garrison Keiler remarked, everywhere else workers are celebrated on May Day. Everywhere else they must be Commies! Everywhere else in developed countries labor unions account for more than 7% of the private workforce, and corporations would love to gain the kind of rights they have here. Union-busting firms probably began here; they'll probably spread elsewhere.
And then, there's the unemployed: near 10% makes those with jobs afraid to ask for anything.
The American model is no longer the well-paid middle class worker belonging to a union. Time and a half for overtime or weekends is a distant memory for most of us. Forty-hour weeks are something that seems to have disappeared, too, for the majority. Either the boss demands that you work extra hours or weekends for the same pay, or if you're salaried, for no extra pay at all.
Unions created the weekend, and that still exists, although for millions it doesn't. A friend of mine lost his $60,000 a year programming job and after the maximum unemployment all he's been able to get is an $8.50/hour job in which he works a rotating schedule, off sometimes on the weekend, sometimes Friday and Saturday, sometimes Sunday and Monday, etc..
My son goes to work daily at about 9, but doesn't get off work until 7 or 8 . His partner works even longer hours. Both are salaried, so, they earn no extra for long hours.
This seems to be the new American model. It may also be why employers aren't hiring much; they can squeeze more and more work out of their current employees with little additional cost. It's also, why they enthusiastically fight unions, and why there are fewer and fewer unionized workers. Employers call it worker "flexibility."
Capital has won; Labor has lost. With the Citizens United court decision, the preponderance of capital over labor can only increase, because corporations can buy Congress, the Executive and the courts: their funds are almost unlimited, anyone else's are extremely limited. Democracy and the shiny worker model first enunciated by Henry Ford--workers paid well enough to buy his cars--is dying fast.
Americans already work longer hours, get less vacation, and fewer benefits than virtually any other developed country. Are we on course to become like Third World countries? American workers aren't competing with Germans and Japanese, but with the Chinese! We'll be competing against India and Brazil, too.
Empire? Yeah. We'll pay for that, but not to hire American workers, and not to pay them decently, either.
The future America will be corporate imperial fascism--until the corporations bankrupt us, or take over the world.
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