Check this out:
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 485,000 U.S. workers were involved in strikes and lockouts during 2018. That’s the highest number since 1986. The data for 2019 won’t be released until 2020, but there’s a good chance that number will be exceeded, a point driven home by the fact that, over the last week, at least 85,000 workers participated in 13 different strikes across the United States.
That’s Chicago teachers, but also teachers in the comparatively tiny Dedham, Massachusetts—but both are part of a nationwide pattern, one that shows signs of continuing.
And it’s not the only way workers are asserting power. Deadspin writers resigned en masse after interim editor in chief Barry Petchesky was fired for refusing to stick to sports. Sen. Bernie Sanders spoke out against the private equity firm that now owns Deadspin.
But these signs of workers asserting themselves remain small against the backdrop of how thoroughly corporations have crushed workers during the past several decades.
● Los Angeles housekeepers and gardeners showed up for work dangerously close to the Getty fire when their employers didn’t bother to let them know the area was under evacuation order.
● Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia is participating in rewriting a rule he worked against during the Obama administration.
● The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act isn’t working, and there’s no reason to think that will change.
● The hottest stop for 2020 candidates on the campaign trail? The picket line.
● Read this thread:
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