Daily Kos

Remembering the Fallen

Tue Apr 29, 2008 at 07:00:53 AM PDT

On May 1st, I will buy no products, travel nowhere, pay for no services, nor will I work.

For 8 hours.  On May 1st, I’ll remember the more than 4,000 American soldiers who have fallen, the countless thousands who have come home without legs, arms, eyes or the ability to walk.  I will remember those now in mental hospitals and all those now living on the streets, still at war in their heads. I will remember all the innocent lives lost in Iraq, children, elderly, mothers, fathers, and I will keep in mind that we can change it all this November. And I will also remember all my brothers and sisters lost while doing their jobs.

I’m planning to support the International Longshore and Warehouse Union and
Worker's Memorial Day (actually April 28th) by not working the day shift on May 1st.  

To honor all those workers who have died in work related accidents this year and also to support the ILWU protest AGAINST the IRAQ WAR

Let’s start with the ILWU protest:

Longshore Caucus calls for Iraq war protest at ports on May 1

Nearly one hundred Longshore Caucus delegates voted on February 8 to support a resolution calling for an eight-hour "stop-work" meeting during the day-shift on Thursday, May 1 at ports in CA, OR and WA to protest the war by calling for the immediate, safe return of U.S. troops from Iraq.

"The Caucus has spoken on this important issue and I’ve notified the employers about our plans for 'stop work' meetings on May 1," said ILWU International President Bob McEllrath.

Caucus delegates, including several military veterans, spoke passionately about the importance of supporting the troops by bringing them home safely and ending the War in Iraq.  Concerns were also raised about the growing cost of the war that has threatened funding for domestic needs, including education and healthcare. Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz and Harvard economist Linda J. Bilmes recently estimated that the true cost of the War in Iraq to American taxpayers will exceed 3 trillion dollars--a figure they describe as "conservative."  

The union’s International Executive Board recently endorsed Barack Obama, citing his opposition to the War in Iraq as one of the key factors in the union's decision-making process.

The ILWU was one (but not the first) of the first unions to integrate, having done so in 1936.  Both black and white gangs (work crews) worked alongside each other on the docks and held together during the strike of 1936.  Integrating the union meant that when they had to strike, owners and bosses couldn’t race bate the workers, a management practice still in use today (check out Smithfield justice for more on this).

My point here about the ILWU is that it is a very progressive union. They do things democratically; including this action on the Iraq war, in fact, they even say as much:

Caucus delegates are democratically elected representatives from every longshore local who set policy for the Longshore Division.

And in support of the actions taken by the caucus,

ILWU International President Robert McEllrath has written letters to President John Sweeney of the AFL-CIO and President Andy Stern of the Change-to-Win Coalition, and to the presidents of the International Transport Workers Federation and the International Dockworkers Council to inform them of the ILWU's plans for May 1.

But this day of Remembrance is not only for those who’ve fallen in this war, but also all those workers who’ve lost their lives.  Since yesterday was Worker's Memorial Day, it seems fitting to remember just a very small sampling of people who’ve given their lives to their jobs in just the last 9 months. From the Weekly Toll:

Employer Shoots Employee in Kingsport
Johnson City,TN -

An Elizabethton man died over the weekend after police say he was shot by his boss. The Sullivan County Sheriff's Department received a call around 9 pm Friday night on a shooting at Kingsport Transfer on Moreland Drive. Investigators say the owner, Samuel Ireson and employee James Guinn were arguing when Ireson shot Guinn in the chest. Guinn was taken to Holston Valley Hospital and died Saturday morning. Investigators say Ireson was released to allow time to determine exactly what led up to the shooting.

Report explains death at Greenheck Fan
Wausau, WI —

A man who died Saturday while working on a machine at Greenheck Fan Corp. in Schofield made a similar repair on the same machine a week earlier, a co-worker told police. Michael Damask, 42, of Hatley, died of compression asphyxia or suffocation, Marathon County Medical Examiner John Larson said this afternoon. Damask was killed when part of a hydraulic press dropped on him while he was changing a bearing, Larson said Larson determined the cause of death after conducting an autopsy this morning. The weight of the machine on his body prevented him from breathing or calling for help, Larson said. Damask was employed by Greenheck for approximately two years and worked nine months in the maintenance department. Damask is married and has three children.

Window washer falls to death at American Indian museum
WASHINGTON —

A window washer at the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian has fallen at least 50 feet to his death. D.C. Fire Department spokesman Alan Etter says rescuers were called to the museum on the National Mall about 10 a.m. Thursday. It's not clear whether the man's safety harness failed or whether it had been engaged properly when he started work. Authorities have not been able to identify the man. Etter says he appeared to be in his early 30s and worked for a contractor hired by the Smithsonian. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration is investigating.

Bartender killed after asking man for ID
Sunrise Beach, MO -

The Gossip Inn is a neighborhood corner bar. "A family tradition since 1938," says the sign out front. But the small tavern in Kansas City, Kan., had a firm rule posted prominently behind the bar: Nobody gets served a drink without showing an ID. Bartender Lori Reynolds stood fast by that rule about 1:30 a.m. Saturday, and it cost Reynolds her life. A man upset when Reynolds said she couldn't serve him without seeing his ID opened fire, striking her multiple times and spraying six to eight more rounds through the bar. No one else was reported injured. The man fled the bar and was still at large Saturday evening. Reynolds died at a hospital. "She did her job. That's all she was trying to do -- her job," said bar owner Laura Maude. Maude said Reynolds, 44, was a good bartender, liked

El Paso CBP officer dies in crash near Moriarty
WASHINGTON -

A U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Air Interdiction Agent (Pilot Trainee) died while performing training as a result of an aircraft crash that occurred Monday at approximately 12:40 p.m. EDT at Moriarty Airport, near Albuquerque, N.M. The Air Interdiction Officer who died in the crash is Julio E. Baray. He is survived by his wife and two children. "Today, the Customs and Border Protection family mourns the loss of Officer Julio Baray," said Michael Kostlenik, Assistant Commissioner, CBP Office of Air and Marine. "Our thoughts and prayers are with his family and friends."

Lorain worker crushed to death
LORAIN, OH —

An employee of Brush Wellman Engineered Products was crushed to death Sunday night in a casting machine. Matthew Salisbury, 30, of Day Drive in Lorain, was pronounced dead at the scene following the accident, which occurred at about 10:50 p.m., said county Coroner Paul Matus. "He died as a result of acute trauma," Matus said. "His injuries were obvious and fatal." The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s Toledo office is investigating the accident. "He was inside a machine and got pinned," said Dick Tracy, the agency’s assistant area director. He said it was too early to say how the accident occurred. Salisbury’s wife, Jennifer Salisbury, said a co-worker told her he saw the whole thing. "The machine was broke down — it was clogged — and he was trying to unclog it," she said.

So, I’m asking again, do you know what you’re doing on Thursday, May 1st?


crossposted on Women, Unions and Our Stories



UPDATE
Just reading over on Truthout this little tidbit:

  After the matter was approved by the caucus, ILWU President Bob McEllrath said on the ILWU Web site, "The caucus has spoken on this important issue, and I've notified the employers about our plans for stop-work meetings on May 1."

   However, in March, the president of PMA, James McKenna, said he would not agree to the request. Employers do not want the ports to be shut during the first, or day shift, as it would be disruptive to the flow of cargo. The PMA said Friday that about 10,000 containers are loaded and unloaded coastwide during an eight-hour day.

   On April 8, the union leadership withdrew the stop-work request for May 1.

   The employers wanted the union to convey the withdrawal to its members, but management sources said it was unclear whether that had happened. So the PMA took the issue to an arbitrator. On Thursday, he issued an opinion that the union is obligated to inform members that the request has been withdrawn. There was no mention of the matter on the ILWU Web site on Friday.

   Craig Merrilees, a spokesman for the ILWU, issued a statement seemingly supportive of a war protest: "The Longshore Caucus resolution calling on all locals to honor May 1 by taking action to end the war and bring the troops home safely from Iraq continues to move forward. Various voluntary rallies and public demonstrations are scheduled for May Day."

So, there is no longer an official call for this (explains why my links to the official letters from the 1st post no longer work), however, they are still encouraging May Day demonstrations.

Tags: May Day, labor, union, death toll, worker, worker deaths, iraq, war, Beltane, 2008, ILWU, protest (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 8 comments

  •  solidarity jar (16+ / 0-)

    Have you signed the Combustible Dust Petition?

    If not, please do.  We need standards.

    The most important word in the language of the working class is `solidarity.'--Harry Bridges, longshore union leader

    by Bendygirl on Tue Apr 29, 2008 at 07:02:26 AM PDT

  •  Thanks for letting us know. How sad. eom (4+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Bendygirl, Ellicatt, DWG, jlms qkw

    The means is the ends in the process of becoming. - Mahatma Gandhi

    by HoundDog on Tue Apr 29, 2008 at 07:03:18 AM PDT

    •  I think it's empowering (4+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      HoundDog, Ellicatt, DWG, jlms qkw

      I can't do anything about those who've fallen, but I can help bring light to what has happened and remember.  Remembering is a beautiful thing and a wonderful tribute to them.

      Hope you'll join me on Thursday.

      The most important word in the language of the working class is `solidarity.'--Harry Bridges, longshore union leader

      by Bendygirl on Tue Apr 29, 2008 at 07:05:30 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  Remembering is indeed a beautiful thing (3+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Bendygirl, HoundDog, jlms qkw

        We cannot change things that slip through our consciousness.  Keep up the good work.

        Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. - Martin Luther King, Jr.

        by DWG on Tue Apr 29, 2008 at 07:30:26 AM PDT

        [ Parent ]

        •  And also we need to "remember" to value people's (0+ / 0-)

          lives before they are dead.

          Even if this means paying more for workers safety, pollution control, basic food, water, safety, and health care for all citizens (yes, even globally.)

          It probably also means being nicer to those folks we find most annoying, but I'm not quite there yet in terms of my spiritual development.  (sure conceptually - but I mean in terms of seriously trying to implement the concept in day to day interactions. :-) )

          Keep up the good work.  And thanks for continuing to work so hard in this lonely area.

          ***********************************
          PS

          I hope you forgive me for making the following excessive long addition here, but I feel sort of sad that we see so few comments to such an important area, while elsewhere if you pass gas and blame it on one of our top ticket candidates you can get rec'd with 100s of comments.

          Let' me share the following observation stated in the extreme just to make the point, then you can move just a little way in this direction, if you think it would be useful.

          I can't help noticing that every time a really good and positive person comes from a purely positive and constructive place, that probably reflects an advanced level of spiritual orientation, or just basic human goodness, the response is too often to be totally ignored.  

          But, cynically, I suspect, that if you adopted a less constructive approach and angrily blamed some one else, ________  you would have many time the comments.

          Years ago here I wrote hundreds of diarues under different pseudonyms (before I knew it was forbidden.)  I have even probably at least 150 in the archives under Hounddog which is the only one I use now.  I learned a whole lot of tricks on how to get recc'd diaries with hundreds of comments, and even received letters of thanks from several Senators and Reps and others.

          And in one six month period about three years ago, I think, I was surprised to notice my top three pseudonyms were responsible for 1.4% of the entire author impact for a six month period.

          But, after being secretly pleased about this, I also recognized I was actually becoming a "Mojo Hound" and getting addicted.  

          But, the key point here, is that I had a statistically significant database from which to do experiments on how to maximize numbers of comments and recs to dairies, and discovered some sad truths, I wss only too happy to exploit.

          Probably the best trick, I noticed, was I could get sometimes 10 or even 100 times as many comments and recs if I could some how connect the diary theme to the "dastardly, evil and threatening oppression of goodness" by Karl Rove, Dick Cheney, George Bush, Donald Rumsefeld, Alberto Gonzoles, Scooter Libby, any of the top 24 neocons on Think Progress's list, etc.

          Or the second best trick was to frame the issue in terms of supporting or celebrating some counter hero, so congratulating Gore, Kerry, Fitzgerald, any progressive hero, etc and framing the issue in terms of one of our loney heros' courageously and defiantly standing up against oppression (even better if it was against one of the above villians) could greatly boost attention and participation.

          So for example if your headline were "Thousands of Workers and Soldiers Die Due To The Murderous Policy Neglect By Bush and the  Heartless Neocon War Criminals and Other Selfish Right Wing  Nutjob Scounderals!!

          But, be cautious.  It's very important not to use all caps or three or more exclamation points or you risk being categorized as a troll, or a sad case of Manic Depression, or drunken narcissism.

          Actually, in this case the sweet spot would be to remove the second exclaimation point and the "murderous policy neglect" phrase because it's already nailed it with Heartless Neocon War Criminals.  

          Actually, even taking out War Criminals makes it even better, because then it appears more like you just the average mentally health hard working and long suffering well intentioned progressive that has just finally had the last straw of  moral indignation, that you can not help strike back despite your obvious attempts to hold back  the "self righteious" zone that's best avoided by the "more mature" half of the progressive communities.  

          But again, in the spirit of humoursly self-deprecations, you could make if even better if you put in a "a colon" and added "Fitzgerald should indict them all for crimes against humanity!!!

          Or Gore would probably be really angry about this if he knew about it (and drank more caffinated beverages!!!!)

          *********
          PPS

          Ultimately, though, I gave this up, because, although it may have got a lot of attention, it seemed to have no real constructive impact on holding the Bush/Cheney administration accountable for their many transgressions.

          So I gave it all up a few years back.

          So I've only been back It appears likely you might have the update the specific villian and heros to include errant members of our own party who've made the wrong top ticket choices.

          But please know, that I'm just teasing you a bit, and actually admire you for acheiving a higher level of discourse that is much better and in the long run.

          I was just too lazy to go find the old Peace Candle that more appropriately would support the solemnity of such sad and tragic observations and situation.

          I'm sorry if my cynical black humor is out of place here, but it's really a subtle message for others, who I beleive should be supporting good work like yours.

          I greatly appreciate your good work and wish you received greater support.

          (And also will not blame you in the least, if you use any of these tricks.  But remeber what Yoda warns us about the seductive power of the Dark Side."    

           

          The means is the ends in the process of becoming. - Mahatma Gandhi

          by HoundDog on Tue Apr 29, 2008 at 02:17:14 PM PDT

          [ Parent ]

          •  wow (0+ / 0-)

            I've had a number on the rec list, but it's usually ones heavy on pics or video, like the one on Friday.

            I'm looking forward to the end of the race.  But there will always be times we blog swarm...it happens.

            Someday, I hope we will be able to link the dots with all of our core values and workers rights.  Until then, I'll be here, plugging away, happily.

            The most important word in the language of the working class is `solidarity.'--Harry Bridges, longshore union leader

            by Bendygirl on Tue Apr 29, 2008 at 07:28:26 PM PDT

            [ Parent ]

  •  on may 1, i'm doing birthday stuff for (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Bendygirl, Powered Grace

    daughter.

    on may 6, i will set aside time.

    9 dead utahns - Crandall Canyon mine disaster - w's fault.  Richard Stickler's fault.  Bob Murray's fault.  Regional MHSA jerk who approved Murray's plan - their fault too.  Elaine Chao's fault.  Heck, Mitch McConnell's fault.  

    Kerry Allred
    Don Erickson
    Luis Hernandez
    Juan Carlos Payan
    Brandon Phillips
    Manuel Sanchez
    Gary Jensen
    Dale Ray Black
    Brandon Kimber

    •  thanks for adding those names (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      jlms qkw

      I thought of adding them, but opted for the other more obscure ones like the female bartender shot by a customer and the worker shot by his boss.  

      I will be thinking of these miners, too.

      The most important word in the language of the working class is `solidarity.'--Harry Bridges, longshore union leader

      by Bendygirl on Tue Apr 29, 2008 at 07:44:26 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

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