What’s it all about, Alfie et al.?

Let’s face it!  There has been a lot of recognition of the degrading and commercializing of Christmas.  The endless Christmas carols crowding into our airwaves, the nonstop commercials for sales and Santas, the constant pressure to buy, buy, for what used to be truly a holy day.

Something similar, though still on a smaller scale, has happened to Labor Day—a day intended to celebrate working people—a celebration proposed by and achieved through the work of labor unionists, many of them immigrants.  Hmmm, labor unionists and immigrants, I wonder why there is such reluctance on the part of media and politicians to remind the public of those roots.

Yes, Virginia,  the “holiday” that provides U.S. citizens with one of those increasingly rare three day weekends, now heralded as signifying the end of summer, back to school, barbecues, and flag-waving parades, originated as a national holiday in the triumph of a labor union protesting inhumane treatment of workers during an economic recession.

Fortunately, there have been several good essays published reminding us of the significance of Labor Day.  Check out the following:

Ron Ashkenas, in Forbes magazine, suggests that to put meaning back into Labor Day, “perhaps Labor Day should recognize the productivity and contributions of office workers, knowledge workers, and those in service industries along with union workers, whether they are steelworkers, hospital workers, or government employees.”

Mary Kay Henry, in The Nation, explains why, for American workers, Labor Day is “a reminder of the struggles we have won—and those that lie ahead.”

In The Monitor, Harrington and Olivares remind us what to celebrate today: “Labor Day is when we should pay respect for the self-sacrifice, jailing, beatings and sometimes death [American workers] endured. Their struggles for justice and dignity brought about the 6-day work week and then the 5-day work week. They helped to narrow standard working hours to 10 hours daily and then eight hours. They brought about the minimum wage and overtime pay and they gave rise to the idea of national health care.”

And, in an article that should really get you up and paying attention, Richard Eskow, on Truthout asks  “How Much Will the War on Unions Cost You This Labor Day?” He provides a detailed and convincing answer. Read the article and learn how important it is to all of us for working people to continue fighting for a better future.

Many obscenely rich, disgustingly greedy, dangerously powerful people and their followers, in and outside the military-industrial complex, with its underpaid (and sometimes slave) workers overseas, have been “laboring” hard (spending fractions of their wealth) to take away those hard-won achievements. Let’s stop rewarding the rich for their greed and honor the people who really did make America great—the working people. Not just today but every day.

Time to face the facts

By guest author Dot Walsh

People Get Ready: The Fight Against a Jobless Economy and a Citizenless Democracy is a new book by Robert W. McChesney with John Nichols, the popular national affairs correspondent at The Nation. The authors write that “The United States retains the facade of democracy. It remains a democracy on paper and in our hearts. But ours is, increasingly, a citizenless democracy…Oligarchs and their servants call the shots for the feudal serfs of corporate capital.”

As with the environment, the threat to democracy is dire. The United States has created, as Dr. Kathie Malley-Morrison pointed out, the greatest wealth inequality since the 1920s. McChesney and Nichols warn us that the technological revolution is contributing to the ever-increasing wealth and power of a tiny minority of Americans at the expense of everyone else—a problem that needs a revolutionary solution to avoid the massive unemployment and undemocratization that will accompany unfettered capitalism.

All is not lost. People still have the vote and the economy has not completely crashed yet. There are some ways that citizens can take back their power and create a peaceful revolution. Locally, the willingness of ordinary citizens to protest against developments that endanger their lives and their environment can be seen in the opposition to new pipelines and fracking . On a broader level, social media like change.org provide a way for individuals and groups to speak out against powerful organizations engaged in harmful pursuits

Dot Walsh is a lifelong peace activist and member of the Engaging Peace Board of Directors.