Thursday, September 20, 2012

It's Pretty Clear


I grew up in a lower middle-class family.  My Mom was a homemaker, and my Dad worked in a factory.  When, at the age of 28 I decided to go to college, I did so while working 40+ hours a week.  Mom and Dad didn’t hand me a loan, and I didn’t have stock investments to sell to live off of, nor SSI to pay my tuition.  That folks, is earning one’s way.

What we have with the Romney\Ryan ticket are two people who have no idea what a struggle is.  They cannot relate to trying to make ends meet on a lower middle-class income.  Both men came from wealth, and both have made money off of investments, not from hard work.  Regardless of what they claim, they have never known, and probably will never know what it’s like to have to tell their kids they can’t go to a birthday party because you can’t even afford to buy a card, or to tell their kids they can’t participate in other youth activities because they don’t have the money.

The candidates from the Obama\Biden ticket know more about what struggles are, although they are as far removed from those struggles as I am, they too have gone through them personally and know how important a support system can be.  Joe Biden knows more about what it’s like for a bread winner to lose his/her job, than Paul Ryan or Mitt Romney do.  Therefore, the Obama\Biden ticket can relate more to the struggles of the middle-class.

I have seen people lose everything because of healthcare bills.  I have seen people lose jobs due to outsourcing.  One ticket only knows how to mouth the word “middle-class” and the other came from the middle-class.  I will vote for the latter.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Of Labor And Leisure

Today is Labor Day.  A holiday that less and less people realize what it really is all about.  If you took the time to ask, you'd find very few who could tell you the history of Labor Day, and what it represents.  Today, more than ever, people should be aware of what Labor Day's roots are.

In the current political foray, where we've got one party trying to tell us that business are solely responsible for their success, holding their convention in a 90% union city.  And we've got another party that decided to hold it's convention in a Right to Work state, in a stadium named after one of banking industry leaders partly responsible for the financial mess we found ourselves in.  What is most baffling is that the party that loathes unions is the one that held their convention in a major union city.  What does this all mean?

What is causing this disdain for labor, especially organized labor?  Why are those workers within the public sector treated as leeches who are draining our countries fiscal resources?  Where does this emanate from?  Did millions of people wake up one day and say to themselves "gee, those damn teachers and city workers have brought this country to it's knees"?  No, they didn't.  They've been spoon fed this garbage from a corrupt media who's only loyalties are with their advertisers, and we all know it's not labor that does all the advertising.

What might be causing this disdain for public sector workers?  Well, I've got a few ideas that have come from observing the shift as it has taken place.  There was a time in the country, when people cheered for their neighbors who seemed to be "lifting themselves up by the boot straps" by working hard and negotiating for good benefits and decent wages.  There was a time when a group of people working for company A, would look at the wages and benefits of those workers at company B and would say "gee, we should negotiate for those same types of benefits and wages instead of working so hard for less".  But now what we have is jealousy.  Neighbors are jealous of neighbors because their company started to take away their benefits and freezing their wages because laws favoring labor were changed to the point that they no longer favor labor, and favor those companies who are doing all they can to eek every last penny out of their corporation to hand over to their stock holders.

I have made it a point to help out labor as much as I can today, and to patronize those businesses who treat their workers with respect and dignity.  For example, in our small town, we have 3 grocery stores.  They are Wal Mart, Pick N Save, and Festival Foods.  Festival is the one that has union workers, and so we patronize that store more often than the other two.  When it comes to hardware items, I refuse to shop at Menards, and give the local hardware store my first shot at business, and then look to other sources.

Take a look at the history of labor force, and seeing how as the number of organized workers diminished, and the laws favoring labor have dwindled, so too has the wages and benefits of all workers.  Corporate CEO's and other top level executives are reaping the benefits of a harder working workforce, all the while those who toil on a daily basis to help make that company strive,  are being handed a hand-to-mouth existence with little to no expectation of things getting any better.

If you're not better off today than you were 10 years ago, ask yourself why.  Is it because of higher costs of public employees, or does it really have to do with dwindling benefits from greedy corporations who treat their labor force as nothing more than another liability on their spreadsheets?

You can choose to sit back and whine and cry about what others have that you don't have, or you can get off your ass and demand a living wage and decent benefits like those others have managed to wrangle for themselves.  Quit buying the rhetoric that corporations can't continue to pay it's workers and that taxes are too high because of all the benefits that public sector employees receive.  Start to question why, when corporations are cutting the wages and benefits of it's labor force, the exec's at the top continue to walk away with huge raises and greater benefits than have ever been realized by executive management in the history of this nation.

It is time for a renewed and refocused labor movement, to bring back the type of livelihood those in the 50's and 60's were able to realize.  It seems one party wants us to move back to the 50's and 60's, but only in regards to the rights of minorities and women.  Remember, the only way this was all built was due to a less divided nation that realized that labor was as important to a corporation as the exec's at the top, working together to make a company better.  If we don't turn this current trend around, we will be nothing more than workers there to satisfy the whims and needs of the rich and the elites.