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Brian K. Noe

Lies My Postmaster General Told Me

Brian K. Noe · May 13, 2014 ·

The Postal Service has been reporting revenue increases for five straight quarters. So why is Postmaster General Donahoe minimizing that winning streak? Over the last few years, faced with falling revenue, postal management has closed post offices, slashed rural office hours, sold historic buildings, cut jobs, and consolidated processing plants. It continues to seek closings and service cuts, such as eliminating Saturday delivery; but some of these moves have been delayed or curtailed by pushback from the public, from employees, and from legislators.

Read More: Why is the Postmaster General Understating Postal Revenue Gains? | Talking Union.

Filed Under: Curated Links Tagged With: Class Struggles, Post Office, Public Policy, Union

Working Class History in the New Century

Brian K. Noe · May 12, 2014 ·

Sharon Smith, author of Subterranean Fire: A History of Working-Class Radicalism in the United States, has written a new introduction for a forthcoming Spanish edition of the book, which expands on the history through the last decade. It appears today on Socialist Worker in English, with the permission of the publisher.

Read it: Taking the fire forward | SocialistWorker.org.

Filed Under: Curated Links Tagged With: Class Struggles, History, Labor History, Sharon Smith, Socialism, Union

May Day 2014

Brian K. Noe · May 1, 2014 ·

 

we want to feel the sunshine
we want to smell the flowers
we’re sure that god has willed it
and we mean to have eight hours

we’re summoning our forces from
shipyard, shop and mill
eight hours for work, eight hours for rest
eight hours for what we will

What is May Day?

Filed Under: Curated Links, Pictures Tagged With: May Day, Union

New Study: Charter Schools Hurt Poor Kids

Brian K. Noe · April 25, 2014 ·

Adopting a “school reform” agenda that encourages privatization actually makes the problems worse, according to a new study.

“In pushing these efforts, politicians, rightwing think tanks, chambers of commerce, and, most of all, the American Legislative Exchange Council are actually creating the very problem of failure in the school system they claim their privatization plans will help address.”

Read about it: Scathing Report Finds School Privatization Hurts Poor Kids – In These Times.

Filed Under: Curated Links Tagged With: Capitalism, Charter Schools, Education, Privatization, Public Policy

Remember Ludlow!

Brian K. Noe · April 24, 2014 ·

From Trish Kahle:

Remembering only the massacre at Ludlow obscures the vital fact that a group of coal miners–most of them immigrants–managed to organize a strike across racial and ethnic lines, and brought southern Colorado to the brink of revolution. It also obscures the tremendous courage with which miners and their families faced down the power of capitalism and the state–and conceals the role socialists and other radicals played in organizing the strike and rebellion. Finally, it sidelines the incredible–and immediate–solidarity expressed by other workers with the strikers in the Colorado coalfields.

Read More: The story of the Ludlow miners | SocialistWorker.org.

Filed Under: Curated Links Tagged With: Class Struggles, Labor History, Ludlow, Union

A Reminder from Chomsky: It’s the Institutions that Matter

Brian K. Noe · April 23, 2014 ·

Tim Donovan has an interesting piece over on Salon encouraging the Left to keep our focus where it matters.

He includes this quote from Noam Chomsky.

When you look at a corporation, just like when you look at a slave owner, you want to distinguish between the institution and the individual. So slavery, for example, or other forms of tyranny, are inherently monstrous. The individuals participating in them may be the nicest guys you can imagine. Benevolent, friendly, nice to the children, even nice to their slaves. Caring about other people. I mean, as individuals they may be anything, but in their institutional role, they’re monsters, because the institution is monstrous.

Read the article: Noam Chomsky was right: Why the Koch brothers are obscuring the real enemy – Salon.com.

Filed Under: Curated Links Tagged With: Chomsky, Koch Brothers, Salon

100 Years After Ludlow

Brian K. Noe · April 18, 2014 ·

“Flags of truce were shot out of hands; women running in the sunlight to rescue their children were whipped back with the hail of a machine gun; little girls who plunged into a shed for shelter were followed there with 48-caliber bullets; a gentle Greek, never armed, was captured running to the rescue of those women and children dying in a hole, was captured without resistance, and after five minutes lay dead under a broken rifle, his skull crushed and bullet holes in his back, and the women and children still dying in the hole.”

What sort of ruthless band of savages or totalitarian police state could possibly have perpetrated such a crime?

Why, it was the Colorado National Guard, of course.

Read about it: The Ludlow Massacre: Never to be forgotten! » peoplesworld.

Filed Under: General

First Singalong is on May Day at FEED

Brian K. Noe · April 16, 2014 ·

The first Key City Singalong will be held on Thursday, May 1st, 2014 from 7PM to 9PM at FEED Arts Center, 259 S. Schuyler Avenue, Kankakee.

Bring your voice, your old songbooks and whatever instruments you’d like. I am told there will be refreshments.

Via The Key City Singalong | feed.

Filed Under: General

First Videos from Labor Notes 2014

Brian K. Noe · April 10, 2014 ·

Labor Notes 2014 in Chicago was an incredible weekend of inspiration and activism. This was my first Labor Notes, and I hope to make in an annual ritual. Highlights, for me, were the Friday afternoon Chicago Labor history tour (conducted by the ILHS), the Saturday afternoon STOP Staples protest, and (of course) the Friday and Saturday night Folk Music singalongs, spearheaded by members of the Seattle Labor Chorus and Anne Feeney.

How could I forget to mention the incredible and boisterous impromptu singalong in the Crowne Plaza lobby into the wee hours of Sunday morning with young Wobblies and Occupy kids from Portland, Chicago and the Twin Cities?

Labor Notes has the first videos from the conference posted on their site now. I’m looking forward to more.

Need an inspiration fix? Here are a few video highlights for those who couldn’t make it to the record-breaking 2014 Labor Notes Conference—or those already ready to relive it.

See them here: First Videos from the 2014 Labor Notes Conference | Labor Notes.

Filed Under: Curated Links Tagged With: Chicago, Folk Music, Labor Notes, Union

Our Lives Literally Aren’t Worth 57 Cents to the Corporations

Brian K. Noe · April 8, 2014 ·

Elizabeth Schulte reports on the toll from corporate negligence at GM.

FIFTY-SEVEN cents. That’s what it would have cost General Motors (GM) to change a faulty part to blame for crashes that have killed at least 13 people.

The calculation comes from a 2005 internal company document obtained by congressional investigators, who provided the evidence for an April 1 congressional hearing on GM.

Read More: Their lives weren’t worth 57 cents to GM | SocialistWorker.org.

Filed Under: Curated Links Tagged With: Corporatism, Socialist Worker

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