• @[email protected]
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    647 months ago

    This should tell you what absolute garbage most American administrations were for the working class.

    FDR was the last president who was really afraid of Marxism at home, while Nixon was probably the last president even slightly afraid of the people.

    • @Ensign_Crab
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      -17 months ago

      FDR was the last president who was really afraid of Marxism at home

      So in order to get actual progressive change, we need the looming threat of Marxism?

      • @[email protected]
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        97 months ago

        Yes.

        You aren’t going to get meaningful progressive change by just asking for it, and certainly not by hoping for it. The powerful need to be afraid that a worse alternative awaits them before they’ll acquiesce to sharing what they have.

        "Nobody in the world, nobody in history, has ever gotten their freedom by appealing to the moral sense of the people who were oppressing them.” ― Assata Shakur

  • @TheDemonBuer
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    217 months ago

    I give the Democrats a really hard time (mainly because I have much higher expectations for them, and so I hold them to a much higher standard than the Republicans), but I can’t deny that Democrats, generally, listen to experts and follow their guidance much more than Republicans. I would even say the Democratic party is somewhat of a technocratic party, for better or worse. It is in this light that the apparent “flip flop” regarding unions should be seen. Both parties became anti-union during the neoliberal era because economists were largely anti-union. Their models or formulas were telling them that unions were bad, so that became the orthodox position of mainstream economics, and Democrats trusted in their expertise. Now, many mainstream economists have decided that unions are good, actually, and so Democrats have once again followed the experts. I’m not sure what changed in the economists’ models or formulas that made them rethink their position on unions, but then economics has always been a bit of a mess.

  • @xc2215x
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    127 months ago

    That says a lot and not in a good way.

    • @Ensign_Crab
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      -67 months ago

      It’s why democrats are so insistent on pretending that Biden is the second coming of FDR.

  • @anticolonialist
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    -77 months ago

    Hollow platitudes, conduct a general strike and see how hard they come down on labor. In the same way they proclaim we have free speech until we start movements against capitalism like Occupy Wall Street, or protest genocide in Gaza. Then the state, in full force, does everything it can to silence that speech.

    • @gibmiser
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      407 months ago

      Nah, I thought so too at first. Look it up, his administration helped with the negotiations

      • @[email protected]
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        7 months ago

        He still banned the strike. They didn’t get to use their own power to demand the terms they wanted, they had to accept what the outside negotiators were willing and able to get for them.

        I’m not disagreeing with the article’s premise, Biden is the most pro-labor president in a long time, but this gaslighting just makes Democrats look deceptive.

        Edit: See @[email protected]’s response for a great way to respond to this. You don’t need to pretend his shit doesn’t stink, acknowledge it and then talk about the good stuff.

      • LeadersAtWork
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        -27 months ago

        Gonna need a link. A quick search only talks about him banning that strike for “economic reasons”. While I’m willing to dig, I’d bet plenty whose minds may change are not.

    • @rockSlayer
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      287 months ago

      It’s a major black mark on his labor record, but I can tell you with first hand experience as a union organizer that he’s done significant things that should have been done decades ago.

    • HopeOfTheGunblade
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      267 months ago

      He quashed the strike in the moment, and got them most of their demands as a follow-up, as I hear it. But only the first part ever made the news, for some reason.

      • @[email protected]
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        317 months ago

        I work for the railroad and this is incorrect. The big fight this contract was for actual sick leave. As of right now if I was to get sick and call in I’d potentially lose an entire weeks worth of pay for taking that one day off (our pay system is complicated) and have a mark on my attendance. Most class ones only allow three hits before you are let go. Some take this a step further and make weekends and holidays count as two strikes. Since we work on call 24 hours 6 days a week with no guarantee of actually being home for your day off doing things as simple as scheduling a doctors appointment becomes a nightmare.

        What happened in December was congress removed the sick leave portion and made it a separate bill. H.J. Res. 100 passed to block us from striking while the bill for sick leave H.Con.Res.119 failed at the senate.

      • @blazera
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        147 months ago

        There was one statement put out, from the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, one of the unions that voted against the strike, and it just got mega amplified, seemingly everyone heard about it.

        No, rail workers didnt get most of their demands, they didnt get as many sick days as they would have with a strike, or other benefits, and not every rail union even got sick days at all. And no one should forget just how poisonous this was for future bargaining, the unions one point of leverage being completely undermined

      • @Eldritch
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        37 months ago

        Publicly owned and traded media can’t be trusted with facts or truth. They’re in it for the money. Which these days means clicks and views. Which means salacious and outraging. Not factual or concise.

    • @[email protected]
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      107 months ago

      The administration has actually done quite a bit in the background surprisingly. You do need to dig for it though

      • @Ensign_Crab
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        47 months ago

        We’re totally doing the opposite of what we do in public, only where you can’t see it.

        • @[email protected]
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          17 months ago

          All good things are being done in secret for some reason, but they’re happy to be very publicly bad.

          • @FlowVoid
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            -17 months ago

            It’s all in public.

            You only heard about the bad stuff if you listen to Fox News or to other people who got it from Fox News.

    • @Omgarm
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      -87 months ago

      And you wouldn’t have a different situation with any other recent president apparently.