What to Do When Your Job Kicks Your Teeth In
By Ryn Gargulinski
Get a secure job. Work yourself to the bone. Be loyal, trustworthy and responsible to your employer – and you’ll be rewarded in the end.
And if you believe all that, I got a bridge to sell you in Brooklyn.
Phil Cohen War Stories: ‘My Strangest House Call’
By Phil Cohen
There are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in your philosophy – William Shakespeare
During the spring of 1995, ACTWU (now Workers United) scheduled a blitz of nonmembers at the unionized Cone Mills textile plant in Greensboro, North Carolina. Organizers, accompanied by an activist from one of Cone’s three union shops, would be issued house-call packets containing addresses and information regarding workers that would be visited in specified neighborhoods.
The Women Making History During Women’s History Month…
By Joe Maniscalco
Here it is, another Women’s History Month — the officially sanctioned time of year when, after enough decades have passed, we’re all encouraged to enthusiastically applaud the achievements of marginalized working class heroes from a safe and non-threatening distance.
The Source of All Our Pain - By the Numbers
By Steve Wishnia
Two economic statistics, a side topic where I recently encountered them, tell a stark story about the history of this country during the last century.
The share of U.S. income going to the top 10% in 2022 was the highest it’s been since 1940, at 48.3%, according to a report released Feb. 13 by the Economic Policy Institute on right-to-work-for-less laws.
9/11 Keeps On Taking…Remembering WNYC Engineer Eddie Granado
By Bob Hennelly
February 11, would have been Eduardo “Eddie” Granado’s 57th birthday. But he didn’t make it. Instead, Granado died in his sleep a week before Christmas from an aggressive form of rectal cancer he contracted after his occupational exposure to the highly toxic air that permeated in and around lower Manhattan for the months after the 9/11 attack.
AI Wants Our Jobs…All of Them
By Joe Maniscalco
Right now, there are people in industries across the United States working very hard to raise their families, but who are openly worrying they have…maybe…one year left before AI takes their jobs.
Phil Cohen War Stories: Confronting Kmart on the PGA Tour!
By Phil Cohen
During 1993, the Kmart Distribution Center in Greensboro, North Carolina became the company’s first hard goods warehouse to be organized. The newly-opened facility offered lower wages and benefits than its Northern counterparts and unlike them, the majority of workers were nonwhite. Focusing on economics and racism had given ACTWU (now Workers United) a decisive organizing victory, led by Assistant Southern Director Ernest Bennett.
Chuck Dives Into the Medicare Advantage Muck — in the Name of ‘Policy Stability’
By Bob Hennelly
A bi-partisan group of 40 Republicans and 21 Democrats led by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (N-NY) has just signed onto a glowing letter endorsing Medicare Advantage — the increasingly controversial profit-driven health insurance program that now enrolls some 32 million seniors and individuals with disabilities nationwide.
Paid $13/Hr. to Sell $10 Beers, Super Bowl Stadium Workers Launch Organizing Drive
By Steve Wishnia
Just days before the start of Super Bowl LVIII in Las Vegas, Nevada’s Culinary Union announced a drive to organize the about 1,500 nonunion workers at Allegiant Stadium, site of this year’s gridiron showdown between the 49ers and Chiefs.
What Significance Does ‘Shawn Vs. Sean’ Have for Working Class People??
By Joe Maniscalco
What do you make of two of the most powerful union leaders in the country when one of them essentially tells Donald Trump to go pound sand — and the other one basically goes to Mar-a-Lago and kisses his big fat fascist ass?
Could This Also Be the Reason Why You Hate Your Job?
By Ryn Gargulinski
Since language is supposedly what sets people apart from animals, you’d think we’d be ideal specimens for exceptional communication. But we’re largely not.
In fact, lack of communication is a common enough bother in the workplace to rank as one of the top reasons people hate their job.
Demagogues Vs. Plutocrats: N.H. Primary Results Show GOP Class Split
By Steve Wishnia
In 2008, I covered the New Hampshire primary for a small New York biweekly, traveling across the state from Manchester, a gentrifying industrial city with a 1940s-neon downtown, to the Ivy League college town of Hanover, talking to voters and going to candidates’ rallies. Driving into Claremont, a town of 13,000 on the Connecticut River, was like going back to the South Bronx of 1982. The road winding uphill from the bridge was lined with the dark, broken-brick ruins of mills and factories.
Phil Cohen War Stories: Confronting Cone Mills!
By Phil Cohen
During the 1980’s, Cone Mills was one of America’s largest textile corporations with plants sprawled across the Carolinas, manufacturing denim for Levis and other jean companies. In 1984, a hostile takeover by Western Pacific was thwarted through a leveraged buyout by 47 Cone executives who acquired all shares of stock and took the company private.
You Gotta Move Under: Music Makes a Journalist’s Job Easier…
By Joe Maniscalco
Between trying to chase down cagey MTA spokespeople to quiz them on potentially deadly working conditions in the subways, and various local elected officials on why they seem all too happy to sell out New York City municipal retirees and steal their healthcare — I lean back, pick up my cheap Squier Mustang, and appreciate a little band from Seattle playing through the laptop speakers.
Mudhoney. Great stuff.
Same As it Ever Was: Corp. Media Pushes ‘24 Horse Race and Shuns the Working Poor…
By Bob Hennelly
Courtesy of InsiderNJ
This past Monday night, as I was watching MSNBC’s hyped up coverage of the Iowa Republican caucus and Steve Kornaki offering a county-by-county breakdown of how former President Donald Trump had carried the day with around 56,000 votes, not even ten percent of the state’s 752,000 registered Republicans, I flashed back to another GOP primary night here in New Jersey almost twenty years ago.
9/11 Community Mourns Father of NYPD Detective James Zadroga Struck and Killed in Tragic Accident…
By Bob Hennelly
The 9/11 responder and survivor community are mourning the death of retired North Arlington, New Jersey Police Chief Joe Zadroga, a powerful voice in the campaign to pass and then to extend the James Zadroga 9/11 WTC Health and Compensation Act, named for his son, an NYPD Detective who died in 2006 as a consequence of his exposure to the air in lower Manhattan in the months after the attack.
Non-Violent Collective Action Gets the Goods — King Said it, ‘The Year of the Strike’ Proves it, Again
By Bob Hennelly
This Martin Luther King Day comes just weeks after a year that’s been dubbed “the year of the strike” because in 2023 there were well over 300 such work stoppages involving 450,000 union workers willing to take the risk of walking out on their employer, a 900 percent increase from just a few years earlier.
It’s 2024: Time to Lift the Limits on the Labor Movement…
By Robert Ovetz
Although I do not make new year’s resolutions, I do set goals. My goals this year are focused on the workers movement. If we are going to build on the momentum of the labor movement over the past two years and bring about real change, we need to radically alter our perspective.
Getting High Has Gone Legit — Funny How That All Worked Out…
By Joe Maniscalco
Imagine watching an affluent white lady so giddy about the shipment of legal cannabis she just ordered online that she immediately empties every bottle of red wine in the house down the Kitchen sink, and the next second is on the phone inviting the rest of the gals over because — woohoo — they’re gonna be getting high without the hangover!
Phil Cohen War Stories: That Time I Went Toe-to-Toe with The Ku Klux Klan…
By Phil Cohen
Cornelius, North Carolina is located between Statesville and Charlotte. The small towns in this region have long been a Klan stronghold. During 1987, a Foamex plant in Cornelius signed a union contract with ACTWU (currently named Workers United.) The driving force among employees throughout the organizing campaign had been three Klansmen who worked as mechanics.