autisticflapper, to random
@autisticflapper@disabled.social avatar

Okay, but where are the autistic people who do like trains? Because I think trains are pretty awesome! Choo-choo! choo locomotive Pacific blog

Black-and-white GIF of steam locomotive, zooming in on front wheels.

autisticflapper,
@autisticflapper@disabled.social avatar
parismarx, to random
@parismarx@mastodon.online avatar

The fallout is growing from Tesla’s continued refusal to sign a collective agreement with its Swedish mechanics.

On top of the solidarity strikes, one of Denmark’s largest pension funds is selling its $58 million stake in Tesla for refusing to respect the Nordic labor model.

https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/danish-pension-fund-sell-its-tesla-shares-over-union-dispute-2023-12-06/

MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History December 6, 1889: The trial of the Chicago Haymarket anarchists began amidst national and international outrage and protest. None of the men on trial had even been at Haymarket Square when the bomb was set off. They were on trial because of their anarchist political affiliations and their labor organizing for the 8-hour work-day. 4 were ultimately executed, including Alber Parsons, husband of future IWW founding member Lucy Parsons. One, Louis Ling, cheated the hangman by committing suicide in his cell. The Haymarket Affairs is considered the origin of International Workers Day, May 1st, celebrated in virtually every country in the world, except for the U.S., where the atrocity occurred. Historically, it was also considered the culmination of the Great Upheaval, which a series of strike waves and labor unrest that began in Martinsburg, West Virginia, 1877, and spread throughout the U.S., including the Saint Louis Commune, when communists took over and controlled the city for several days. Over 100 workers were killed across the U.S. in the weeks of strikes and protests. Communists and anarchists also organized strikes in Chicago, where police killed 20 men and boys. Albert and Lucy Parsons participated and were influenced by these events. I write about this historical period in my Great Upheaval Trilogy. The first book in this series, Anywhere But Schuylkill, came out in September, 2023, from Historium Press. Check it out here: https://www.thehistoricalfictioncompany.com/it/michael-dunn and https://michaeldunnauthor.com/

@bookstadon

Malleus,
@Malleus@pagan.plus avatar

@MikeDunnAuthor @bookstadon Lingg may have been killed in his cell. I think he would have wanted to address his executioners.

MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History November 5, 1916: The Everett Massacre occurred in Everett, Washington. 300 IWW members arrived by boat in Everett to help support the shingle workers’ strike that had been going on for the past 5 months. Prior attempts to support the strikers were met with vigilante beatings with axe handles. As the boat pulled in, Sheriff McRae called out, “Who’s your leader?” The Wobblies answered, “We’re all leaders!” The sheriff pulled his gun and said, “You can’t land.” A Wobbly yelled back, “Like hell we can’t.” Gunfire erupted, most of it from the 200 vigilantes on the dock. When the smoke cleared, two of the sheriff’s deputies were dead, shot in the back by their own men, along with 5-12 Wobblies on the boat. Dozens more were wounded. The authorities arrested 74 Wobblies. After a trial, all charges were dropped against the IWW members. The event was mentioned in John Dos Passos’s “USA Trilogy.”

@bookstadon

nantucketebooks,
@nantucketebooks@fosstodon.org avatar

@MikeDunnAuthor @bookstadon I wrote a historical novel about a similar Wobbly event that happened about ten years after this, in Erie, Colorado.

ned, to random
@ned@mstdn.ca avatar

Capitalism kills art.

samhainnight,
@samhainnight@mstdn.social avatar

@ned The guy who animated Genie in Aladdin retired recently, because he couldn’t get any animation jobs.

tagesschau, to random German
@tagesschau@ard.social avatar

Bayern und Hessen: Wie die Merz-CDU auf die Wahlen schaut

Die Union kann dem Wahlsonntag eigentlich ziemlich gelassen entgegensehen, deuten sich doch gleich zwei Wahlsiege an. Doch die Erfolge in Bayern und Hessen könnten für Parteichef Merz auch Probleme bringen. Von Vera Wolfskämpf.

➡️ https://www.tagesschau.de/inland/innenpolitik/cdu-merz-landtagswahlen-100.html?at_medium=mastodon&at_campaign=tagesschau.de

SomeAnoTooter,

@tagesschau viele aktive Wähler sind immer noch davon überzeugt, dass die, welche uns in die bisher schwierigste Lage gebracht haben, diejenigen sind die uns daraus helfen? Oder noch besser jemanden zu wählen, der das gleiche oder noch extremere macht nur dabei empörter schreit. Es gibt anscheinend viele die sich gern ins eigene Fleisch schneiden, nur im Glauben andern damit zu schaden oder sich eigene Heilung erhoffen. Hoffentlich merken viele davon, dass unprofessionelle Schnitte nicht heilen.

Ooops,
@Ooops@kbin.social avatar

@SomeAnoTooter

Hoffentlich merken viele davon, dass unprofessionelle Schnitte nicht heilen.

Merken tun sie es schon. Aber es ist ihnen egal, solange man ihnen erzählt, dass dafür Andere schwerer verletzt werden.

MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History September 30, 1912: The Lawrence, Massachusetts “Bread and Roses” textile strike was in full swing. On this date, 12,000 textile workers walked out of mills to protest the arrests of two leaders of the strike. Police clubbed strikers and arrested many, while the bosses fired 1,500. IWW co-founder Big Bill Haywood threatened another general strike to get the workers reinstated. Strike leaders Arturo Giovannitti and Joe Ettor were eventually acquitted 58 days later. During the strike, IWW organizers Bill Haywood and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn came up with the plan of sending hundreds of the strikers' hungry children to live with sympathetic families in New York, New Jersey, and Vermont, a move that drew widespread sympathy for the strikers. Nearly 300 workers were arrested during the strike; three were killed. After the strike was over, IWW co-founder and socialist candidate for president, Eugene Debs, said "The Victory at Lawrence was the most decisive and far-reaching ever won by organized labor."

Several novels have been written against the backdrop of this famous strike: The Cry of the Street (1913), by Mabel Farnum; Fighting for Bread and Roses (2005), by Lynn A. Coleman; Bread and Roses, Too (2006), by Katherine Paterson

@bookstadon

rlmartstudio,
@rlmartstudio@mas.to avatar
GottaLaff, to random
@GottaLaff@mastodon.social avatar

to join the picket line in

His decision to stand alongside the striking workers represents perhaps the most significant display of solidarity ever by a sitting president. 💪🏼
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/09/22/biden-to-join-the-picket-line-in-uaw-strike-00117749

janeadams, to random
@janeadams@vis.social avatar
SomeGadgetGuy, to random
@SomeGadgetGuy@techhub.social avatar

Uh-oh! What if Musk gets another sternly worded finger wagging from regulators? He HATES those!
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2023/09/musks-x-revokes-paid-blue-check-from-united-auto-workers-after-strike-called/
Musk’s X revokes paid blue check from United Auto Workers after strike called

#x

OutOfExile_IDR_Voice, to disabilityjustice
@OutOfExile_IDR_Voice@kolektiva.social avatar

Federally Sanctioned Exploitation Of Workers with Disabilities – Happy Labor Day:

On this Labor Day, Out Of Exile – Invisible Disability Rights gives thanks and honor to workers and the unions that protect them. Without unions, the experience of many workers may be similar to that of the disabled. This piece will focus on the exploitation and abuse of disabled workers by employers , and how it's perfectly legal under federal and state laws in the US. Section 14(c) of the US Department of Labor's "Fair Standards And Labor Act" (FSLA), has been virtually unchanged since it was enacted in 1938. Under the almost century old regulation, employers can apply for a certificate which allows them to pay workers with disabilities, an unspecified subminimum wage.

The average sub wage and the number of disabled people seemingly exploited by this legislation, seems to vary among the sources linked below. By any account, even one person with disabilities being preyed upon in this way, is far too many. The wages are inhumane. A 2021 Forbes article claims over 320,000 people with disabilities, the majority with invisible disabilities, earn an average of $3.34 an hour. A previous Forbes article put the figures in excess of 420,000 people being paid as little as $2.15, while others cite drastically lower wages. Some organizations like Goodwill, form their own "sheltered workshops", determining their own limits on sub wages for their disabled workers. There seems to be no bottom limit on how little individuals with invisible disabilities can be paid.

"The non-profits use “time studies” to calculate the salaries of Section 14 (c) workers. With a stopwatch, staff members time how long it takes a disabled worker to complete a task. That time is compared with how long it would take a person without a disability to do the same task. The non-profit then applies a formula to calculate a rate of pay, which may be equal to or less than minimum wage".

A decade ago, NBC reported that Goodwill industries, presumably by authority of their DOL "Section 14(c) certificate", paid disabled workers twenty-two cents an hour. The report claims that some were paid as little as three or four cents an hour. Think about paying your bills 10 years ago on a wage like this. Some nonprofits, even place Section 14(c) workers in outside, for-profit endeavors in restaurants, stores and even, "IRS centers". That sounds more like calculated exploitation, rather than accommodation and equality. Though the "NBC-Goodwill" article and figures are old, the problem is older and still continues today.

The theory of sheltered workshops is to prepare individuals with disabilities to transition to outside employment. In Missouri, disabled workers packaging T-shirts or sorting and counting dog treats to be sold for profit on Amazon, rarely "graduate" these workshops into regular paying jobs. Pay for sorting the $15 Amazon dog treats? $1.50 an hour while Jeff Bezos builds rocket ships. The title of the recent ProPublica article linked below, says it all. "Missouri Allows Some Disabled Workers to Earn Less Than One Dollar and Hour. The State Says It's Fine If That Never Changes". I say, show me change in the Show-Me state and across the country.

In a follow-up to that story by ProPublica, some participants of sheltered workshops said they approved, saying the alternative is to sit at home and do nothing. Are these opinion formed as a result of gas lighting or years of oppression accepted as "just the way it is"? It's time for new attitudes and alternatives for the disabled community when it comes to wages and employment. In some states, now there are.

About 16 states have changed or passed laws regarding disability subminimum wage exploitation but, nothing to speak of federally. A three year old press release from the National Council on Disability that "Applauded the US commission on civil rights call to repeal section 14(c)", seems to be the sum of that effort. Other states have actions in progress including: Connecticut, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New York. If you live in any of these states, now's the time for activism and to let your representatives know how you feel. Follow the ""legislation watch" APSE link to track progress. The Alternative? Similar actions introduced in Kentucky and West Virginia died in committee allowing this despicable injustice against disabled people in those states to continue. Change is up to everyone. What will you do to help stop the exploitation and abuse?

OutOfExile_IDR © 2023

"Subminimum Wage: ...Why It Needs to End" – World Institute on Disability (WID): https://wid.org/subminimum-wage-what-it-is-why-its-unjust-and-why-it-needs-to-end/

"Missouri Allows Some Disabled Workers to Earn Less Than a Dollar an Hour…" – ProPublica: https://www.propublica.org/article/missouri-sheltered-workshops-low-graduation-rate

More disabled workers paid just pennies in our – NBC: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/investigations/more-disabled-workers-paid-just-pennies-hour-nvna19916979

"Paying Disabled People Less Than Minimum Wage: The Next Frontier for Disability Activism" – Forbes: https://www.forbes.com/sites/drnancydoyle/2021/07/30/paying-disabled-people-less-than-the-minimum-wage-the-next-frontier-for-disability-activism/?sh=1579a7707fe3

https://www.forbes.com/sites/sarahkim/2019/10/24/sub-minimum-wages-disability/?sh=4b845da4c22b

Some in Missouri approve of sheltered workshops: https://www.propublica.org/article/what-disability-community-told-us-about-sheltered-workshops

Where Does Your States Stand – APSE: https://apse.org/state-legislation/

NCD applauds USCCR:
https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2020/09/17/2095347/0/en/National-Council-on-Disability-applauds-U-S-Commission-on-Civil-Rights-call-to-repeal-14-c-subminimum-wages.html


@disability @disabilityjustice

AutisticMumTo3,
@AutisticMumTo3@leftist.network avatar

@Peace_out_art @OutOfExile_IDR_Voice @disability @disabilityjustice
Absolutely. If there was a community membership category for disabled people who are not in paid work I'd join it.

Peace_out_art,
@Peace_out_art@sfba.social avatar

@AutisticMumTo3 @OutOfExile_IDR_Voice @disability @disabilityjustice
I honestly don’t know how that would work.. but there’s way too much discrimination, and often times it’s legalized.

thorncoyle, to random
@thorncoyle@wandering.shop avatar

There’s a statement authors can sign pledging to not cross the Powell’s Books picket line:

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSf5f3LQxPVDmx5nZDmG3noNZAYgKn-52HH-hEuO-_cQjrwONg/


@bookstodon

thorncoyle,
@thorncoyle@wandering.shop avatar
LizEllisPhD, to academicchatter
@LizEllisPhD@mastodon.social avatar

Standing up for jobs at UHI. The process is a shambles and has been mismanaged from the start. I have strong feelings that my union activism has made me, and others, a target. Regardless, I'm not going quietly.

Anyone with practical tips, legal advice etc, hit me up cos I have no fucking idea what I'm doing!

@academicsunite @WIASN @academicchatter @ucu

Me trying to look tough (inside I was broken cos this was 20 mins after my interview telling me I was being made redundant) holding up high my UCU plackard. Same as before. plus same colleague with her plackard.

jesusmargar,
@jesusmargar@mastodon.social avatar

@LizEllisPhD @academicsunite @WIASN @academicchatter @ucu that's horrible but unsurprising given UCEA advice on MAB retaliation. I'm so sorry.

LizEllisPhD,
@LizEllisPhD@mastodon.social avatar

@jesusmargar @academicsunite @WIASN @academicchatter @ucu it's super-charged incompetence mostly. One of the most senior execs was asked to leave a voluntary role at a small community organisation because they were so incompetent.

MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History August 11, 1894: Federal troops drove over 1,000 jobless workers from the nation's capital. Led by Charles "Hobo" Kelley, an unemployed activist from California, and Jacob Coxey, they camped in Washington D.C. starting in July. Kelley's Hobo Army included a young journalist named Jack London and a young miner-cowboy named Big Bill Haywood. Frank Baum was an observer of the protest and some say it influenced his Wizard of Oz, with the Scarecrow representing the American farmer, the tin man representing industrial workers and the Cowardly Lion representing William Jennings Bryan, all marching on Washington (Oz) to demand redress from the president (the Wizard). 650 miners, led by a "General" Hogan, captured a Northern Pacific train at Butte, Montana, en route to the protest. The Feds caught up with them at Billings, forcing a surrender, but a few eventually made it to Washington.

@bookstadon

ericgjovaag,
@ericgjovaag@wandering.shop avatar

@MikeDunnAuthor @bookstadon I saw it in an actual, researched book, long before Wikipedia ever existed. So I am more likely to believe that.

MikeDunnAuthor,
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

@ericgjovaag @bookstadon

I was being facetious

ned, to random
@ned@mstdn.ca avatar

Louder for those in the back.

Record profits are unpaid wages.

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