I believe these two are incompatible with each other as to the direction and recipient of the effect (fear and anger).
Fear works against the employees. Anger --as I can assume from how you put it-- works against the company. So I can't see how you can select between the two ... — Alkis Piskas
In February 1919 the Catalan Regional Conference (part of the CNT, an anarcho-syndicalist union) organized a strike at the Barcelona offices of a Barcelona electrical company, because they fired people for attempting to form a union.
When they didn't listen the CNT escalated and organized a strike at the electricity generation plant. This plunged Barcelona into darkness and stranded trams on the streets.
So the Spanish state send in the military to restore power.
So naturally this caused the strike to further escalate now including most of the city's gas, water, and electricity workers. Not to mention the solidarity strikes, outside of Barcelona, happening in Sabadell, Vilafranca and Badalona.
On March 8 the Spanish state responded by militarizing the reservists working in these fields, threatening them with being confined to barracks, if they don't break the strike.
Which of course ended in the only obvious consequence. The tram workers and carters who transported essential goods also joined the strike.
And almost none of the militarized workers broke the strike leading to the government locking 800 of them up.
These workers were than supporterd by the printers union, which refused to publish the proclamations of the Spanish state or articles that opposed the strike.
Not even the statement by the company saying that everyone who wouldn't return the work would be fired was printed.
Throughout this whole strike the CNT sought to win their demands by mobalising a lot of large amounts of workers and using tactics like sabotaging the transformers and power cables.
At this point the CNT's strike committee were in a position where they could negotiate with the ruling class and force them to increase wages, pay worker's wages for the period that they had been on strike, recognise the union, grant an eight hour day and reinstate fired workers.
This whole thing was so threatening that the prime minister declared the 8 hour day for the whole construction industry (and later expanded it to all industrie) just to calm them down.
This is a great example of how solidarity can be an extremely strong weapon, being able to shut down whole city's.
A following strike to release a number of prisoners who were not released sadly failed, through state repression using martial law, but what was achieved is still incredible. And it is also absurd how much the strike grew. Remember this conflict started with a company firing a couple of people for trying to build a union. — Lonely_traffic_light
What a union really does is negotiate -- striking is just a tactic in that process of negotiation, and it's basically the last resort. — Moliere
... or just, like in the good old days, send in the cops.Research shows that states with RTW laws see higher employment but lower wages for workers (but higher executive pay). Studies also point to lower unionization rates.
In 2012, the Guardian had made the link with a previous South Yorkshire police operation, this one against thousands of striking miners, which took place near Rotherham on 18 June 1984 and was notoriously dubbed the Battle of Orgreave. Scenes of police violence, including horse charges and officers beating miners with truncheons, dominated television news that day. No police were charged for their actions. Instead, the incident led to the prosecution of 55 miners who were arrested at Orgreave and charged with riot.
Not quite clear to me, esp. the last statement, but it's OK."working against the company" is a bit of a stretch, I'd say. "the company" is primarily comprised of employees, after all. But the union is for the employees, so it doesn't make sense to say "against the company" from that standpoint. (against management, now...)
Anger works against fear that management uses in its negotiations — Moliere
Not quite clear to me, esp. the last statement, but it's OK. — Alkis Piskas
But I imagine you still have police and fire departments, roads, bridges, harbours, traffic lights, schools, hospitals, old age pensions, media and communication network, electricity, public transit and sanitation, running water and sewer systems... those benefits. — Vera Mont
[police and fire departments, roads, bridges, harbours, traffic lights, schools, hospitals, old age pensions, media and communication network, electricity, public transit and sanitation, running water and sewer systems.]Which are those "benefits"? — javi2541997
Those are public services which are covered up by taxes. — javi2541997
You make it sound like a simple phsychological game. I'm afraid there's much more to it than just that. One does not risk his job, his income and the support of his family because he gets angry.If the workers are angry enough and united in their anger, they overcome their fear and move against the employer in spite of the dangers. — Vera Mont
Not quite clear to me, esp. the last statement, but it's OK. — Alkis Piskas
You make it sound like a simple phsychological game. I'm afraid there's much more to it than just that. One does not risk his job, his income and the support of his family because he gets angry.
(Except if he's a total idiot, of course.) — Alkis Piskas
One does not risk his job, his income and the support of his family because he gets angry. — Alkis Piskas
So much for that workers solidarity!These two are Marxist, and they refuse to recognise other classes of trade unions, such as UFPOL (a police syndicate, that it is fascist, supposedly) — javi2541997
Are these the largest trade unions and are they really Marxist? — ssu
especially Americans are hung-up on the mob influence on the unions in the past. — Benkei
Yep, they seem to be pretty Marxist to me... — javi2541997
I would think so too, to be marxist would be way off, but they surely are ideologically on the left. I think the bitter civil war and the Franco's regime still has made the divide in Spain a painful issue. Unlike Finland, Spain didn't have it's "Winter War" that would have united the people to fight a common enemy and thus create social cohesion between the left and the right. Hence I wouldn't underestimate here the impact of Spanish history.Any social democrat, eg. centrist and anything to the left of that has similar ideas. It's not really marxist. — Benkei
I think the bitter civil war and the Franco's regime still has made the divide in Spain a painful issue. Unlike Finland, Spain didn't have it's "Winter War" that would have united the people to fight a common enemy and thus create social cohesion between the left and the right — ssu
I think that if the trade unions are apolitical would be better as then their members understand that the union is simply for there for their salaries and working conditions — ssu
I think that if the trade unions are apolitical would be better as then their members understand that the union is simply for there for their salaries and working conditions — ssu
Should working people not have political representation to defend themselves?Oxfam report : Poverty has increased for the first time in 25 years. At the same time, these multiple crises all have winners. The very richest have become dramatically richer and corporate profits have hit record highs, driving an explosion of inequality.....
he richest 1 percent grabbed nearly two-thirds of all new wealth worth $42 trillion created since 2020, almost twice as much money as the bottom 99 percent of the world’s population,
Not to be Spain basher here, we must also remember that Spain is the example of how a fascist state then can transform itself to a democracy. Hence if Spain (and Portugal) could transform themselves, why couldn't Russia? Spain was an empire too! Spain had to endure many wars and humiliations in losing it's empire and becoming the Spain we know now.We are so divided that it is impossible for us to agree on the lyrics of the national anthem. But the division goes further in all possible areas. — javi2541997
I always loved Max Weber, his "Protestant ethic" argument is important.1. Catholic culture instead of protestant. Having wannabe Vatican lovers have always been a pain in the ass. — javi2541997
Interesting, a bit off the topic, but I would love to hear just why some think so.2. The Bourbon dynasty won over Habsburg in the succession war. Some of us believe that our culture would be totally different if our kingdom had centre-European roots. — javi2541997
Anybody who doesn't believe this should see for example the movie American Factory.They can't do that in North America. The moneyed interests have political power through campaign financing and lobbying. — Vera Mont
The first thing when talking about trade unions in the US, people usually think about Jimmy Hoffa and the mobsters. Not encouraging, actually. And people believe the mantra: "If the job sucks, then just get a new job!".That's why they're able to control governments and defeat trade unions - as well as working people and poor people; that's why they are able to take more and more and more. — Vera Mont
that has every time bounced back, actually important in the transformation after Franco's death? — ssu
Interesting, a bit off the topic, but I would love to hear just why some think so. — ssu
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