Since June 13, hundreds of thousands of Ecuadorians have been mobilizing across the country as a part of an indefinite national strike against the right-wing government of President Guillermo Lasso and his anti-people economic policies. The strike was called for by various Indigenous, peasant and social organizations, with a set of ten demands that address the most urgent needs of the majority of Ecuador’s population.
...Their demands include: reduction and freeze of fuel prices; employment opportunities and labor guarantees; an end to privatization of public companies; price control policies for essential products; greater budget for public education and health sectors; an end to drug trafficking, kidnappings and violence; protection for people against banking and finance sectors; fair prices for their farm products; ban on mining and oil exploitation activities in Indigenous territories; and respect for the 21 collective rights of Indigenous peoples and nationalities.
And you know of a non-EU country doing any better? Let me guess, Australia? — Olivier5
it does not follow that a good strategy is to lie about it. — Olivier5
the EU is the only place on earth that takes workers rights seriously. — Olivier5
You guys keep building straw men, over and over again. Ask yourself why you need to lie about what this article is saying, why you need to deform reality all the time. You're too shallow to deal with the truth. — Olivier5
Who cares about the GDP if I do not know what is the real value of being born in Spain, Japan, USA UK, etc...? — javi2541997
Your whole contribution on this thread can be paraphrased to read: "EU and NATI caca". — Olivier5
I wonder if the constant train of insults and snide remarks from the anti NATO camp is indicative of something, some fragility, a fear. Otherwise, why the constant put down? It's symptomatic of something. Perhaps just an attempt to protect the banal nihilism or whataboutism of our times against the return of the seemingly clearcut. — Olivier5
I do not even understand when you say fascism with "Japanese characteristics"... was Francisco Franco a fascist with "Spanish characteristics?"... — javi2541997
Isn't this a right path to choose to? — javi2541997
Whenever someone presents a political philosophy that they purport to be neither left-wing or right-wing it's always just rephrased right-wing sentiments; as was the case with Mishima, who was definitely right-wing. — Maw
Hundreds of British Airways workers at Heathrow Airport have voted to go on strike over pay. Unite and GMB union members who are mostly check-in staff backed industrial action on Thursday. A total of 700 workers are set to strike during the summer holidays, when demand from travellers is expected to be near pre-pandemic levels. The unions said the action was due to a 10% pay cut imposed during the peak of the pandemic not being reinstated. Some 500 Unite members recorded a 94.7% vote in favour of industrial action, while 95% of GMB members backed the walkouts. The strike dates will be confirmed in the coming days.
Tens of thousands of NSW public and Catholic school teachers will walk off the job next week to demand reform. The Independent Education Union (IEU) and the NSW Teachers Federation agreed unanimously at a meeting on Tuesday to hold their first joint action in more than 20 years on June 30.
More than 85,000 teachers and support staff from 2300 public schools in NSW and 560 Catholic schools across NSW and the ACT will be directed to take part in the unprecedented 24-hour strike. Teachers will rally in Sydney’s Macquarie St as well as in regional locations across NSW and the ACT. The unions say the strike is the result of the “manifest failure” of the NSW government and Catholic employers to address the crises in the education system.
Broadening your brush only reveals the lack of precision you had prior to.
You know better than this. — creativesoul
In order to know that you'd have to be privy to the framers' thought and belief. — creativesoul
IS NOT THE RESULT OF TOO MUCH GOVERNMENTAL REGULATION — creativesoul
Biden was the only electoral means to that end. — 180 Proof
Consider: The failure and loss of "White's Only Democracy" has been, for over fifty years, driving the increasingly violent movement to "repeal and replace" it with a White Nationalist Autocracy, which is now the overt agenda of the Republican Party. The Counter-"Revolution" Is Being Televised, comrades, and hyper-partisan paralysis-by-design of the Federal and State governments is bringing Murica's paramilitarized populist gumbo to a boil. The organizing principle and driver is post-Civil Rights "white grievance" (no doubt catalyzed – not, however, caused – by the ravages of rapacious neoliberal policies that most of these MAGAs (and too many fucking Dems) still support). — 180 Proof
Look at the Supreme Court, to take the obvious example. If Clinton had been elected, we wouldn’t be seeing the end of Roe — which will have very real effects for years to come. As will the upcoming ruling on guns and on restricting the EPA’s ability to regulate emissions. That’s not nothing. That’s not an endorsement of Clinton, of course, but it’s true nevertheless— I think we can all agree?
Given this alone, if things like abortion rights and the environment matter to you, it would be preferable if we didn’t go backwards. — Xtrix
Ironically, Trump supporters would fight you tooth and nail on all of that. — RogueAI
Democrats impeached Trump twice. — Jackson
It's not that the Democrats in power can't make sense of the reason why Trump came into power, it's that they don't like the implications of the answer. Better to think that they're not the problem and that they don't need to change then to go through the trouble of stirring up the status quo. — Mr Bee
Why is the GOP clinging so hard with so much nearly religious devotion to such an inept politician as Trump is beyond me. It doesn't make any sense. — ssu
It's utterly astonishing that as soon as less than 100% support for the Democrats is raised, the alternatives are assumed to be some kind of bloody revolution. I mean, I'm as up for a bloody revolution as the next man, but is that really the limit of these people's imagination? — Isaac
I don't even want to know what else you would add to this blueprint of wholescale destruction. — Tzeentch
Are you, like me, a socialist? — universeness
So is there anything short of total revolution that will address the problem? I mean, what would a solution consist of? Do you think if the current order completely broke down and anarchy prevailed, it would make it easier for those suffering masses to pay their rent and get along? — Wayfarer
So I take it that you think the solution to the political problem posed by Trump is outside of politics. — Wayfarer