Every year for the past two dozen or so, I've felt less and less like
celebrating Labor Day and more and more like forgetting the whole damned
thing. It used to be that we actually set aside that day to
acknowledge and pay tribute to our vast labor force. We had parades and
speeches and presentations all across the country, with union leaders
sticking verbal pins in the Big Guys, and the Big Guys pretending not to
notice as they got ready to hold their noses and gush over the workers
who made their products and sold their products and fixed their products
(and--it should be noted--bought their products).
Labor and management have always had a love-hate relationship but there was
a window--a
brief window in time--when nearly everybody was making money and
spending money and for most Americans life was good. Cheap goods were
coming in from the slave-labor countries but we still made enough to be
self-sustaining and proud.
A chicken in every pot.
"Made in America".
"Look for the Union Label".
Then came government-approved off-shoring and outsourcing, along with
cheap labor and non-regulation, and suddenly the Big Guys saw gold in
them thar hills and weren't even our pretend friends anymore. We stopped
making things and became the poor step-satellite of industrialized
nations like China, Taiwan, Japan, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia,
Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Korea, Macau (I'm reading
labels here in my house).
And now here we are, looking at another Labor Day and wondering how the
hell we got ourselves into this fix, considering the rich history of the
labor movement and what those people put themselves through in order to
make life fair for all of us. I'm glad they're not here to see this.
On the other hand, we could use their fierce commitment to us right
about now:
(. . .continued at Ramona's Voices
here.)