Saturday, March 26, 2011

Connect the dots

So, let me see if I've got this straight. 100 years ago today, in lower Manhattan, the Triangle Shirtwaist fire killed 146 people (a third of the people working in the building) who couldn't escape a ten-story factory because the owners, in an effort to prevent theft, had locked the exit doors.

Because there were no unions to protect their rights or ensure workplace safety, the employees who died were often underage, worked twelve to sixteen hour days, six days a week, and earned less than $2 a day.

Out of that two dollars, they had to pay the owners for the needles, thread and electricity they needed to do their jobs. And they could be fired for any reason, including missing a day of work or talking to the person working next to them. Or joining a union.

In fact, unions were under assault. Literally: with clubs, knives, guns and dogs - until a quarter of a century later, when the Wagner Act was passed, supporting unions and collective bargaining.

Oh, and 15 years before the fire, the National Guard was sent into the Homestead Steel Works to break up a strike by steelworkers. Just so you know.

But, the Triangle Shirtwaist fire. That was 100 years ago today. Happy Birthday.

One hundred days ago today, a fire in a Bangladesh sweatshop killed dozens of people and injured over a hundred more. To prevent theft, the doors had been padlocked shut by the owners,

That was, as I said, 100 days ago today.

The workers in Bangladesh are among the lowest-paid in the world, and frequently die because of workplace safety, which isn't enforced by anyone. Like, say, a union.

This was one of two manufacturing plants run by the Hameem Group, who makes clothing for the Gap, Wrangler, JC Penney, Target, Abercrombie & Fitch, and Osh Kosh B'Gosh.

Oshkosh B'Gosh. Founded in 1895 - three years after the Homestead Steel Strike. In Oshkosh, Wisconsin.

Last month in Wisconsin (85 miles southwest of Oshkosh), Governor Scott Walker was mobilizing the Wisconsin National Guard, in case unions protested his attempts to destroy collective bargaining rights. In the course of the next few weeks, that same Governor Walker, outraged because striking workers were occupying his Imperial Palace the Wisconsin State Capital Building, had doors locked and windows bolted shut to keep strikers from getting food.

Initial reports that the windows were welded shut proved to be merely rumors. There are, however, pictures of the new bolts preventing the windows from opening.

So, locking people inside a building with a sporadic record of safety inspections. Because he's trying to bust unions.

Quick test: what have we learned in the last century?
A. Jack.
B. Shit.

9 comments:

  1. Thank you for that history and current events lesson, Nameless.

    The Human Race: The more we change; the more we remain the same.

    Sigh.

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  2. The more I look at the Chimps, the more I wonder why it took us so long to see the obvious.

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  3. Good post, NC. Jack shit indeed !!!

    I am beyond shocked at what is happening since the Baghead invasion. Here are some stories that caught my attention:

    Wisconsin Republicans Publish Anti-Union Law - In Defiance Of Court Order

    _University of Wisconsin Professor William Cronon has become the target of an open-records request by the state Republican Party

    New Hampshire GOP Moves Anti-Union Bill That Goes Farther Than Wisconsin

    Missouri senator wants to repeal child labor laws (note comments section).

    My word for the above no longer qualifies as hyperbole, derision, or a goddamn Godwin Fallacy. My word for it FASCISM. Half the states that bagheads have won are turning back civilization. And I am ANGRY AS HELL.

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  4. Great post. As Octopus says we move closer and closer to fascism daily. Let's hope more people get pissed off and get go vote come 2012.

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  5. Indeed - I think it has to get worse before the idiots will notice.

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  6. Jack Shit indeed! I knew about the Triangle Shirtwaist fire, but I assumed that kind of thuggery had been done away with long, long ago. Not only legally, but in our thinking. If anything, that mentality has blossomed (if one can classify cretin mentally as blossoming) in the 21st Century.

    My mouth seems to be in perpetual "drop" position from the audacity of these bastards. In our faces is what it is. Pissed off does not even begin to describe what I am feeling.

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  7. "Any comment that fails to rise above ranting, taunting, profanity, and name-calling will be deleted." Hmm. Perhaps we need more of that in this case, not less...

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  8. Sad but true. We never learn.

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  9. I have to agree. Calm, rational and polite analysis by leagues of concerned gentlemen isn't going to have much influence on the hordes of mutant brain eating zombies we're up against.

    Do not go gentle into that good fight
    Rage, rage against the lying of the right.

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