There Is Power in a Union Quotes
There Is Power in a Union: The Epic Story of Labor in America
by
Philip Dray842 ratings, 4.19 average rating, 100 reviews
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There Is Power in a Union Quotes
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“in the case of the Coxey industrials, they appeared to want something they had not earned. Their demands implied that poverty and unemployment did not stem from laziness or even bad luck, but rather from larger, systemic problems in the economy, in society—factors that were beyond any one person’s control.59 Such a claim raised vexing questions. Self-reliance, resourcefulness, individual initiative—these traits were intrinsic to the ideal of what it meant to be American. Americans always made do. If government took greater responsibility for people’s well-being, would that not alter the very essence of the United States, seduce and possibly corrupt its character? Was that not the aim of those foreign theories spread in workers’ enclaves in the big cities—anarchism, Communism, Socialism?”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“The students targeted not only college retailers and administrators but also picketed major college sporting events.”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“a strike in the era of globalization must be vigorously supported by allies near and far and exceptionally well managed.”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“working at reduced pay, with marginal perks and nonexistent health coverage.”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“Work stoppages in America declined from 3,111 in 1977 to only 385 by 1995, even as real wages lost 15 percent of their value—data that, as if on a diagnostic chart, revealed an ailing U.S. labor movement.96”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“It had linked its fate to the activism of a political party that was far from activist, that largely took labor’s support for granted; there seemed little real pressure on the Democrats to deliver for labor when it knew, everyone knew, that labor had nowhere else to go.”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“President Bill Clinton led the country into international trade agreements”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“Senator Edward Kennedy accused the Republicans of trying to “dismantle our federal government and all it stands for,”74 and laid into Reagan for pursuing “the discredited and disastrous ideas of the 1920s,”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“Looming over all such changes was globalization—the dispersal of the world’s trade and finances through advances in shipping, air freight, telecommunications, and computerized banking and money exchanges, which allowed U.S. businesses access to lower-cost workers and production overseas—a trend that accelerated when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1989, bringing down the iron curtain and opening new markets as well as cheap labor to global producers. This”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“the growth of trade unions into mighty business enterprises.”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“the difficulty of gaining access to job sites for inspection, and the perennial lack of regulatory law backed by sufficient funding and manpower.”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“He did not believe the AFL-CIO was up to these challenges. “As the parent body of the American labor movement, [it] suffers from a sense of complacency and adherence to the status quo, and is not fulfilling the basic aims and purposes which prompted the merger of the AFL and CIO” in the first place, Reuther remarked in December 1967.”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“With great prescience he warned of the need to develop common bargaining goals for autoworkers in all auto-producing nations as a means of counteracting global wage competition, and recommended the country turn its attention to repairing bridges, roads, and other infrastructures.”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“An injunction the city had obtained against a sanitation strike in 1966 was still in effect, and could be wielded against the local.”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“To what extent would antiwar opinions endanger its alliance with the Democratic Party? Had the movement’s hesitation on the subject already rendered it toothless as a credible force for social change?”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“condemning a war that, due to college draft deferments, was being fought largely by soldiers drawn from the working class, with blacks a proportionately high percentage.”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“Taft-Hartley had excluded foremen and supervisors from labor-law coverage, which made workplace unity more difficult because fewer new jobs were blue-collar in character and more positions in the emerging service fields were designated as supervisory, meaning”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“major American agricultural concerns.”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“The AIFLD’s fingerprints were later found on a number of U.S. covert incursions in Latin America—including the toppling in 1954 of the labor-supported Guatemalan government of Jacobo Arbenz, whose land reforms were opposed by the United Fruit Company, the CIA, and the AFL-CIO.”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“In one inadvertently revealing action, the Rockefeller forces formally announced that CFI was now prepared to concede certain improvements to the Colorado miners, only to learn that many of these “privileges” were already the law in Colorado, that they had long been stifled by the company, and that their denial had been among the strikers’ major grievances.”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“The statement that a man or company of men who put their money in a business have a right to operate it as they see fit, without regard to the public interest, belongs to days long since passed away,” the congressional report asserted. “Every individual who invests his capital … is entitled to the protection of the law … but he owes something to society.”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
“For labor, it meant a new openness to the idea that workers and capital might acknowledge the other’s necessity, that trade unions had a role to play in standardizing decent wages so as to alleviate the need for relief or charity, and that some form of mutualism, the working out of problems, could replace the cyclical tradition of hurtful strikes and class antagonism. In this evolving process government would be asked whether, if it was to be involved in labor disputes, it might find more constructive methods than urging court injunctions and dispatching regiments.”
― There is Power in a Union
― There is Power in a Union
