Published on Oct 10, 2012 by NTDTV
It’s an unbelievable piece of satire in a country known for iron-fisted censorship and harsh handling of petitioners. Miao Cuihua, most likely a pseudonym, is doing what countless other migrant workers have done in the past—protest against unpaid wages. But she’s skipped the queue at the petition office. Instead, Miao has created a video that not only demands she receives her quote, “blood and sweat money,” but also mocks the Chinese regime’s propaganda machine—and it’s gone viral.Above her reads “Migrant Worker Unpaid Salary News Conference” Her rambling rhetoric that follows could be lifted from any of China’s scripted foreign ministry briefings.
[Miao Cuihua, Unpaid Wages News Agency]:
“We are regretted to hear that the official of the Bureau of Civil Affairs said ‘I represent the government. When I say not to give you money, you won’t get money. What can you do? We propose to peacefully, reasonably, and legally request payment. Harmony is precious. Society stability is the priority. So never appeal illegally.’”The language she uses is typical of China’s well-educated elite, not a migrant worker who mixes concrete for a living.
Her video has been online since May, but in the past few days it’s exploded.
[Xie Liusheng, Shenzhen City Rights Activist for Migrant Workers]:
“It is very interesting. It satirizes the government’s corruption from another angle.”[Chen Yongmiao, Beijing-based political commentator]:
“In China, if those migrant workers don’t use this kind of special, ironic, and mocking news reporting way to speak up. They would hardly get any public attention.”Miao worked for the funeral administration department of Hangu district government in Tianjin City. She says a court ruled in 2009 that they owed workers almost $600,000 in unpaid wages, and has never paid up.
Her video is now making Hangu officials take notice, and they have been quick to respond. They’re not paying her though, instead, they say her video is full of distortions and she’s trying to extort more money from the state.
Chinese Migrant Worker’s Hilarious Petition Goes Viral
Posted in BUSINESS, China, collective bargaining, conflict theory, CULTURE, DEMOGRAPHY, ECONOMICS, human resources, inequality, labor, LANGUAGE, meaning, migration, propaganda, SOCIOLOGY, STRATIFICATION | Leave a Comment »
Providing rights to Peru’s child workers
Published on Aug 16, 2012 by AlJazeeraEnglish
At over three million, Peru has the highest child labour rate in the Americas.
Officially the practice is banned, but many poor families rely on the money their children earn. Of the nation’s three million child labourers, aged between five and 17, 70 per cent of them are engaging in activities that endanger their lives.
Now, thanks to the nation’s first children’s union – that monitors and defends minors who work – many of those children are getting some added protection.
Al Jazeera’s Mariana Sanchez reports from Lima.
Posted in BUSINESS, child labor, children, collective bargaining, conflict theory, ECONOMICS, EDUCATION, exploitation, FAMILY, inequality, labor, Latin America, Peru, poverty, South America, STRATIFICATION | Leave a Comment »
President Reagan Raised Gas Tax in 1983 for Road Construction
President Ronald Reagan signed into law a gasoline tax increase in 1983 for road construction and characterized the increase as job creating.
Posted in 1980s, collective bargaining, ECONOMICS, labor, POLITICAL SCIENCE, public policy, US Presidents | Leave a Comment »
The Story of Citizens United v. FEC (2011)
The Story of Citizens United v. FEC, an exploration of the inordinate power that corporations exercise in our democracy.
Posted in capitalism, collective bargaining, conflict theory, constitutional law, corporations, democracy, ECONOMICS, law, POLITICAL SCIENCE, SOCIOLOGY, United States, US Supreme Court | Leave a Comment »
Violent crime soars in Brazil
Feb 4, 2012
Violent crime in one of Brazil’s biggest cities is soaring as state police strike over pay. Al Jazeera’s Gabriel Elizondo reports.
Posted in authority, collective bargaining, CRIMINOLOGY, homicide, labor, law enforcement, POLITICAL SCIENCE, SOCIOLOGY, violence, work | Leave a Comment »
Amazing video of Wisconsin protests
February 2011
Over 13,000 angry union supporters gathered at the capital building in Madison, Wisconsin for a 17-hour public hearing on the issue. The protestors are calling for opposition to the bill, and an end to Walker’s governorship as a whole.
Posted in collective action, collective bargaining, democracy, ECONOMICS, EDUCATION, labor, POLITICAL SCIENCE, SOCIAL CHANGE, social movements, United States | Leave a Comment »
Manufacturing: The Ways of the Future or a Relic from the Past?
The one-time portrait of the American Dream, a job working in a factory or plant, has been replaced by the notion that most goods can be produced cheaper in countries like China and India. This is leaving Union leaders concerned and Americans without jobs.
Posted in BUSINESS, capitalism, collective bargaining, labor, manufacturing, work | Leave a Comment »
Mahalla, Egypt at forefront of workers’ struggle
May the first is International Labour Day, a day that traditionally sees workers protest for more rights. In Egypt, a rally is planned for Tahrir Square, where the revolution took root.
But long before Mubarak was deposed in February, many people were fighting against deep-rooted injustices, poor working conditions and low wages. Some say that the revolution started in the industrial town of Malhalla.
Al Jazeera’s Mohamed Vall went to visit.
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Studs Terkel remembers Haymarket – 8-hour workday
Studs Terkel honors the activists that won Americans the right to the 8-hour work day at Haymarket Square in 1996.
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Strawbs – Part of the Union (1973)
Introduced by Jimmy Savile
LYRICS:
Now I’m a union man
Amazed at what I am
I say what I think
That the company stinks
Yes I’m a union man.
Posted in !MUSIC VIDEOS, 1970s, capitalism, collective bargaining, conflict theory, ECONOMICS, labor, music, social inequality, theory | Leave a Comment »
RSA Animate – Crises of Capitalism
In this RSA Animate, renowned academic David Harvey asks if it is time to look beyond capitalism towards a new social order that would allow us to live within a system that really could be responsible, just, and humane?
Posted in capitalism, collective bargaining, corporations, democracy, ECONOMICS, labor, POLITICAL SCIENCE | Leave a Comment »
Wisconsin Assembly Passes Anti-union Law; Protesters Removed Before Vote
Police carried protesters from a hallway leading to the Wis. Assembly as Democrats pounded on the locked door of the chamber, demanding to be let in before a historic vote on the bill taking away public workers’ collective bargaining rights. (March 10, 2011)
There were jeers from the stands as Republicans in Wisconsin’s state legislature successfully pushed through a law Thursday that strips public workers of most collective bargaining rights. (March 10, 2011)
Posted in authority, collective action, collective bargaining, conflict theory, ECONOMICS, inequality, labor, POLITICAL SCIENCE, public policy, SOCIAL CHANGE, social class, social movements, work | 1 Comment »
Thom Hartmann: It all boils down to “corporate personhood”
A “corporate person” – an entity that is not born – does not die – is neither male nor female – doesn’t need safe food or clean water – and cannot be put in prison – yet enjoys many of the same constitutional rights that you and I do. They’re now a super person.
Posted in capitalism, civil rights, collective bargaining, conflict theory, constitutional law, corporations, ECONOMICS, exploitation, labor, law, POLITICAL SCIENCE, SOCIAL CHANGE, social class, STRATIFICATION, United States, US Supreme Court | Leave a Comment »
Tenure reform: Teachers evaluated by student progress
Jim Axelrod reports on new tenure reform for teachers that will be driven by how well students do in any particular teachers classroom.
Posted in collective bargaining, EDUCATION, schools, teaching, United States | Leave a Comment »
Wisconsin Gov. Gets Tough on Unions
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lnbCekCM7TQ
Fox Business Network’s Stuart Varney on Gov. Scott Walker, (R-Wis.), taking on the unions in an effort to reduce the state’s spending.
Posted in collective bargaining, HEALTH, health care, labor, United States, work | Leave a Comment »