Archive for the ‘Peace’ Category

Strategic planning points for Biodiversecity

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

In business as in politics, your tactics derive from your strategy. Strategy & tactics derive from your program.  Program derives from your macro assessment. Macro assessment derives from your Critique or Analysis of the current situation, which arises from your basic worldview or philosophy. So it is with our need for strategic planning as we contemplate actually purchasing a chunk of land for sustainable urban agriculture here in Central Exposure, WI.

Here are a few strategic planning bullet points we expect to base our plans upon over the next couple few years.

1.  Macroeconomic crisis. There is no basis for optimism about the macroeconomic environment. I said this in January, 2007 at a public forum and look, it still seems to be true today. Our macro economic outlook is for a deflationary double-dip recession (3-D recession).

This means that supplying local organically grown food from a small-scale urban ag. operation is going to be very challenging.  The high end “foodie” market will continue to shrink, we believe. The low-income market is extremely cost conscious and this gives people marketing to this segment of the market very little pricing power. Everything must be done on a low-cost basis. Whether delivering organic food can be made affordable on a mass scale is an open question at this point.  Few people seem interested in this question.

2.  Peak oil problem. The global peak of oil production is probably already underway, or at best, within a half-decade. You can always follow the development of this on The Energy Bulletin yourself. Beyond the year 2015, just five years off, global oil production will be falling, and outside the OPEC countries, falling fairly fast.

Small local food producers should expect, as we do, the beginning of overt shortage of motor fuels around that time. We can’t predict what government will do in response, but given recent experience, we can expect that response to be a) too little, badly organized and b) too late, as shown for example in BP oil spill response. Small local food producers should expect themselves to be shoved aside by large corporate farms in their regions when it comes to the rationing of fuel supplies. Expect as we do a chaotic business environment.

3.  Man-made global climate change. Most of our season’s production this summer has been ruined by too much rainfall in too short a time, falling on ground not well suited to excess rainfall in a veggie crop production scheme.  We expect the man-made global warming to continue ramping up, leading to weather chaos which makes planning for crop production exceptionally tough.

We expect, as small-scale local food producers, to have to plan and spend excessively for both irrigation needs (for hot, dry summers brought by global warming’s regional effects) as well as drainage (for hot, wet summers brought by global warming’s regional effects).  The land we have looked at for purchase was viewed with an eye on both these problems. Investment will be needed in both areas we’re sure.

4.  Continued credit crisis.  We expect the credit crunch or crisis to continue.  Despite the massive bi-partisan bank bailouts endorsed by both G.W. Bush and Pres. Obama, banks are not lending out their cash, but instead are profiting from borrowing cheaply from the Fed and investing it in their proprietary trading schemes, bound to once again implode in the near future, exacerbating this crisis once again. We expect small-scale farmers and community needs including small-business job creation to be completely starved for credit going forward.

This means for us, we can never expect conventional bank loans nor small business loans via govt. as a source for capital. Everything will have to be paid out of current earnings.  As small-scale producers we expect not to be alone in facing this challenge.

5. Continued unbelievable levels of unemployment. Not only are the Baby Boomers facing their suddenly becoming irrelevant in the labor market, but the 20-Something generation faces systemic, structural, persistent unemployment unlike anything previous generations of Americans have faced.

This means again that the high-end foodie market for boutique-style food offerings from small local food producers will remain constrained and not a high-growth area. This may mean, for small food producers, a need to try offering food at affordable prices. Given the chronic cash shortage many people are facing, various forms of barter — barter for food, barter for services needed by the food producers, and so on — may become increasingly important.

6.  Class struggle intensifies.  Since 1974 we’ve been studying and teaching the perpetual class struggle in America. In times of economic crisis, such as we expect chronically over the next decade, this struggle does not ease nor diminish, but intensifies.

For small-scale food producers, this means you should expect concerted effort by large agribusiness to continue driving you completely off the scene, out of business, and for government to generally take the side of large agribusiness.  Small-scale producers who must depend on off-farm wage labor to support their farms should expect intensified workplace struggle, the driving down of your wages, the loss of pension benefits, loss of health-care benefits, and so on.

7. Crash and chaos scenarios increase in probability.  Given America’s recent experience with large-scale crises, and the ongoing #fail mode we have seen with situations such as Hurricane Katrina, the Gulf Oil spill, and other situations, we expect incidents such as these to increase. Since Central Wisconsin is not highly urbanized, large-scale incidents are not expected. However, chronic, ongoing crises such as hunger and chronic underemployment will remain in our forecast.

We will remain open to participating in various crisis-mitigation and mutual self-help type groups as time goes on. This participation will depend upon our assessment that participation is grass-roots democratic and not driven by or dominated by local ruling elite interests.

Principles of a working-class local food movement

Saturday, August 21st, 2010

1st principle of a working-class local food movement: Mutual aid, self-help. Working poor people are full citizens, not “clients”. Hunger is not a social work problem but a structural flaw of capitalism. Workers facing food shortages must NOT be managed by strange religious cults such as the (homophobic, ultra-conservative) Salvation Army. Working poor people must manage their own food relief organizations democratically.

Principle #2: We drop the dogma/mantra that “cheap food isn’t good; good food isn’t cheap.” That’s like saying to your prospective market, “if you’re cheap (and by necessity we need to be cheap), you’re not good.” The first rule of Community Organizing Club is, Don’t Insult Your Community.

#3 principle: The struggle for nutritive, quality non-toxic non-lethal food is a class struggle. The organic movement stops being a petit-bourgeois (”little ruling class”) movement. Black activists have long pointed out that the poorest communities are like labs to test how much toxic… exposure poor people can take before higher mortality ensues. So it is with food.

4th principle: Solidarity, 4a. As long as I’ve been involved with small-scale farmers, most have been workers off the farm too. The Man doesn’t want small farmers succeeding; so, you have to work off-farm. Your status as a worker doesn’t end when you drive in that long driveway. Are there any purely “rural” or purely “urban” worker issues? I doubt it.
Principle 4: Solidarity, 4b. So, wearing your off-farm Teacher Hat, consider bringing a Teacher Union sign in support of MalWart workers trying to organize. Or wearing your Steelworkers’ hat from the paper mill that supports your farm, go support those teachers trying to hold their jobs. The Man is the only one who benefits from the false urban-rural/farmer-vs.-worker divides.

Principle #5: Co-operation, not competition. If the only way to thrive is cannibalizing someone else’s customer base, that takes fierce competitiveness, undermining the “solidarity” principle mentioned above.  On the other hand, if you look the Rochdale co-op principles, these have stood the test of time. We think a working-class local food movement needs to be governed by these, not by the Univ. of Wisc.-Extension’s petit-bourgeois tiny ag-entrepreneur eating-his-neighbor’s lunch model. “Get big or get out,” still the model of ag schools and extension everywhere, must be rejected. Get appropriately-sized and stay in ag, by co-operating.

Principle #6: Job creation starts with ag. Your town likely has a “Community Development Agency” which is busy pursuing outmoded models of “creating jobs.” You need to remind them of the National Farmers’ Org. principle, all wealth starts from the earth: from farming, mining, logging, or fishing. Get your CDA to start a “value-added” producers’ co-op to start generating jobs & wealth.

Principle #7: Public institutions impacting agriculture belong to YOU, not the corporations. Institutions like public land-grant universities and University Extensions (or “co-op extension”) are still largely publicly-funded despite the stealth privatization going on as corporate money corrupts these systems. Form a watchdog group, call Bullshit on the corporate bullshit, get nasty if you see Monsanto and the genuine fascist corp. Bayer (remember Bayer/IG Farben of the Third Reich) start pushing their agendas in these public institutions.

Principle #8: Corporate foundation money belongs to YOU, the workers, NOT to the bourgeoisie (ruling class) who carefully dole it out to groups who will walk their corporate walk. I know this is a tough one for people to get their mind around, but corporations extract ALL of their wealth by exploiting it from the working class, as well as by selling products/services to workers wearing their “consumer” hats, usually at a great profit. This is the source of all foundation wealth. Don’t beg for it: demand it. It’s to feed people, not the bourgeois ego and craving for a legacy.

Principle #9: All agriculture is “urban agriculture.” Can you think of any aspect of agriculture that is NOT controlled by, governed by, steered by, very wealthy men in corporations and corporate/government, operating from urban centers? I can’t. Once you, the small “local” farmer, can identify your interests with a starving farmworker in a former rainforest village now turned to monoculture biomass energy production (e.g. Brasil), you’re well on your way to forging alliances that will return the power where it belongs: to workers.

#10 Grassroots democracy. Participate, don’t be a spectator. Anyone involved in small-scale organics, local food, urban agriculture, is up against a class of powerful people running powerful corporations who wish for the small-scale farmer to disappear, lose their assets, and become one of the working poor who keep these corporations going. It’s going to be a fight to regain democratic control over institutions long ago corrupted. It’s not going to be easy, it will be nasty at times, but really, what choice is there but to fight for grassroots democracy and local control over your world?

Bobby G

August 2010

Criminal Justice: Can Portage County opt-out of Incarceration Nation?

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

Here’s what Charles Shaw, author of Exile Nation, says about our incarceration rate:

“The United States has 5% of the world’s population and 25% of the world’s prisoners. Criminologists have found that when too many people are incarcerated the crime rate actually increases. Imagine if we spent some of the $60 billion a year prisons cost on education, job training and healthcare. Paul Butler, a law professor, former federal prosecutor and author of “Let’s Get Free: A Hip-Hop Theory of Justice” (click) suggests ways to undo the damage caused by overincarceration.”

Could our County opt-out of the War on Drugs just a little bit? Instead emphasize Harm Reduction and Alternatives to Incarceration? Is the Get-Tough-On-Crime (especially victimless crime like drug use) really sustainable? Is the Incarceration Nation sustainable, along with the rest of our macho national profile? Is a macho militarized empire really sustainable? (Especially when funded by borrowed $$ and borrowed fuel?)

“Major responsibilities required of the county include the provision of most social service programs (child welfare, juvenile justice, senior citizen services, public health, mental health, jail, developmental disabilities, etc.) and responsibilities for local and state road maintenance. Counties also provide the majority of cultural and recreational amenities (e.g. parks, libraries, and snowmobile trails), law enforcement, health services, zoning and road maintenance for citizens in rural, unincorporated areas within their borders.” from this County Govt. in Wisc. fact-sheet from UW Extension.

In other words, the County can choose to some degree how to prioritize whether to emphasize law enforcement, prosecution, and jailing, or a social services approach to the problems I mention.

Ask many a voter “do you favor getting tough on crime, and locking up a lot of bad guys?” and you’d probably get a “yes.” Then ask, “do you favor an unsustainable, never-ending, ever-growing incarceration system paid for by ever-increasing taxes on you, the taxpayer, to accomplish this?” and you’ll probably get a Sarah Palin Tea-Party resounding “HELL NO!”

See, we Americans are capable of holding two completely mutually-exclusive contradictory ideas in our minds at the same time, and attempting to act on them simultaneously. That’s where real leaders distinguish themselves from people who are just going along to get along in the status quo. Good leaders cut through the cognitive dissonance and suggest a clear path out of a quagmire such as our current “criminal justice” system.

And that’s another reason why I’m endorsing Patty Dreier for our County Executive here in Portage Co., Wisc. While she doesn’t yet have available a fleshed-out position on county government’s role in the larger prison-industrial complex, I believe she would look at these issues with a far more open mind than Jim Gifford, the long-time county board member who has NOT been raising the issues of excessive incarceration, de-criminalization, alternatives to incarceration, and other notions of reform. His pitch has been: “I’ve been in County Govt. a long time, I have the experience.”

Perhaps, but it’s the kind of experience that keeps us trudging down the same old, dead-end road. As soon as the voters had defeated a $72 million referendum on a new Justice Center, the County Exec. and Board began trying to find a way to build the thing anyway, deciding to pursue a $29 million Courthouse expansion first (with the $43 million jail expansion to follow soon thereafter, no doubt). Perhaps this decision to thwart the voters played some role in the defeat of the sitting County Exec?

Perhaps if the Board and Exec. will take some time and allow the economy to recover (as everyone expects), then pursue a big new building project several years from now under a new economic boom (which everyone expects), this will sit better with voters. What will have been lost in taking more time, getting more real input from citizens, and studying alternatives to the prosecutorial, jail-prone methods now in use? Could we lessen the pressure on the criminal justice system, along with the need to proceed toward that expensive new set of buildings?

Major props and thanks to Charles Shaw for keeping this issue in the front of my mind, too.

Bobby G
Stevens Point WI

US invades South Florida

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

We happened to catch the nightly news, the one that features Katie Couric.

Watching the desert-khaki clad, machine-gun toting “Police” on maneuvers for “Super Bowl security” in Miami, I commented to my wife, “hey, it looks sort of like Baghdad or Kandahar, but without all the bombs going off.”

There were the heavy, armored troop-transport vehicles. The circling helicopters. The usual manhandling suspected “domestic terrorists” and throwing them on the ground, intimidating people in vehicles, all the stuff you’d expect at a Baghdad checkpoint. Without, of course, the up-close explosions and depleted uranium rounds thudding in the distance.

Not that I’d ever want to attend a Super Bowl game anyway. Or any other corporate spectacle these days, for that matter… But what if I wanted to attend a, for example,protest march? Would that be my lot, slammed to the ground, perhaps deafened ppermanently with high-decibel hearing-damage equipment such as police forces are ready to deploy in Vancouver against the Olympics protests?

This week, of course, all the heads of US security forces were in front of Congress whipping up the fear and anxiety level about an “imminent attack” from the usual people who terrorize us, including of course Mr. Bin Laden, now long dead.

It’s just too bad that all hints of a US movement for peace and in opposition to militarising every aspect of our “civilian” lives have now evaporated. It’s easier to accomplish that goal under a “liberal” administration instead of a hated “neo-con” administration, ever notice that?

Alas, we’ll have to rely on the workers, peasants, and slum dwellers in distant parts of our globalized world to do the heavy lifting in opposition to US militarism and imperialism. Much as the Haitians used to attempt to do, before being completely crushed in 1994 and 2004.

Bobby G
Central Wisc.
http://twitter.com/BioDiverseCity

How America went from a nation of producers to consumers: Part V: The Reagan (Counter)Revolution begins race to the bottom

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

Gil Scott-Heron again:

“What has happened is that, in the last 20 years, America has changed from a producer to a consumer; and all consumers know that when the producer names the tune, the consumer has got to dance. The way it is.

“We used to be a producer–very inflexible at that–and now we are consumers and finding it difficult to understand: Natural resources and minerals will change your world.” –Gil Scott-Heron, “B Movie,” ca. 1981.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=56ipWM3DWe4&feature=related

I’m using Gil Scott-Heron’s words to anchor this piece because I always saw him as the voice of the voiceless, the underclass, the black workers and those who couldn’t get a job. And when the 1980s decade began, black workers and poor people in general were the canaries in the coal mine for what was going to befall the rest of the working class and what we called “the middle class” in those days.

Ronald Reagan became a larger-than-life figure for a lot of voters in this country who saw him as someone who could deal with the threat of the Soviet Union, with the Iranian revolution, take on the labor unions, stop inflation, cut taxes, curtail welfare spending, and usher in new prosperity, even if only for a quarter of the US population.

The election of Reagan caused some splits in the US labor movement, where in many cases, labor unions of the more conservative bent such as Teamsters and some of the construction trades actually endorsed Reagan. In order to grasp why some labor unions in the USA have tended toward the conservative side of the spectrum, you might go back a ways in history and consult writers of the real left, starting with Frederick Engels’ 1892 book The Condition of the Working Class in England. Engels, and later V.I. Lenin in Russia, spoke of an “aristocracy of labor” who more and more tended to side with the capitalists, even while occasionally getting into conflict with these capitalists.

It all had to do with the use of the super-profit that could be derived from the laboring people in the colonies (later, neocolonies), who worked at the very bottom of the wage-labor pyramid. With such extraordinary profit in hand, the theory goes, capital can sort of “bribe” the highest-paid sectors of its home labor force in the home country (England or the USA) to take its side in political matters. The most important of these political matters was the continued oppression and exploitation of foreign nations’ work forces. With the highest standard of living in the world somewhat assured, the higher tiers in the US labor movement (as well as professional workers and those not in unions) could usually be counted on to support wars of foreign intervention.

Domestically, the form that this kind of “super-profit” extraction and division of the labor force into an “aristocracy” and a highly-exploited general workforce took was in the division of white workers against African-American and Latino workers. Within the US labor market, the deep south and the southwest provided a source of such super-profit for capital for decades. The deep south also became a kind of foundry for the civil rights movement, a general uprising of southern black working people against the intolerable treatment that persisted since the first slaves arrived.

All this is to suggest some explanation for why Mr. Reagan, no friend of the working class, could nonetheless have gotten a lot of votes, and support, from the working class. White workers understood him to be out to slash spending on social welfare, seen as disproportionately supporting poor black working families. They thought his administration would lower their taxes and bring new prosperity. They thought this administration would stand tough against the communist threat arising from Latin America, the Caribbean, and Afghanistan.

So, a sector of labor was willing to throw their votes to Reagan, then watch for the next eight years as the producing, industrial sector of America’s economy was hollowed out and shipped overseas. They watched as de-regulation was introduced in a number of sectors of the economy, especially the financial sector, and where a large bubble would build up in the stock market, along with the savings and loan industry and other key sectors that would later come crashing down, starting in October, 1987.

Left economists often point out how big capital uses recessions to “rationalize production,” that is, to down-size manufacturing, introduce new automation techniques, shed less-profitable factories or entire divisions, and especially since the Carter years, these downturns have served as opportunities to move work abroad. The recession that began shortly after Reagan took office was a deep one, and left US organized labor in a greatly weakened condition.

The Reagan Recession introduced America to a new wave of homelessness among poor workers that had not been seen since the Great Depression era. In 1984-1985, I had been living and organizing in Philadelphia at a time when there were some 40,000-50,000 homeless working poor people living out on the streets, in full public view. This was the time when Bruce Springsteen was organizing benefit gigs for homeless groups, and when the issue of homelessness became a major issue in many large cities in the USA.

This recession began to raise the question both for capital and for labor: how far can you cut the standard of living of your domestic working class before their ability to be a consumer class is badly damaged and begins to feed into the growing recession? It is one thing to gain super-profits by opening hundreds of new factories in the maquiladora region of Mexico (just across the US border). It is another thing if this impoverishes so many US workers in the domestic market that they can no longer afford to drive retail sales onward and upward.

This tension between falling standard of living in the USA and the need for constant growth in the US gross domestic product was only temporarily resolved in the boom period of the Clinton-Gore years. It would come back to haunt the USA with the start of another recession just at the beginning of the GW Bush administration, and would take on an entrenched, scary scope with the recession that began in December, 2007. It turns out, you can’t just turn a nation of producers into one of consumers, if the consumers have not got the income to drive a healthy consumer economy. This is the pickle in which America finds itself today.

What of Reagan’s role as the liberator of those behind the “Iron Curtain” of the Soviet Bloc?  “Mr. Gorbachev: tear down this wall” and look, a few years later, the wall came down.  I don’t think Reagan liberated those people through his tough rhetoric and huge military spending.  But Reagan certainly landed on the scene at the opportune time, when the Soviet Union had been struggling under 40-year history of maintaining an unsustainable bloc of countries hostile to the Russian homeland, trying to match the USA in war spending, and finally, making the historically fatal error of trying to invade and occupy Afghanistan.  I think you can argue that as hollowed-out as the USA was becoming, the Soviet Union was even more hollowed-out in terms of its ability to sustain itself as a going concern.

The legacy of the collapse of the Soviet Union is still playing out today in many ways, in the Persian Gulf, in Afghanistan, Iran, as well as Latin America and Africa.  With the disappearance of socialism as an economic system for most of the globe, the way was clear for global capitalism to take over, and take over it did, rapidly.  In a way, this rapid takeover prepared the way for future economic crises to take on the sort of apocalyptic scale that our current global economic meltdown is taking.

Next: Part VI: Clinton/Gore, Bush, and Obama: Laying the Groundwork for Collapse.

Readings

Max Elbaum and Robert Seltzer, Theory of the Labour Aristocracy, Resistance Books, 1984. E-book available here.

Bill Fletcher, Jr. and Fernando Gapasin, Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path toward Social Justice, University of California Press, Berkeley, 2008.

Steven F. Hayward, The Age of Reagan: The Conservative Counterrevolution 1980-1989, Crown Forum, 2009.

V.I. Lenin, Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism, International Books, 1969.

Michael Round, Grounded: Reagan and the PATCO Crash, Routledge, 1999.

James B. Stewart, Den of Thieves, Touchstone Books, 1992.

COP-enhagen

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

Copenhagen’s climate change summit. #COP15 is the hashtag on Twitter.

Activists are calling it COP-enhagen, because of its eerie resemblance to the Battle in Seattle, Quebec City, Genoa, the G20, Republican Convention, etc. That is, COPs are in control, not the civil society electeds.

My conclusion is that Subcomandante Marcos was right on this point: “the police have replaced politics.” Ruling classes in any country, in any city, merely turn over the nasty job of bashing in youth activists’ heads to the police, wash their hands of any blood, and go on about their useless, fruitless meetings.

COP-enhangen has proven no different.

What it illlustrates to me is the need for municipalities, local govts., to wrench control over their police forces from the higher-up levels of govts. (e.g. federal, or WTO, or NAFTA, or whomever really rules). Control over police should be in place BEFORE these cities ever invite large gatherings where there is a possibility of mass protest.

This could pave a whole new avenue of struggle–local autonomy, autonomous zones, anti-authoritarian local govts. just trying to serve the people, etc.

Otherwise, these municipalities like Cope and Hang ‘Em just end up looking like fascist police depts. in the good old USA, who they’re so eager to not look like.

Just my comments from monitoring the situation chronically.

Peace

Bobby G
http://www.twittercom/biodiversecity

How America went from a nation of producers, to consumers. Part IV: Revolutions against neo-colonialism, run-away production, and the US worker becomes disposable.

Sunday, November 29th, 2009

(To read this in order, you have to scroll down the blog to get to the earlier parts. It reads from the bottom up, the way democracy also should read).

In the early 1970s, many of the trends of the 60s took new directions. By the mid-1970s it seemed that much of Africa, southeast Asia, and Latin America was in the throes of revolutions against neo-colonialism. Much of this took the form of variations on the Cold War–proxy wars fought on behalf of the USA and its allies, or the Soviet Union and its allies. In Africa, guerrillas fought in Morocco, Guinea-Bissau, Angola, Namibia, Rhodesia, Mozambique, Yemen, Ethiopia, the Congo, along with other countries taking a less violent leftward course such as Zambia and Tanzania.

In Latin America, liberation struggles had broken out in El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua and across the Panama Canal in Colombia, Peru, Uruguay, Chile and Argentina. With the coming of the military to power first in the 9/11 coup in Chile in 1973 and then in Argentina in 1976, a curtain of darkness seemed to have fallen over the southern cone countries of Argentina, Brazil, and Chile. For workers in trade unions, leftists and even moderate socialists, there was hell to pay until some time in the 1990s. You can imagine how this repression might have worked to the advantage of the United States corporations that were conducting mining operations in Chile, Argentina, Bolivia, and other South American countries.

In Africa, the 1970s’ struggles against neo-colonial regimes often took the form of “proxy” armies funded and supported by the Soviet Union, which appeared to be at its height of power but as we now know, was already weakening and deteriorating from within. Many of the regimes that came to power with at least some Soviet support in the ensuing years–Robert Mugabe’s in Zimbabwe, formerly Rhodesia, comes instantly to mind–would over the years degenerate into frank dictatorships even worse than what they had replaced.

Meanwhile, the mining of minerals continued, and continues to this day, without a shred of democracy having been established in many of the countries that had struggled so hard against neo-colonialism. The same is true of food extraction from the African, Latin American, and Asian countries where revolutions against colonialism were attempted. Thus, we still have slave-produced cocoa from Africa, bananas picked under the harshest conditions imaginable for the workers, and rice produced in Myanmar under near-slave conditions.

While Richard Nixon had fully supported attempts to undermine left-wing regimes in Chile and other places, after Nixon’s resignation it seemed that the CIA and US military was on auto-pilot, really accountable to no one. Certainly Gerald Ford exerted little effort to stop the ongoing US meddling in all the countries engaging in some kind of revolutionary activity.

Jimmy Carter inherited the wind with his inauguration in 1977. Within a couple years, the Sandinistas had succeeded in toppling Somoza in Nicaragua, and the US support for the Shah of Iran (including Carter’s failure to cut the Shah loose even when the writing was on the wall) led to his fall from power in Iran in 1979. Guerrilla groups were operating in dozens of countries, again often with Soviet blessing if not funding.

The 1970s were also, you’ll recall, times of severe inflation in the US currency. The cost of living became a major issue that had showed up on the radar screen under Nixon and proceeded to get much worse following the Yom Kippur War conducted by Israel against a grouping of Arab states. With the US standing by Israel, the Arab oil producers conducted an oil embargo against the US which drove gasoline prices to new unheard-of levels. Meanwhile, the US economy was stagnating. The term “stagflation” was coined, meaning stagnation in the midst of inflation.

My personal opinion is that the height of US labor unions’ power–both in bargaining and in politics (with their unfailing support of whoever the Democratic Party selected to be the candidate, at any level of government)–was reached late in the Carter Administration, and that power fell off a cliff with the ascendancy of Reagan. I can recall being on shop bargaining committees in the late 1970s and one period when we negotiated back-to-back almost 10% wage increases, including a factory-wide re-evaluation of a number of labor grades that added 10% or more for the lower-paid categories. To my knowledge, that sort of bargaining environment never again occurred in American labor.

If US workers were about to lose significant status and purchasing power, and see their real wages begin a gradual slide which continues to the present, how then could big capital maintain this workforce as a nation of consumers? I doubt that any group of wealthy and powerful conspirators was holding seminars and secret conferences to answer that question. To attribute too much cohesiveness and conspiratorial power to the rich and powerful is to give them too much credit. On the other hand, a way might have been found to keep a weakened US labor force consuming: to give them too much credit with which to buy the newly-outsourced goods.

From 1979 to 2009, it took three decades for a weakened US labor force to see its standard of living reduced to that of today, when one in seven people doesn’t get enough to eat, something like 45 million have no health coverage, and something like 50 million live at or below the poverty line.

With the ascendancy of Ronald Reagan, labor war was declared on the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization, and that union broken within a year. Other unions fell under the withering effect of massive run-away shop movements to the US deep south, to Mexico, and to parts of Asia which were just opening up to US sweatshops.

Recessions are useful to big capital because they allow “rationalization” of the production process. The huge recession which drove down workers’ and poor peoples’ living conditions in the early 1980s facilitated the new, leaner workforce. Two-tier labor structures became the rage, with young entry-level workers earning far less than the older workers who were soon going to be forced out or bought out. Non-union shops in the deep south held labor conditions down until the further move abroad could be made. Real wages were in freefall.

Indeed, by the mid-1980s, a wave of homelessness had struck the US working class. I can recall working in Philly in 1985-1986 with an independent labor union which had an alliance with the Homeless Union of Philadelphia. Part of the agreement was mutual support–urging homeless workers not to cross picket lines, and urging employed workers to assist the homeless union in meeting its political demands.

We also visited with and offered support to workers who were organizing under COTA out in the vegetable farms and orchards of South Jersey. These workers, mostly from Latin America, faced near slave-labor like conditions. I was appalled at the conditions that farmworkers faced in modern-day New Jersey at the time. There was no one in Washington, D.C. who cared about those workers, nor the homeless union members in Philadelphia. We were on our own, literally.

The US worker was becoming increasingly disposable. We heard the term “The Rust Belt” for the first time, describing the old industrial belt running from Milwaukee through Chicago, along the southern tier of the Great Lakes, up to Buffalo, N.Y. We were told that the “Sun Belt”–where wages were low, unions few and far between (and weak), and job growth was still happening–was the new place to be for US corporations and the people who worked for them. Almost three decades later, it was the “Sun Belt” where the mortgage industry collapse wreaked the most havoc, ironically enough.

As the decade changed from the 1980s to the ’90s, strange things were happening, as the Soviet Union broke apart and what was seen as a monolithic, formidable system of big socialism was revealed to have been hollowed-out and weak at the core. Ronald Reagan is often credited with having hastened the demise of this Soviet system. But a deeper investigation in history would reveal, I think, that the flaws in Soviet-style socialism were there from the beginning, and that the historic conflict with fascism all through the 1930s and World War II prevented that system from ever becoming a grass-roots democracy in which means of production actually belonged to the workers.

Next, Part V: The Reagan (Counter)Revolution begins race to the bottom

How America went from a nation of producers to consumers, Part III: Cheap food, agriculture, and keeping the farmer down

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

(To read this in order, you have to scroll down the blog to get to the earlier parts. It reads from the bottom up, the way democracy also should read).

In Part II I briefly mentioned the relationship between US food-oriented corporations and foreign policy. It’s not a stretch to say that maintaining unfair trade, especially in food, was one of the major purposes to which the US military was mis-directed over the past century and a half. In 1954, the role of United Fruit Company in encouraging (directing?) the Central Intelligence Agency to overthrow the government of Arbenz in Guatemala is very well documented.

Likewise, when the Castro brothers, along with Ernesto “Che” Guevara and a small army finally overthrew Batista in Cuba in 1959, one of their first acts was nationalizing the lands of that same United Fruit Company. Once again, United Fruit went into action, encouraging (directing?) the US CIA to intervene, and a hastily-organized disastrous invasion of newly-liberated Cuba occurred at the Bay of Pigs–sometimes called the “Bay of Pigs Fiasco.”

(The CIA was very busy in 1954, also staging the overthrow of the elected government of Mossadegh in Iran, a blunder that the USA is still paying for dearly in the form of the extremely distorted course of events in the Persian Gulf region. But that topic is covered under Part IV on national liberation and beginning of the end for neo-colonialism.)

I would argue that the role of cheap food is crucial in shifting the USA from a producer base to a consumer base, where we are now dependent upon a global economy for meeting the needs of our outsized spending habits. If the manufacturers of all sorts of consumer products wanted to move more of these products, food would have to become a much smaller part of each household’s budget, in order to allow that household more wiggle room in buying other products flooding the market.

Examples of these other products might be: the house they lived in, all its furniture, home electronics, fashion that had to be discarded each time “back-to-school” rolled around in August, automobiles, gasoline, vacation trips, second homes in vacation hot spots, later computers, monitors, Nintendos, cell phones, digital cameras, printers, disk drives, iPhones, mp3 players, PDAs, GPS devices, XBoxes, Wii games, electronic toys of all sorts, a boat to go fishing, an ATV when you’re not fishing, a snowmobile to play in the snow, trailers to haul all that, storage sheds to store it all, a second, third, fourth automobile for the spouse and two teens, plus all the credit cards needed to buy all that stuff, not to mention the insurance to cover it all.

So, food went from being approximately 19% of the typical US household budget, down to about 9% in around 2005, while these other products filled up the remaining 125% of the household budget.

Someone would have to pay for this easing of the burden of food on the household. Ah, the farmer.

First, as we mentioned, the farmers who were unlucky enough to live in those countries that grew things the USA coveted had to be dispossessed of their land, then re-hired as plantation workers to pick coffee, bananas, cocoa (and coca), pineapples, and ever more exotic fruits as the American palate got more and more exotic in its tastes. Thus, the “Banana Republic” was born. Countries like Nicaragua, Guatemala, El Salvador, Cuba, the Caribbean islands, Colombia, and on and on became home to some truly evil dictatorships, all to assure the flow of cheap luxury food to the USA.

In the USA, it was necessary to keep the farmer in check, but this was easily done through oligarchic control over the pricing of farm produce. A series of enormous food corporations came into being which managed the flow of foods and somehow miraculously ensured that farmers were getting sometimes a little more, sometimes a lot less, than their costs of production.

Occasional attempts by farmers to organize themselves into something analogous to labor unions in the factories, mines and mills were made. There was the Grange movement. There was the Farmers’ Union. There was National Farmers Organization. Efforts were made to restrict production–the sometimes violent milk strikes of Farmers’ Holiday Association and other groups in the 1930s and other efforts to push prices back up. All to no avail.

The fundamental problem always facing farmers was that they “owned” their land and operations (with guidance from their bankers), and hence, were always by nature in competition with the neighboring farmers. When a group of farmers is trying to hold out for higher prices, they can only hold until the first one caves in and accepts the lower price. Given the high debt load farmers have always faced, caving in doesn’t take long, and prices paid farmers are kept low. You don’t need to see a vast capitalist conspiracy in this arrangement; it’s just the way “Mr. Market” works.

The process of letting Mr. Market remove farmers from their land gained speed with the first Great Migration of rural blacks to the north, ca. 1910-1930. It progressed apace with the coming of the Dust Bowl in the great plains breakbasket states of Oklahoma and Texas, Colorado, parts of New Mexico, Kansas, Arkansas, and other places where food staples had been grown. This led to the first wave of environmental refuges inside the United States, headly mostly west toward California, where the formerly independent, self-reliant farmers were transformed into wage-laboring, largely homeless farmworkers working for large landowning food corporations. Then came the Second Great Migration of southern black rural folk going north to work in the factories, most never to return to the land, instead rearing a new generation of completely urbanized Baby Boom African-Americans.

In the 1950s, the rural brain drain continued slow but steady, as it did in the 1960s. And the 1970s. Don’t forget the ’80s. In the 1980s, here in Wisconsin, we faced a severe small farm crisis, and the Wisconsin Farm Unity Alliance arose to attempt to deal with the crisis. Too small to change the course of events, such a movement could still contribute to the ongoing national discussion about what to do with those farmers–everything except assuring them reliable parity pricing for their crops.

Two people who perhaps understood the importance of parity pricing for farm crops, from the “left” and “right” directions perhaps, were Roosevelt’s Secretary of Agriculture Henry Wallace, and Charles Walters, author of Unforgiven, and founder of the magazine Acres, USA. Parity pricing could be called simply “fair trade for farmers” as the basic idea was that farmers should receive a price for their products that would provide a parity, a level equal to that enjoyed by other prosperous classes in society. In the 1950s and 60s, that might have meant being on parity with the highest-paid trades union workers, the middle-class professionals or others earning a living able to sustain a family without fear of financial ruination.

In this current era, we are in uncharted waters. It is difficult to know with whom farmers might achieve parity, with the entire US middle class of professionals on the brink of financial ruination, with the labor unions decimated and powerless to improve worker wages, and with farmers themselves once again selling products at prices dangerously below the cost of their production.

At this point, the drive to push down real wages for workers in the USA has come round to backfire on finance capital. What seemed to have been an application of Naomi Klein’s concept of “shock doctrine” in the fall of 2008 now seems to have taken on a life outside the control of finance capital, domestically or globally. Events seem to be spiralling out of their control.

Once you have driven down the standard of living of your domestic market–US workers, farmers, and the middle classes–you find yourself with a shrinking market to sell all those outsourced goods to. Without continuing high levels of government direct payments, at this stage it seems that the economic downturn will continue on toward some unknown level of ruination. While I may have argued that finance capital had wanted to weaken the farm sector to the point where cheap food would not compete for household dollars with all the other junk from southeast Asia and China steaming its way toward the US ports, now the very productivity of US farmers seems in jeopardy, if massive farm bankruptcies follow this downtrend in the economy.

Likewise, with the specter of mass hunger in the USA, the very health and productivity of the next generations of workers needed to maintain at least some skeleton-crew level of staffing of the US domestic economy is in peril. Capital has gone too far, the shock doctrine has backfired, and we are all in uncharted waters here.

Next Part IV: Revolutions against neo-colonialism, run-away production, and the US worker becomes disposable.

Readings

Peter Chapman, Bananas! How the United Fruit Company Shaped the World, Canongate US, 2008.
John C. Culver, American Dreamer: A life of Henry A. Wallace, W.W. Norton, 2001.
Eduardo Galeano, Open Veins of Latin America, Montly Review Press, 25th Ann. edition, 1997. Yes, this was the book given to Barack Obama by Hugo Chavez at their meeting in South America, 2009.
Kinzer, Stephen and Schlesinger, Stephen. Bitter Fruit: The Story of the American Coup in Guatemala. Cambridge Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1999.
Thomas Kriger, The 1939 Dairy Farmers Union Milk Strike: The Story in Words and Pictures, Journal for Multi-Media History, 1998.
Norman D. Markowitz, The Rise and Fall of the People’s Century: Henry A. Wallace and American Liberalism, 1941-1948 (New York, 1973), pp. 15-27.
Charles Walters, Unforgiven, Acres USA 2nd edition, 2002.

How America went from a nation of producers to consumers Part II: The 60s confluence of three rivers of social change

Saturday, November 21st, 2009

Late in the year 2000 I attended some Green Party meetings in Milwaukee, at a time when there was quite a bit of momentum remaining from Ralph Nader’s presidential campaign. I was struck by the number of young people in attendance, students from UWM, the MATC technical college, and some city high schools. These young people seemed to have a very progressive worldview concerning the issues of globalization, an attitude of anti-consumerism, a consciousness about avoiding sweatshop-produced products and engaging in fair trade.

It occurred to me that this new youth movement was in some way a sort of echo of an earlier one from the late 1960s–the counterculture, the hippies, the back-to-land movement, various labels that were applied to the youth subculture that resulted when millions of Baby Boomers came of age at the same time and began to exert their influence on the USA.

But the counterculture was only one among many rivers of social change that were converging at around the same time. There was also the emerging peace movement attempting to put an end to the US involvement in Vietnam. And there was a civil rights movement raging, which had begun by 1965 to take an increasingly insurrectionary, violent, unpredictable course which threatened the whole social order which those in power had established. As these three rivers of social change ran together, you had what is somewhat amorphously seen as “the 60s.” An additionl stream of social change was the impact of rising national liberation and revolutionary movements in the “third world” — movements against neocolonialism, the new form of colonialism in which countries were still fully under control by US and European powers, yet had nominally independent governments. These movements would play a larger part in the 1970s.

The US by the late 1960s was at the pinnacle of its days as a producer nation. There was full-scale industrial production to fuel the war on Vietnam. US oil production was nearing its all-time peak, reached in 1970. Food production was hitting new highs as the policy of the post-Henry Wallace US Department of Agriculture played out: farmers should “get big, or get out” as Earl Butz later summarized as US policy toward farmers.

(You could probably argue that globalization began with trade in food, going all the way back to the British empire moving tea, coffee, sugar and other food commodities all around the globe, quite profitably to the British corporations. Oh, and as Jim in the UK points out, also opium. Lots of opium run by the British drug cartel.
(The US corporate sector was quick to realize that secure access to certain foods would be an important part of its emerging consumer society. Even as US domestic staple food and fiber production kept ramping up, decade after decade, there were commodities such as fruits and vegetables, sugar, coffee, cocoa and so on that could be locked-up for US consumption. Thus, the USA intervened early and often in affairs in Central America, the Caribbean, and South America. US meddling in Nicaragua began in the early 1850s, and the adventures of William Walker in that country assured an enduring US footprint in Nicaragua that continues to this day, even under the leftist Ortega presidency. Part III deals with cheap food, agriculture, and keeping the farmers downpressed.)

Yet this pinnacle of US power as a producer left the younger generation cold. And it left the black and Latino workers out in the cold, not to participate in the best-paying segment of labor. This situation set the stage for the separate, but rarely intersecting, paths of the youth counter-culture and the civil rights struggles of the 1960s. They began to intersect during the years of peace protests aimed at ending the Vietnam war, however.

Youth counter-culture took on an anti-consumerist, simple-life living, back-to-land worldview as tens of thousands of mostly white Baby Boom youth attempted to cut the cord binding them to “straight life” (before that took on a different meaning). They attempted to “drop out” as the term was used. It was a time of great experimentation with forms of social organization, as co-operatives, community farms, Ashrams, “communes” and a range of other, usually loose, organizations tried to take root out in the country. There was also a large urban component to this social experimentation, as a survey of the Minneapolis-St. Paul co-operatives scene would have revealed circa 1970.

Many of these social experiments were aimed at reconnecting with the land, in order to provide a livelihood for the young folks moving out to these small towns and rural townships. However, youth would soon find out that the powers that managed the ever-expanding global economy did not really want a lot of young people reconnecting with the land and becoming producers with some degree of self-sufficiency and sustainability.

To impose a consumer society, it was necessary for big capital–whether industrial capital, retail and distribution capital, or finance capital at its highest level–to continue breaking the connection of independent producers with their means of production–be it land, or small artisan shops, or artisan food processing, or anything else that would threaten the oligopoly that now reached into every aspect of modern life.

Nowhere was this assault on autonomy and self-sufficiency felt more harshly than in the black and Latino working-class communities. Black small farmers and sharecroppers in the south never enjoyed what you’d call prosperity. Always living on the edge with the threat of violence and a kind of down-home fascist repression in the form of the Ku Klux Klan, black workers and farmers in the south needed relief from oppression. And the coming of World War II in a way provided this relief.

What came to be known as the “Second Great Migration” of African-Americans northward into the industrial cities where war production was gearing up, took place between ca. 1940 and ca. 1970. Black workers had two paths to choose as the War began: enlist in the armed forces, or go to work in a factory doing industrial production for the War. Both of these paths contributed to the civil rights movement that began after the war’s end.

In the factories of the north, and the industrial cities where they were located, blacks had to contend with the need for at least minimal worker unity, whether it took the form of joining a union or not crossing picket lines during a strike, or in rare cases, rising to some position of leadership and authority in a union. This was a world apart from living in fear of an unprovoked racist attack in a small town in the deep south.

Nelson Peery described the process he and tens of thousands of other blacks inducted into the military underwent during World War II as “the journey of the African-American soldier from second-class citizen to first-class soldier.” Upon returning to one’s hometown after this transformation, not many young blacks wished to return to “second-class citizenship.” You can view Peery’s account of the role of the black veteran in the emergence of the civil rights movement on this link:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S33j7YdrCOc&feature=related

This perspective shows the role of the rank-and-file worker, soldier, or citizen in social change. As with all movements, attention is often absorbed by a few prominent people and the story of the movement is written into history as the achievements of these individuals, rather than the grass roots movement that they rode into the history books upon.

Similarly, the history of the counter-culture is often absorbed by a few pages on the likes of Timothy Leary, or Steven Gaskin and “The Farm” or perhaps Ken Kesey or even an Abbie Hoffman. The lives of the millions of others involved in these social movements are of no consequence as the story is later told. This approach to history accommodates the needs of a consumerist society, where the average person is just a sort of spectator to the latest social trend or American Idol craze, and perhaps harbors secret aspirations to get up on that stage and show what they can do, and pray for a launch into stardom. Since one’s life as a producer of average, everyday stuff of life is so devalued, this escape route to consumerist stardom beckons to millions.

For the black and Latino worker, the life of the counter-culture held little appeal. One black worker on a factory floor once told me over a couple of sandwiches, sitting next to a milling machine, “why would brothers want to drop out into that hippie lifestyle of voluntary poverty, when we haven’t even had the chance to experience what that other life is like?”

Likewise, for the Chicano farmworker out in the California Central Valley, life in the “country” was not so appealing, as it usually meant back-breaking, unsafe work, poisoning by ag chemicals, lousy wages, no job security, and if you were here illegally, the likelihood of being rounded up by La Migra and shipped back over the border.

There were chances for idealistic young whites from middle-class backgrounds to provide support and solidarity work to the civil rights movements: help with the farm products boycotts launched by the United Farmworkers in the 1970s (again, “Cesar Chavez’s movement”), or traveling to the south to assist with civil rights work, voter registration, and other avenues of support. Sometimes, people went back and forth between roles: activist to counter-culture farmer, or vice-versa.

Certain points in time were pivotal. I would argue that spring, 1970 was one of these for many people involved in these parallel paths of social change. There were the killings of students at Kent State; there was increasing participation of blacks, Latinos, and American Indians in the anti-war protests that were growing increasingly large and vocal. One peace march I attended in St. Paul in spring, 1970 included a Black Panthers member, Dennis Banks from American Indian Movement, student leaders, senior citizen leaders, feminists and a host of others. There was the first Earth Day, which attempted to provide a nationwide stage for the emerging environmental movement to challenge the entire consumerist basis of what America was becoming. There was a nationwide student strike that spring, when students attempted to shut down their campuses in order to have a massive nationwide “teach-in” about ending the war, about social justice, about a lot of things gone wrong.

As the 1970s unfolded, what many people didn’t realize was that the ground underneath their feet was shifting and the foundations were being undermined. The great “guns and butter” economy of Lyndon Johnson’s “Great Society,” where war could mix with consumer abundance, poverty could be fought like another war, and justice for all at last achieved, all was about to begin to deteriorate.

Next Part III: cheap food, agriculture, and keeping the farmers down.

Boyer and Morais, Labor’s Untold Story, United Electrical Workers, self-published, 1955.
Philip S. Foner, Organized Labor and the Black Worker, Prager, 1975.
Steven Gaskin, Monday Night Class, revised ed., Book Publishing Company of TN.
Georgakas and Surkin, Detroit: I Do Mind Dying, 2nd edition, South End Press, 1998.
Nelson Peery, Black Radical. New Press, 2007.
Nelson Peery, Black Fire. New Press, 1995.

How America went from a nation of producers to consumers. Part I: Post-war

Friday, November 20th, 2009

“What has happened is that, in the last 20 years, America has changed from a producer to a consumer; and all consumers know that when the producer names the tune, the consumer has got to dance. The way it is.

“We used to be a producer–very inflexible at that–and now we are consumers and finding it difficult to understand: Natural resources and minerals will change your world.” –Gil Scott-Heron, “B Movie,” ca. 1981.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=56ipWM3DWe4&feature=related

——————————-

How did we get from being a nation that produced things, that made things, to being a nation of consumers, hugely indebted to China, who saw our economy start to crumble in fall, 2008 when the overdebtedness finally caught up to us? Will our heyday of easy consumption ever return? Will we ever become once again a nation of producers?

World War II seems to be the main inflection point in this process. With the end of World War II and the stimulative effect it had on the industrial producer economy, came the threat of a return to the depression. Returning veterans were not immediately able to find work. All those “Rosie the Riveter” women who had helped build the warmaking machinery had to return to the home, capital decided, in order to avoid unemployment-induced disruption. A series of severe labor conflicts broke out as the US economy struggled to get onto a peacetime footing.

It was during the labor conflicts from 1946-1949 that the US labor movement was mostly derailed onto the tracks of supporting industrial capital instead of confrontation with capital. The left-wing union leaders who ascended to leadership in the 1930s were gradually red-baited and hounded out of positions of leadership, in favor of a leadership more amenable to a “pork-chop” style of unionism (seeking more pork chops rather than more workplace power). The great Allis-Chalmers strike of the late 1940s here in Wisconsin was a microcosm of this process. When it was over, the left-wing leaders were out of power.

In the late 1970s, I worked with a group of workers in a big electric motor plant in Minneapolis, under union contract with I.U.E., who could remember many of these fratricidal struggles in labor, particularly between the left-wing United Electrical Workers (UE), which moved outside the AFL-CIO, and the International Union of Electrical workers, which took the path of labor peace with management, under a much more right-wing leadership.

This process of co-optation of labor leadership in some ways paved the way toward the consumer society that finance capital envisioned for the USA. With labor peace assured, workers could feel confident in going out and buying houses, buying automobiles, and buying all the stuff to fill up the houses. The massive movement to the suburbs on the part of mostly white, better-paid workers and professionals began in the early 1950s and has only begun to come to a halt with the mortgage crisis of late 2008.

My own family was a case study in this process of moving from producerism to consumerism. My dad returned from his tour of duty in the Navy and found that the textile mills of Rhode Island, where he and his brother had worked in the pre-war days, were beginning the process of shutting down to move to the deep south of the USA, almost universally non-union factories that paid far lower wages and rode the workers much harder than in the union north.

This was the first of what I believe were three major phases of what labor came to call the “run-away shop” or that we now call “outsourcing.” Phase I was the move to the deep south. Phase II was the maquiladora movement to the region just inside the Mexican border. Phase III was when finance capital discovered an even cheaper labor force in China and southeast Asia generally. I believe that Phase III is probably the final phase of the search for ever-cheaper labor, the phase that ends with the process of de-globalization, the crumbling of the global economy itself.

The Baby Boomers were born and grew up in that period between the wars–from 1946 to the height of the Vietnam War in the late 1960s. The world of rampant consumerism was their world. The period of unrest of the late 1960s marked the turning of a segment of this young cohort of people against the very consumerism they had grown up with. It also marked, I believe, the beginning of the end of the USA as a producer nation.

We moved from the woolen mill towns of Rhode Island down to the Jersey Shore, where commuting 45 miles a day to north Jersey was the preferred lifestyle. I remember my dad explaining how we bought things “on time” and he worked something called “time-and-a-half” (overtime pay) at Western Electric to pay for all the stuff bought “on time.” We were supposedly living the high life as the USA approached peak producer status. Along with a whole generation of other people across the nation doing exactly the same thing.

Next: Part II, The 1960s convergence of three rivers of social change.

Sources:

Boyer and Morais, Labor’s Untold Story, United Electrical Workers, self-published, 1955.
Foner, Philip S. Organized Labor and the Black Worker, Prager, 1975.
Georgakas and Surkin, Detroit: I Do Mind Dying, 2nd edition, South End Press, 1998