Some More News - SMN: Unions Make Things Better (Even If You're Not In One)
Episode Date: May 24, 2023Hi. In today's episode, we look at the current union "boom" and how unions improve pay and conditions for workers, non-union workers, and even non-workers. Sources: https://docs....google.com/document/d/15UlKT4S_j8Kq6bw_g9HRGsbDGT6Gjud8onMlndZiRZ0/edit?usp=sharing Support us on our PATREON: http://patreon.com/somemorenews Check out our MERCH STORE: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/somemorenews?ref_id=9949 SUBSCRIBE to SOME MORE NEWS: https://tinyurl.com/ybfx89rh Subscribe to the Even More News and SMN audio podcasts here: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/some-more-news/id1364825229 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ebqegozpFt9hY2WJ7TDiA?si=5keGjCe5SxejFN1XkQlZ3w&dl_branch=1 Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/show/even-more-news Follow us on social media: Twitter: https://twitter.com/SomeMoreNews Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/SomeMoreNews/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SomeMoreNews/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@somemorenews If you want to take ownership of your health, today is a good time to start. Athletic Greens is giving you a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D AND 5 free travel packs with your first purchase. Go to https://athleticgreens.com/MORENEWS.
Transcript
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Hey Newsies, Xtree Xtree, ready to sling some papes for Mr. Pulitzer until you've saved up enough wooden subway tokens or whatever the heck to go to Santa Fe?
Are you there? Of course I'm talking about the classic Disney musical Newsies, for some reason.
Probably because I too am a Newsie. You know, a newsboy grown through the spring of my youth into a newsman here with the news at a penny a pape,
which is short for paper,
which the news is decreasingly printed on.
But here, some of that news is,
which news-wise is, I promise I'm a newsman.
It's unions.
We're talking about unions today.
And unions are pretty good,
as evidenced by the classic Disney musical Newsies. You see,
unions are the reason we don't still have child wage slaves working themselves to death on street
corners. So that's good. It's good for unions to matter, not just in fake musical plots either.
For example, you might've heard that the movie Newsies was written by writers to be very specific.
Like the WGA writers currently on strike
and making wild demands like,
it's a livable wage,
a reasonable piece of the streaming revenue,
and to not be replaced by an AOL chat bot.
How dare they?
We're probably going to circle back to the WGA
in this and later episodes,
because Hollywood is messed up in several unique
and exciting ways, some of which we've already discussed.
But for this day, it's all about them unions.
Unions that, if I may be so bold,
have made the entire world much better
for literally everyone.
Hence this title.
Why Unions Make the World Better for Literally Everyone.
Good work, title.
You did it.
So for decades now, unions in America
have been on a pretty alarming and steady decline,
perhaps coincidentally correlating with a decline in wages
despite a rise in productivity.
Lately, they are often associated with entitled
and lazy workers who want to do less and make more.
They're depicted as corrupt and surly cigar chewers.
And now, some of the most powerful groups
that once protected American workers
are mere shells of their former selves,
having been gradually dismantled by draconian regulation,
hostile lawmakers, and a decades long propaganda campaign
depicting them as useless or worse, lazy.
For example, back in the 60s and 70s,
the United Farm Workers had around 60,000 members
and led groundbreaking reforms for the people who, you know, feed all of us.
That included important victories
like raises for grape pickers,
the first official recognition for farm unions
from major corporations,
and even the right to collective bargaining
for all farm workers in the state of California.
That's huge.
Compare that to today,
where the UFW has only around 5,500 members,
or less than 2% of California's
total agricultural workforce.
This has a real and immediately negative impact
for workers on the ground.
And not just because they're not getting invited
to pool parties at Big Jimmy's house.
Jimmy is the name I've assigned
their hypothetical union rep.
It's got a good union rep ring to it, you know?
They should be happy with Jimmy.
According to labor organizer and non-Jimmy, Veronica Mota,
bosses on non-union farms frequently ignore dangerous conditions and safety concerns
while threatening to cut employee hours whenever they need additional leverage.
Jimmy would never allow that.
But despite dire situations like these,
unions appear to be in the midst of a slight resurgence,
with more Americans viewing them favorably
than at any other point since the 1960s.
They're coming back, like vintage vinyl,
or this satanic panic panic or reefer madness.
More than two thirds of Americans
now say they approve of unions.
And last year was considered a union boom by the media.
But the key word from before is appear.
Because despite this popularity,
union membership is at a record low.
How could this be?
Are we in one of them Escher drawings
where up is down and B be left and right be up again?
Maybe, I could just am drunk.
But in this case, one left-leaning think tank
has pointed out that union membership
has actually increased by 200,000,
but non-union jobs have increased even more,
hence the low percentage.
And this makes sense when you think
about the biggest job creators
and their open animosity towards unions.
Many high-profile employers such as Amazon, Starbucks, Apple,
and this extremely divorced emerald-coated spaceman
with a salamander's face are firmly against unions. Unions make it more
difficult for them to exploit their workers, you see. That's a pickle for them. A pickle Rick,
right? You love that. But despite hurting the poor weirdo billionaires, unions are generally
a net good. They're the reason we have weekends.
And I may just be a humble newsy
turned fully grown adult news professori,
but the inventor of eat cereal in my pajamas
and watch cartoons day,
gets the showdy support any day of the week.
But especially that day.
That day actually being, it's Tuesday for me.
I work weird hours, but you get it.
Episodes are only filmed on full moons.
Right, that's how I get my beard.
Half werewolves, NBT.
So anyway, labor unions have existed in America
pretty much since its inception.
The first organized group of American workers
was probably the Federal Society of Journeyman Cord Wainers
of Philadelphia, who united in 1794 to demand higher wages.
After all, those cords don't wane themselves, do they?
But amazingly, the courts decided that organizing workers
to demand higher wages was a criminal conspiracy.
Let me hit that a bit harder.
Maybe I'll try a weird face or something.
The courts originally decided that organizing workers
to demand higher wages was a criminal conspiracy.
As a result, the practice was outlawed for many years
until they were once again legalized
by a Massachusetts court in 1842.
Pretty cool for a state that looks like an alien's genitals.
Later, the first National Labor Union was formed in 1866,
shortly after the close of the Civil War.
The stage was then set for a string of massive victories
for workers throughout the late 19th
and early 20th centuries
that are collectively responsible
for enshrining a lot of standard employment practices
that we still follow to this day.
Victories like the 1913 formation
of the U.S. Department of Labor,
which gave workers their own representative
in the president's cabinet.
The Norris-LaGuardia Act of 1932,
which prevented federal courts
from issuing injunctions that stopped strikes.
The National Labor Relations
Act of 1935, which guaranteed the rights of private sector workers to unionize and engage
in collective bargaining. The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, which gave workers the right to a
minimum wage along with overtime pay if they exceed 40 hours a week and also prohibited, and I quote, oppressive child labor.
You could still put kids to work, of course,
but they'd better enjoy it.
Not all of the victories achieved by labor unions
during this period and afterward were permanent
or even long lasting, but they collectively succeeded
in raising American standard of living for a while
until we started to roll them back
or get rid of them entirely and continue to try it seems
as we really like the idea of child labor again.
I mean, I get it, you know, did you see how smoothly
that snow piercer ran?
That is the magic of tiny little hands.
Anywho, it turns out that when American workers
have more collective power,
they earn more money. It's so weird. And you might have already noticed that you don't have to be
in a union for these benefits to reach you. Circling back to the WGA, a good example is the
minimum wages they set for union writers and how non-union writers can negotiate using those
minimums. In other words, this union sets the standard for the rest of the industry
and therefore helps all writers regardless of if they're a member or not.
But when you chip away at these union-created rules and regulations
that protect these workers from exploitation,
you actually increase poverty and misery in a real and measurable way.
Take, for example, the country of, ah,
Almar, Almarigo, Almarigo,
it's blank again, America.
While certainly not struggling as bad
as a lot of other places,
these United States of the Americas
have had pretty much the same poverty rate since the 1970s.
Yes, it fluctuates,
but compare it to the decades before that
where it was going down steadily.
So why did it stop lowering?
There's no natural level for poverty.
It's not like the fractal fur patterns on a camel's balls,
which might exist.
Poverty is artificial is my point. Like the fractal felt pattern on a robot camel's balls, which might exist. Poverty is artificial is my point.
Like the fractal felt pattern on a robot camel's balls,
which definitely exist.
And so predictably enough,
this poverty stagnation corresponds with wages
because of course it does.
Wages stagnated starting in the 70s.
And when you look at the minimum wage
and adjust for inflation,
the highest it's actually ever been was back in 1968.
Interesting thing about that graph
is that it goes up steadily until the 1980s
and then starts bottoming out for decades at a time.
How odd!
Did anything significant happen in the 1980s
that we should know about?
It is for this reason that I must tell those
who failed to report for duty this morning,
they are in violation of the law.
And if they do not report for work within 48 hours,
they have forfeited their jobs and will be terminated.
Ah, yeah, there he is.
He's like Thanos.
You knew you were gonna see him at least
in a post-credits scene, a POTUS credits scene.
There were a lot of reasons why unions began to decline
in the 1980s, but a large part of it was a shift
in economic policy that directly challenged unions
and pushed deregulation and the lowering of taxes
as a solution to poverty,
as opposed to other wild ideas like wage increases.
I think it's safe to say that this technique did not work.
And since Reagan, a lot of other things happened
that have contributed to the wage problem,
not just in the States, but everywhere.
But at least other countries
didn't also dismantle their unions.
Today, nearly all private sector employees in the US,
around 94%, have no union.
But in the 50s and 60s,
nearly a third of all US workers were members.
In just the year 1970 alone,
3 million American union members participated
in work stoppages and strikes.
And a lot of the data suggests
that the benefits earned by these striking workers not only paid off
for the union members themselves,
but their non-union counterparts.
But we got rid of them.
We threw them to the curb like old basement porn.
And in fact, America is now no more or less productive
than other countries who have strong unions.
The only difference is that we aren't getting paid enough.
Relative to other wealthy nations, the U.S. is now offering workers some of the lowest wages
in the entire industrialized world. 23% of Americans earn what's officially deemed low pay,
that is less than two-thirds of the median wage, compared to 17% in Britain, 11% in Japan, and just 5% in Italy. Those are,
of course, countries with more people in unions than us. But this isn't the only evidence that
unions make everyone's wages higher. This 2021 paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research
found that union membership has varied inversely with income inequality since the 1930s.
In other words, as union membership goes up, income inequality goes down.
Across the board for everyone.
This makes practical sense when you think about it.
Just by threatening a strike, a union can often compel companies to increase compensation or benefits for all workers.
union can often compel companies to increase compensation or benefits for all workers.
And in a healthy, functioning labor market, this makes hiring in that category more competitive and pushes other companies to increase their wages accordingly. A 2016 study by the Economic
Policy Institute suggested that today's non-union wages would be around 5% higher on average if union membership overall had remained at its 1979 level.
For non-union workers without bachelor's degrees,
that figure is even higher, around 8% on average.
But as union membership significantly declined
in the Reagan 80s, these groups had a lot less leverage,
which in turn increased wage inequality among all workers.
Boy, that Reagan fellow sure sucks a bunch.
It's almost as if we shouldn't use his policies
as any kind of guide for how to run a government
and perhaps look back to the eras before he took influence
over the Republican party.
Hand rubbing beard emoji.
Beyond just wages, there are other positive effects
to having a significant chunk of a workforce unionized.
Workplace conditions come to mind.
When unions fight to make improvements,
everyone who works in the same space benefits.
It would be weird if they made separate
and more dangerous areas for non-union employees, you know?
For this reason,
the American Public Health Association
supports union membership
without even bringing up money specifically. According to a 2016 paper in the American
Journal for Public Health, unions promote healthy working conditions, vital health and safety
programs, health insurance, and democratic participation in workplace-related decisions.
The authors of the paper argue that the decline in union membership
undermines public health in the United States.
It's literally a health issue to not have unions.
Then there are things like disciplinary due process
and grievance procedures,
which are often set in place by unions,
but serve to protect all workers
if they're under investigation or facing an accusation
or registering a formal complaint. Unions also serve to reduce all workers if they're under investigation or facing an accusation or registering a formal complaint.
Unions also serve to reduce racial and gender disparities
in the workplace in a number of ways.
According to the Center for American Progress,
unions not only increase wealth for all workers,
but they narrow the overall racial wealth gap.
Among all US families, membership in a union
reduces the likelihood of having negative wealth,
which is when your total debt exceeds your savings and assets.
But this effect is even greater for Black families.
Additionally, median household wealth for white union members is 1.8 times higher than non-union members.
But for Black union members, it's 3.5 times higher.
And for Hispanic union members, it's 3.5 times higher. And for Hispanic union members, it's 5.2 times higher.
To be clear, unions aren't perfect when it comes to racism,
which is a very gentle way to phrase that.
But by their nature, unions strive to serve groups
that have been historically exploited
and that need to join forces
in order to balance out the existing power dynamic.
Unions also disproportionately represent blue collar workers
over white collar workers,
and lower wage earners over higher wage earners.
So they're systemically helping to balance these figures
behind the scenes.
You don't need a ton of statistics to understand
why this is important.
But it's still nice to have the statistics,
especially if you're one of those statistic perverts
who jerks at the pie graphs.
Oh yeah, yeah, you show me the percentage
of therapists by race, you dirty, dirty graph.
But maybe you, I don't know, hate workers.
Weird stance to have.
But maybe you don't care that unions make the lives
of all workers better everywhere.
So after the break, I will magically explain to you
why unions make lives better for non-workers as well.
So like children and cats,
and rich people, sounds fun.
Just like these ads sound fun.
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What's a sound to mean fun?
Ads.
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To all.
We are back from the ad break dimension
and we barely made it out alive! I lost three
damn people in that dimension! So clearly the work done to represent unionized employees also,
intentionally or otherwise, ends up benefiting all the other people who work in that industry as
well. And that's all well and good, you might be saying. But how does it affect me, average Joe
nobody? I totally get it. That's
usually the first follow-up question I ask any time I learn a new piece of information. Whether
it be facts about the Magna Carta, or the recommended tire pressure for a Subaru Outback,
that's the car Crocodile done D-drives, and other people. So just for starters, unions are among the most effective ways we can push for much needed safety reforms.
The recent Ohio train derailment provided
a particularly devastating example of this.
For years, members of Railroad Workers United
had been pressing their employers for changes
that potentially could have prevented the accident.
But that is sadly just the most famous
and devastating recent example of many.
If only out of a sense of self-preservation,
the Teamsters Union frequently aligns
with public safety groups like advocates for highway
and auto safety to push back against new rules
and regulations that could make roads more deadly.
Take this new proposal introduced to Congress in January
called the Safer Highways and Increased Performance
for Interstate Trucking Act or SHIP IT Act,
not to be confused with the Bop It or Pull It
or Twist It Act.
The SHIP IT Act is aimed at untangling supply chain issues
by creating recruitment and worker retention perks.
Except their solutions are barely
about the actual working conditions
and seem more about helping the companies themselves.
One of their grand ideas is to allow special permits
for overweight vehicles and other trucks
trying to get around certain kinds
of preexisting regulations.
That's not really a worker perk,
which is probably why the bill is backed by industry groups
like the Shippers Coalition,
the International Dairy Foods Association,
and the National Milk Producers,
but it's opposed by highway safety groups
and truckers themselves.
But hey, you know, at least they're also offering,
and this is true,
lower cost parking spots as a way to encourage more people to become truckers. That'll do it.
So generally speaking, if employers are overwhelmingly for something that workers are overwhelmingly against, that thing stands a good chance of sucking ass,
but not in the fun way that an ass might perhaps be sucked,
like with a crazy straw or in a sex way.
Point is, the Ship It Act doesn't just fail
to address the issue with retaining drivers,
but also endangers everyone
by finding regulation loopholes.
Teamsters General President Sean M. O'Brien
has been pointing this out,
that the law is just going to make highways
less safe for everyone,
truckers and regular drivers and passengers alike,
by allowing heavier and more dangerous trucks
that are more prone to devastating crashes.
And folks, Sean is going hard for our safety and the rights of the people
he represents. And no, don't tell me I'm out of line. Don't tell me I'm out of line.
Well, you frame the statement. You're going to tell me to shut my mouth?
Yes, I did. Hold it. Hold it. Tough guy. I'm not afraid of physical.
Hold it. Jerry, Jerry, Jerry, Jerry.
Jerry?
Jerry? Jerry.
Anywho, speaking of a workforce the entire nation
depends on but gets paid less than carnival rats, teachers.
When teachers unions led the fight for smaller class sizes,
obviously one intended result was to make classes more manageable.
But smaller class sizes also benefit young learners,
especially the students most in need
of direct help and supervision.
And students, as it turns out,
are the very people schools exist to serve.
A 2014 study from Northwestern found that class size
is a significant determinant of student outcomes,
and that smaller classes disproportionately benefit low-income and minority students,
and that increasing classroom populations lowers test scores and even diminishes the students' future earning potential.
Smaller classes provide teachers the ability to give students more individually specific feedback and more hands-on assignments.
It makes sense.
How do you expect anyone to heroically inspire kids
to stand on their desks if there's like 200 goddamn desks?
That's a logistical nightmare and a safety hazard.
Nurses are another group of frontline workers
we all rely on.
National Nurses United have come out in favor
of Medicare for All,
not necessarily because it improves their working conditions,
but rather because they believe it is better for patients
and people seeking care,
the people they're meant to help, the you people.
There's certainly a chance that additional funding
flowing directly into healthcare services
would improve working conditions for nurses,
but there's no guarantee.
In fact, traditionally, major overhauls
like moving from a private insurance-based system
to single payer have had a negative effect
on the individual earnings of staffers
who rely on big organizations
and employers like hospitals for their pay.
So this is a case of nurses advocating for something
that might not even benefit them specifically,
at least in the short term,
because it benefits everyone else.
They're just being nice,
because they're nice and cool people
who have easy access to drugs and perhaps want to hang out.
And as this, the New York Times editorial speculates,
this might simply be because they're on the front lines
of today's healthcare system
and see how poorly it functions for everyone.
I can and will keep going about how unions
make the quality of life better for everyone.
And this includes the writers of the WGA
who work very hard to write good stories.
After all, there is nothing more powerful in the world
than a good story.
And who has a better story than Bran the Broken?
Oof! Why? Why, oh why would I show that clip from the very angering final episode of Game of Thrones?
Remember that show and how its enraged fandom fell off the face of the earth? Or heck, remember Questworld,
another HBO show that started strong
and just faded away like a fart
in a room full of other equally bad farts?
Or Hecaru, do you recall that time
when somehow Palpatine returned?
Are you mad when movies and shows are bad
and happy when they're good?
Well, that very often has nothing to do
with the actual writers,
but rather the studios devaluing the presence of writers.
The original Star Wars were all written
by the same three people,
Lawrence Kasdan, Lee Brackett,
and the one George, George Lucas, I guess, apparently.
The new Star Wars have seven different writers between them,
nearly every film involving an entirely new group of people.
It's not the writer's fault that blockbusters seem more hollow
and often very bad these days.
It's the studio's dismissiveness of the process
and a power dynamic that makes writers more expendable than the expendables.
This is a similar dynamic for actors and directors,
with studio executives now running the creative decisions
way more than they should.
Going back to Game of Thrones and Westworld,
both of those shows suffered showrunner problems.
Despite what some people believe,
showrunning is a very specific and logistical job
that oversees every aspect of production,
including writing.
It often falls
on the creator or prominent writer of a show. And currently we are suffering a show running
shortage. This is in part because the job itself has been misconstrued as an all powerful creative
force. And also because there's less opportunity for apprenticeships, especially with the streaming
model. I bring this up because part of the WGA's demands is to require shows to keep
writers on during production. And while that sounds weird if you don't know how TV works,
it would not only allow for potentially better rewrites on set, but it would also solve the
showrunning problem by having writers training on set for the position. So yeah, besides just
wanting to pay writers what they deserve, the WGA strike and supporting it
also supports making the shows and movies you love
better in quality.
You know, if that's something you're into
as opposed to this AI written comedy scene
that doesn't have any jokes.
Look, we will do future episodes on the WGA and AI
and you know, probably Star Wars too,
but you get the point.
Along with making our throne games more gooder,
unions also work to protect whistleblowers,
as in people who call out exploitative
and flat out illegal practices of their employers.
Although I'm sure there's a union for slide whistle clowns
considering how big and powerful that industry is.
But these non-clown whistleblowers
aren't only at risk of losing their jobs,
but retaliation from some of the most powerful people
and corporate entities on earth.
Although according to American law,
corporate entities are people
because that allows them to make more money.
Public and private unions are the first lines of defense
for people who take these kinds of public risks, not only on their own behalf, that allows them to make more money. Public and private unions are the first lines of defense for
people who take these kinds of public risks, not only on their own behalf, but to benefit and inform
us all. They're like the Unsullied, except, you know, not unceremoniously killed off. God, they
really fucked that up. A local San Francisco labor union filed a lawsuit against the city and county
of San Francisco today. They allege retali the city and county of San Francisco today.
They allege retaliation for whistleblowing related to public corruption.
That's from last year, when a San Francisco labor union alleged that the city retaliated
against a female employee who complained about not having access to a restroom or
hand-washing facilities, and claimed gender discrimination in how bathrooms were organized.
According to the filing,
the city responded to the 2019 complaint
with both retaliation and intimidation
against a woman who wanted to use the bathroom.
The city's Department of Public Works
is denying the allegations,
probably because it would look bad if they said,
"'Our policy is piss yourself, time is money.'
Only slightly worse than Amazon's
"'Piss in a bottle, time is money. Only slightly worse than Amazon's piss in a bottle,
time is money.
So just to recap,
we've talked about how unions are a net good
and how the existence of unions leads to higher wages,
better working conditions,
and more advantageous and helpful social programs
for everyone.
We've talked about how they just generally
make the world better quality.
Sex feels better when you're
in a union, perhaps. I don't have any steaming hot statistics backing that one up, but yes.
And so we also need to note that unions have a positive political power that stands to benefit
us all. They're better than either political party, but of course, labor unions make any
movement on progressive
causes far more possible, particularly at the federal level, where there's some of the very
few groups with enough organization numbers and funding to actually take on corporate power and
have any shot of victory. Since they're also composed of working class people, unions are
more trusted in red states and majority Republican areas
than the Democratic Party itself.
Democratic Kentucky Governor, Andy Beshear,
owes his position in large part to support
from his state's public school teachers,
while union backed get out the vote campaigns
in swing states likely help to turn the 2022 midterms
in the Democrats' favor.
In other words, if Democrats want to help steer the political conversation away from
bug-shit weirdos hooting about critical race theory and the woke mind virus,
well, then they should probably think about aggressively courting unions.
After all, unions spent $169 million in 2018 on federal elections, mostly on behalf of Democrats.
Democratic candidates won among union members
by a 59 to 39% margin in 2018.
And unions currently have around 68% favorability ratings
across the entire United States,
making them more trusted than most politicians.
In other words, unions overwhelmingly favor
Democratic candidates, and they're seen as more trustworthy by the American people.
They could even help Hogwarts' oldest gym teacher, Joe Biden, get reelected if he can stop busting railroad strikes for a goddamn minute or two.
The bill I'm about to sign ends a difficult rail dispute and helps our nation avoid what, without a doubt, would have been an
economic catastrophe at a very bad time. Yeah, bro, that's why they were striking.
Strikes don't happen at good times. This is the entire point. We will circle back to
Raisin Joe and the choo-choo fight later. But the point here is that unions have always been
extremely important for America's health. But politically speaking, they're especially important now.
The pandemic, its associated great resignation,
and a dropping unemployment rate
have at least temporarily shifted some power
back to workers.
Inflation coupled with the flat wages we mentioned
means that paychecks aren't going quite as far.
Families that could afford three eggs last year are now
down to just two gross eggs, which makes collective bargaining for higher pay suddenly more appealing.
So of course, union membership is up nationwide, like we said before. According to the National
Labor Relations Board, petitions for union representation rose by 57% between October 2022 and March 2023.
Even the cast of Medieval Times Dinner and Tournament has had enough, and they get to ride
horses and sword fight at work. But unfortunately, unions are still facing a number of challenges
that are preventing them from making the country a better place for literally everyone except
a few hundred white men
who stand to become slightly less wealthy.
And we're going to dig more into those challenges
after we journey back into the ad break dimension
to avenge the fallen.
Hey, look over here, it's K Stoll.
You know, people are always asking me,
Katie, what does the K in KSTOL stand for?
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No joke, we are back from ads. We lost the ad dimension of war. Many have died.
But I'm here. I survived. I mean, I'll never be the same again, but it's fine.
It's fine. It's fine. So we talked about how labor unions make work better for all workers and also
just make things better for everyone. Unions and the push for labor rights seem to be coming back as well. And so naturally the GOP is not a fan.
Republicans are trying to squash this newfound resurgence
so they can focus on other ways
to represent the working class,
such as blaming trans people for spree shootings
and getting into legal fights with Disney
about gay pecs on the cheek.
Super helpful stuff.
Seems like actually helping the working class
is one of those things they struggle with
because while they often talk about the need
for conservatives to reach out to the blue collar worker,
kinda seems like they don't have a practical solution,
perhaps because they get a lot of money
from corporate interests just spit balling their patooey,
patooey on them actually.
But that hasn't stopped them from pretending
to be concerned about the issue.
During his inaugural address attended by the largest crowd
in all of crowd history,
Donald liable for sexual abuse Trump said,
"'For too long, a small group in our nation's capital
"'has reaped the rewards of government,
while the people have borne the cost. Washington flourished, but the people did not share in its
wealth. Politicians prospered, but the jobs left and the factories closed. The establishment
protected itself, but not the citizens of our country. Those words are, in a vacuum, correct.
In a not vacuum, however,
those words would have been way more correct
had Trump not spent his presidency fucking over workers.
And now in 2023, it's getting increasingly difficult
to even envision what a pro-business conservative who prioritizes the needs of both workers
and their corporate masters might look like.
After all, this is the political party
that's actively attempting to roll back protections
against child labor nationwide.
One Iowa bill would allow kids as young as 14
to do previously banned dangerous jobs,
provided the work is classified as part of a learning program. kids as young as 14 to do previously banned dangerous jobs,
provided the work is classified
as part of a learning program.
While education in trades and skills is important,
the goal should be education, not cheap labor.
The bill also strips these same jobs
of workers' compensation rights.
Republicans in Ohio and Minnesota
both recently introduced new legislation that would lengthen the permissible workday for teens.
Wisconsin's legislature passed a similar bill, but the state's Democratic governor vetoed it.
A think tank from former Mitt Romney advisor Oren Cass has dedicated itself to outlining a vision for pro-worker conservatism.
But so far, their big proposal has been company unions,
which are jointly owned by employees and management,
which kind of defeats the entire purpose of having a union,
which is to bargain with management.
It's a type of inexplicable compromise
that seems designed not to work,
even if Republicans actually had any interest
in giving workers more leverage, which they probably do not.
But in their defense, these company unions
would encompass all people as they define it.
One time trick corporation.
Ah, Mitt, your name is sports equipment.
But it doesn't stop there.
There are a number of proven effective ways
to weaken and shut down unions.
And American corporations and right-wing politicians
are down for all of them.
One recent example was the Supreme Court's 2018
Janus v. the American Federation of State,
County, and Municipal Employees Council decision,
which overturned 41 years of precedent
by declaring that the First Amendment
protects public employees from having to
pay union dues or fees. All four liberal justices dissented to the decision, which dealt two
simultaneous blows to public sector unions, cutting their overall membership while also
denying them a major source of funding. The anti-union National Right to Work Foundation
estimated that 5 million public employees
would likely skip supporting their unions moving forward.
Unions, of course, only function properly
when all the employees are
united is the word.
That's the whole concept behind collective bargaining.
Individual bargaining is just one person
asking really nicely for a raise,
and it's way less effective than you
and all of your coworkers threatening to strike.
So this move seems fundamentally designed
to fracture unions and reduce their power.
This of course, isn't the only anti-union response
from the GOP.
After taking control of the house in 2022,
Republicans immediately made attacks
on the labor movement a top priority.
Even their rules package included some light union busting
as a fun little treat.
It attempted to eliminate labor unions
for actual staffers within the House of Representatives,
which is fucking ice cold.
Like they work with those people.
They take dumps in stalls next to them taking dumps.
Luckily or hilariously, there's some debate
about whether or not the language they used
actually does anything to nullify
House Stafford's efforts to unionize.
But no one's saying these people know what they're doing,
just that they're trying to do bad things
to whoever they can,
like a drunk circus ape lusting for vengeance.
That's the takeaway here.
The bills the GOP House are currently proposing
have no chance of becoming law
with a Democratic Senate and president,
but they're the sort of proposals
that will likely gain ground the instant that's not the case.
All someone has to do is open the doors for them
like I did with that ape.
The proposals include the Protecting American Jobs Act,
which would prevent the NLRB from prosecuting employers
accused of unfair labor practices,
and the Truth in Employment Act,
which allows employers to discriminate
against job applicants who are likely
to have pro-union views.
So cool.
You might've noticed that these laws come
with very pro-worker or positive phrases with them.
That's called irony.
Just like how the Protecting American Jobs Act
doesn't protect jobs
and the Truth in Employment Act
doesn't have anything to do with telling the truth,
this isn't really about helping the workers.
The term right to work specifically has to do
with opting out of being a union member
if you work a union job.
The ultimate goal of which is to make unions weaker
as opposed to protecting worker
freedom. And perhaps the reason why is because the GOP knows that attacking unions is good for
their party. Research has shown that these laws reduce democratic vote share in elections along
with turnout, while also dampening labor contributions to democratic candidates and
moving overall state policy
in a more conservative direction.
They're also just bad for workers,
associated not just with lower rates of unionization,
but lower wages altogether.
In other words, conservatives would rather fuck over
the working class if it makes their party stronger.
Virginia, for example, is a right to work state
that offers few protections for workers under state law.
And in 2019, they were rated the worst state to work
in the US by Oxfam America.
Virginia is for lovers of fucking over workers.
In a lot of other cases,
the blatant anti-union sentiment is a lot more obvious.
Florida, for example, has of course led the way
in the right to work front.
One bill seeks to expand the Janus decision
by barring public employee union members
from having their fees automatically deducted
from their paychecks.
Under this rule, designed exclusively to serve as a hassle
and extra step to frustrate people
into not paying their dues, members would
have to pay their dues separately. Another bill now passed by Governor Wokeness makes it harder
for teachers to form and maintain their union by raising the percentage of dues paying members
they need to recruit in order to avoid decertification. That rule wouldn't apply to police or firefighter unions, by the way,
which both endorsed defingers in 2022
and typically support Republican candidates.
No, this rule just impacts teachers
because the best laws are always made
to attack specific people you perceive as political enemies.
Anyway, congratulations, Ron,
for successfully using your political power
to attack teachers.
You absolute leech on America.
Meanwhile, similar measures are also being knocked around
in Pennsylvania.
Future presidential loser vying for VP, Nikki Haley,
has made fighting unions a cornerstone
of her entire political career,
even suggesting back when she was South
Carolina's governor that she'd keep jobs out of the state as a way to prevent unions from moving
in. You gotta hand it to her. That's a bold platform. At a Tea Party convention in 2012,
you remember those? They seem almost quaint now. Anyway, at the piss party, Haley boasted about being a union buster,
claiming that it was a boon to South Carolina's economy.
That state now has the lowest union membership rate
in the entire country at just 1.7%.
Incidentally, it also ranks among the nation's
highest poverty rates and highest rates of evictions.
But I'm sure that's just a coincidence
and South Carolina's terrible economy
is due to some other bad thing
the GOP leadership there has done, I guess.
So yes, yes indeed.
Color me Shocktober orange.
The current GOP really hates workers' rights.
That's not an opinion,
but a conclusion based on the evidence we have.
But at least we have the Democrats on our side
who have responded to the sudden and unexpected rise
of unions with a passionate and committed,
yeah, sure.
I mean, they don't hate it.
They're certainly better than the alternative.
Just last month, the Michigan Senate repealed
that state's right to work law
in a huge boost to public unions.
Great stuff.
It's also a major victory for Michigan Democrats
who control the state Senate, House, and governorship
for the first time in 40 years.
And of course, there's this guy.
I see from Pennsylvania and Delaware,
Wall Street didn't build this country,
working people built the country,
the middle class built the country,
and unions built the middle class.
On the eve of his big election,
Joe Big Nuts Biden promised to be
the most pro-union president you've ever seen, Jack.
And there has actually been some real follow through
on this front. His 2021 $1.9
trillion stimulus package included $86 billion in aid for 185 collapsing union pension plans,
covering about 10.7 million active and retiring workers. A 2022 executive order now requires
labor agreements as part of any federal construction project valued at over
$35 million. Last year's Inflation Reduction Act also incentivized new clean energy projects to
pay union rates. AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler told the New York Times that Biden genuinely has
been a more pro-union president than his Democratic predecessor, Barack Obama,
for whom she says labor was often an afterthought.
Too busy with those playlists, I guess.
Biden has also made a number of pro-labor appointments
to agencies like the National Labor Relations Board.
They're newly empowered to go after big companies
like Starbucks and Amazon
for unfair practices and violations. But as with
so many Biden administration policies, it's pretty good sometimes, but not all the time.
Maybe he could use a nap. As we skillfully foreshadowed earlier, Biden signed legislation
forcibly ending a railroad strike, even though the striking workers
didn't get a lot of their demands,
some of which were fundamental requests
most workers take for granted, like sick leave.
So while it's true that railroads are vital
to our supply chain,
and it's disruptive to have the workers on strike,
maybe that's a very good reason to give them days off
when they're fucking sick.
Especially when we're in the middle of a pandemic,
because I don't know, it seems like train operations
are something you want people to be healthy for,
you know, because they can crash and spill chemicals.
Or at times release dangerous,
but possibly innocent fugitives.
Love that movie.
Thanks writers.
Hope you get paid.
Railroad workers were like, we're on strike.
And Biden, like so many Lee Joneses before him said,
I don't care, like from the movie.
Now listen, while appealing,
we're not saying there's some glorious worker revolution
that's just over the horizon.
I feel like we made it pretty clear
that this is an uphill battle.
Decades of rhetoric about lazy teamsters
and greedy teachers alongside targeted
and specific anti-unionization efforts
by many of the nation's largest employers
led to the widespread image of organized labor
as irrelevant, unnecessary, or worse.
Unless you're cops, apparently. Then they're good, and in some cases,
smuggle fentanyl into the country.
But it seems like this anti-union sentiment
is possibly starting to actually change.
The more people become familiar with unions,
and more importantly, the more access
to joining unions they get,
the more power the American working class
will have to fight for a better,
more equitable life for themselves
and, as we've been pointing out, all of us.
And the first step here is messaging,
which is why, as we've been screaming during this episode,
even if you aren't in a union,
you should still be thankful for unions
and want to support them.
Unions make
it possible for people to earn living wages and help keep those wages rising alongside production
instead of dwindling. They give us weekends. They make our schools better. They make hospitals and
healthcare better. They protect us from retaliation, exploitation, and abuse at the hands of
corporations. Unions are one of our best bets
at eliminating poverty in this country by fighting for legislation that guarantees everyone is
equitably compensated for their labor. And they are constantly under attack by the most powerful
people in the history of the world because of the threat that they pose to endless profits.
We shouldn't even have to make an episode pointing this out.
It's absolutely nutter butters and cream
that we have to fight for something
that would make all of our lives better.
But we do.
So here we are explaining all of that
and urging you to support the WGA
by contributing to their strike fund in the comments below.
Opening the gates and seizing the day
for workers and society.
And also, so the next season of Stranger Things
doesn't feature a bunch of 40 year olds
pretending to be in middle school.
I mean, those kids are already like 35 probably.
At this point, they can probably just beat up the mind flayer
with their big adult fists,
which wouldn't be necessary at all
if they had a union like those Newsy kids.
Seriously, is forcing a bunch of kids
to fight monsters not child labor?
Seriously, I am asking,
because I have some pretty neat plans later, actually. I'm gonna break back into the ad dimension
and right our wrongs, lead an army of children
and destroy the monsters and...
Skillshare?
I don't know.
Welcome to the end of the end of the video
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Thank you for subscribing.
Thank you for commenting something nice.
Three things that you did,
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