General Strike

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Re: General Strike

Postby dada » Fri Feb 03, 2017 9:43 pm

MacCruiskeen » Fri Feb 03, 2017 4:53 pm wrote:km artlu, good questions. I think what we are doing here is shooting the breeze, or whistling in the dark.

The General Strike should coincide with a truly gigantic demonstration and end with the levitation of the Pentagon, which is long overdue.


I knew a guy that levitated the Pentagon. At least, he swore he did. I asked him, "the Pentagon levitates, but does it spin?" He said, "brother, does it ever."

Thank you, I'll be here all week.

The response to any effective general strike would be polarizing, venomous. I don't see any way around that. The corporate media will be spitting mad. We may think of it as a way to flex our muscle, make demands, but it would be taken as an act of war by the status quo.

Not that it shouldn't be a tactic. I'm just saying, The violent reaction is how we'd know it was having an impact. So people should be prepared, expect the worst.

I'm wondering, what do I do during a general strike. I'd like to show solidarity. However, my job is taking care of sick and elderly people. And I barely participate in consumer culture already, other than to have the basic necessities for continuing to function on the kafkaesque grid. Do I give up my oh so extravagant existence, join the commune, maybe go live in the mountains like an old taoist? Give away everything but the clothes on my back like st. francis, go cleanse lepers? How far do I have to go? It seems to me the "General strike" doesn't even get to where I am already. Could it be it's an overreaction, utopian grandstanding? Is all or nothing just a posture for those who don't really want to evolve?

I know, I'm just ranting now. It's been another long day. Tomorrow will be, too. Good luck on inspiring and organizing the general strike. I'll support it in whatever way I can. I offer my cranky and annoyingly critical questions and opinions out of a loving heart.
Both his words and manner of speech seemed at first totally unfamiliar to me, and yet somehow they stirred memories - as an actor might be stirred by the forgotten lines of some role he had played far away and long ago.
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Re: General Strike

Postby American Dream » Sat Feb 04, 2017 8:36 am

dada, if you can cook soup during the general strike, I will bring over the vegetables!



https://viewpointmag.com/2017/02/03/bey ... n-march-8/


Beyond Lean-In: For a Feminism of the 99% and a Militant International Strike on March 8

Linda Martín Alcoff, Cinzia Arruzza, Tithi Bhattacharya, Nancy Fraser, Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor and Rasmea Yousef Odeh February 3, 2017

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The massive women’s marches of January 21st may mark the beginning of a new wave of militant feminist struggle. But what exactly will be its focus? In our view, it is not enough to oppose Trump and his aggressively misogynistic, homophobic, transphobic and racist policies; we also need to target the ongoing neoliberal attack on social provision and labor rights. While Trump’s blatant misogyny was the immediate trigger for the massive response on January 21st, the attack on women (and all working people) long predates his administration. Women’s conditions of life, especially those of women of color and of working, unemployed and migrant women, have steadily deteriorated over the last 30 years, thanks to financialization and corporate globalization. Lean-in feminism and other variants of corporate feminism have failed the overwhelming majority of us, who do not have access to individual self-promotion and advancement and whose conditions of life can be improved only through policies that defend social reproduction, secure reproductive justice, and guarantee labor rights. As we see it, the new wave of women’s mobilization must address all these concerns in a frontal way. It must be a feminism for the 99%.

The kind of feminism we seek is already emerging internationally, in struggles across the globe: from the women’s strike in Poland against the abortion ban to the women’s strikes and marches in Latin America against male violence; from the massive women’s demonstration of the last November in Italy to the protests and the women’s strike in defense of reproductive rights in South Korea and Ireland. What is striking about these mobilizations is that several of them combined struggles against male violence with opposition to the casualization of labor and wage inequality, while also opposing homophobia, transphobia and xenophobic immigration policies. Together, they herald a new international feminist movement with an expanded agenda–at once anti-racist, anti-imperialist, anti-heterosexist, and anti-neoliberal.

We want to contribute to the development of this new, more expansive feminist movement.

As a first step, we propose to help build an international strike against male violence and in defense of reproductive rights on March 8th. In this, we join with feminist groups from around thirty countries who have called for such a strike. The idea is to mobilize women, trans-women and all who support them in an international day of struggle–a day of striking, marching, blocking roads, bridges, and squares, abstaining from domestic, care and sex work, boycotting, calling out misogynistic politicians and companies, striking in educational institutions. These actions are aimed at making visible the needs and aspirations of those whom lean-in feminism ignored: women in the formal labor market, women working in the sphere of social reproduction and care, and unemployed and precarious working women.

In embracing a feminism for the 99%, we take inspiration from the Argentinian coalition Ni Una Menos. Violence against women, as they define it, has many facets: it is domestic violence, but also the violence of the market, of debt, of capitalist property relations, and of the state; the violence of discriminatory policies against lesbian, trans and queer women, the violence of state criminalization of migratory movements, the violence of mass incarceration, and the institutional violence against women’s bodies through abortion bans and lack of access to free healthcare and free abortion. Their perspective informs our determination to oppose the institutional, political, cultural, and economic attacks on Muslim and migrant women, on women of color and working and unemployed women, on lesbian, gender nonconforming, and trans-women.

The women’s marches of January 21st have shown that in the United States too a new feminist movement may be in the making. It is important not to lose momentum. Let us join together on March 8 to strike, walk out, march and demonstrate. Let us use the occasion of this international day of action to be done with lean-feminism and to build in its place a feminism for the 99%, a grass-roots, anti-capitalist feminism–a feminism in solidarity with working women, their families, and their allies throughout the world.


Linda Martín Alcoff is a professor of philosophy at Hunter College and the CUNY Graduate Center and the author of Visible Identities: Race, Gender, and the Self. She is currently at work on a new book on sexual violence, and another on decolonizing epistemology.

Cinzia Arruzza is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the New School for Social Research in New York and a feminist and socialist activist. She is the author of the author of Dangerous Liaisons: The Marriages and Divorces of Marxism and Feminism.

Tithi Bhattacharya teaches history at Purdue University. Her first book, The Sentinels of Culture: Class, Education, and the Colonial Intellectual in Bengal (Oxford, 2005), is about the obsession with culture and education in the middle class. Her work has been published in journals such as the Journal of Asian Studies, South Asia Research and New Left Review, and she is currently working on a book project entitled Uncanny Histories: Fear, Superstition and Reason in Colonial Bengal.

Nancy Fraser Nancy Fraser is Loeb Professor of Philosophy and Politics at the New School for Social Research. Her books include Redistribution or Recognition and Fortunes of Feminism.

Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor is an assistant professor in Princeton University's Center for African American Studies and the author of From #BlackLivesMatter to Black Liberation.

Rasmea Yousef Odeh is the associate director of the Arab American Action Network, leader of that group's Arab Women's Committee, and a former member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
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Re: General Strike

Postby brainpanhandler » Sat Feb 04, 2017 10:27 am

km artlu » Fri Feb 03, 2017 4:46 pm wrote:Who would join the strike on the 17th? Students and professors? Baristas? Bloggers? Uber?


Uber? Fuck Uber. Fuck Kalanick. Kalanick accepted an offer to join Trump's advisory council. When the NY taxi union struck at JFK Uber turned off it's surge pricing and continued to operate, thereby undermining the strike. #deleteuber went viral and 200,000 people deleted Uber off their phones. Uber went into damage control and Kalanick resigned from Trump's economic advisory council and donated 3 million to the ACLU after LYFT had donated 1 million. Fuck Uber. The "sharing economy" is a scam.

A general strike is not going to happen. A boycott though?

Can we please do this? https://grabyourwallet.org/ Pretty please?
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Re: General Strike

Postby Iamwhomiam » Sat Feb 04, 2017 12:00 pm

And as a top-off for that scabby news ^^^^ Uber announced it will be investing in driverless cars.
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Re: General Strike

Postby brainpanhandler » Sat Feb 04, 2017 2:13 pm

Iamwhomiam » Sat Feb 04, 2017 11:00 am wrote:And as a top-off for that scabby news ^^^^ Uber announced it will be investing in driverless cars.


They've done more than that. Uber just does whatever the fuck it wants.



I can't wait to see what the teamsters do when Uber and their ilk try to put driverless trucks on the road.
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Re: General Strike

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Sat Feb 04, 2017 2:33 pm

brainpanhandler » Sat Feb 04, 2017 1:13 pm wrote:I can't wait to see what the teamsters do when Uber and their ilk try to put driverless trucks on the road.


Indeed, watching them come to grips with the fact they have no actual power anymore and can only complain as the future marches over their faces will be quite entertaining.

More entertaining still will be watching their myriad organized crime connections get exposed thanks to Uber's largesse & army of paid-off journalists breaking the stories.
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Re: General Strike

Postby Cordelia » Sat Feb 04, 2017 2:49 pm


I was behind the wheel when a self-driving Uber failed — here's what happens


Danielle Muoio Dec. 24, 2016

Uber launched its second pilot program in San Francisco last week, but the day it launched, a car ran straight through a red light.


Uber has since said the incident was due to human error, but it's not clear whether that means a person drove through the light or failed to stop the car from doing so while it was in autonomous mode. Either way, Uber knows its cars will fail from time-to-time, which is why a safety driver and engineer sit upfront while the cars autonomously drive people.

(Uber shut down the San Francisco pilot program on Wednesday after the California DMV revoked the cars' registration.)

Uber let us get behind the wheel for the launch of its pilot program in Pittsburgh in September, and we got to see firsthand what it's like when the car fails and needs a driver to take over.

Keep in mind that Uber used self-driving Volvo XC90s for the San Francisco pilot instead of the self-driving Ford Fusions in Pittsburgh. As a result, the interface we experienced is slightly different from the one in the Volvo cars.

But you can scroll down to get a basic sense of what it's like when the robot cars need help:

Continued.......
http://www.businessinsider.com/uber-sel ... e-safely-1
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Re: General Strike

Postby Cordelia » Sat Feb 04, 2017 4:14 pm



Uber’s Self-Driving Truck Makes Its First Delivery: 50,000 Beers



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Autonomous cars are sexy, but trucks are more practical. And they’ll almost certainly be here sooner than cars, because the industry desperately needs them. The trucking industry hauls 70 percent of the nation’s freight—about 10.5 billion tons annually—and simply doesn’t have enough drivers. The American Trucking Association pegs the shortfall at 48,000 drivers, and says it could hit 175,000 by 2024.

For the foreseeable future, the driver will remain an essential part of the system. But with Otto, they can can do something other than deal with the stress of driving. Like practice yoga.

https://www.wired.com/2016/10/ubers-sel ... 000-beers/
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Re: General Strike

Postby American Dream » Sat Feb 04, 2017 10:39 pm

In 1971, The People Didn't Just March on Washington -- They Shut It Down

L. A. Kauffman
February 4, 2017
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The most influential large-scale political action of the '60s was actually in 1971, and you've never heard of it. It was called the Mayday action, and it provides invaluable lessons for today.

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The largest and most audacious direct action in US history is also among the least remembered, a protest that has slipped into deep historical obscurity. It was a protest against the Vietnam War, but it wasn’t part of the storied sixties, having taken place in 1971, a year of nationwide but largely unchronicled ferment. To many, infighting, violence, and police repression had effectively destroyed “the movement” two years earlier in 1969.

That year, Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), the totemic organization of the white New Left, had disintegrated into dogmatic and squabbling factions; the Black Panther Party, meanwhile, had been so thoroughly infiltrated and targeted by law enforcement that factionalism and paranoia had come to eclipse its expansive program of revolutionary nationalism. But the war had certainly not ended, and neither had the underlying economic and racial injustices that organizers had sought to address across a long decade of protest politics. If anything, the recent flourishing of heterodox new radicalisms—from the women’s and gay liberation movements to radical ecology to militant Native American, Chicano, Puerto Rican, and Asian-American movements—had given those who dreamed of a world free of war and oppression a sobering new awareness of the range and scale of the challenges they faced.

On May 3, 1971, after nearly two weeks of intense antiwar protest in Washington, DC, ranging from a half-million-person march to large-scale sit-ins outside the Selective Service, Justice Department, and other government agencies, some 25,000 young people set out to do something brash and extraordinary: disrupt the basic functioning of the federal government through nonviolent action. They called themselves the Mayday Tribe, and their slogan was as succinct as it was ambitious: “If the government won’t stop the war, we’ll stop the government.” The slogan was of course hyperbolic— even if Washington, DC were completely paralyzed by protest for a day or week or a month, that would not halt the collection of taxes, the delivery of mail, the dropping of bombs, or countless other government functions—but that made it no less electrifying as a rallying cry, and no less alarming to the Nixon administration (Nixon’s White House chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman, called it “potentially a real threat”). An elaborate tactical manual distributed in advance detailed twenty-one key bridges and traffic circles for protesters to block nonviolently, with stalled vehicles, improvised barricades, or their bodies. The immediate goal was to snarl traffic so completely that government employees could not get to their jobs. The larger objective was “to create the spectre of social chaos while maintaining the support or at least toleration of the broad masses of American people.”

The protest certainly interfered with business as usual in Washington: traffic was snarled, and many government employees stayed home. Others commuted to their offices before dawn, and three members of Congress even resorted to canoeing across the Potomac to get themselves to Capitol Hill. But most of the planned blockades held only briefly, if at all, because most of the protesters were arrested before they even got into position. Thanks to the detailed tactical manual, the authorities knew exactly where protesters would be deployed. To stop them from paralyzing the city, the Nixon Administration had made the unprecedented decision to sweep them all up, using not just police but actual military forces.

Under direct presidential orders, Attorney General John Mitchell mobilized the National Guard and thousands of troops from the Army and the Marines to join the Washington, DC police in rounding up everyone suspected of participating in the protest. As one protester noted, “Anyone and everyone who looked at all freaky was scooped up off the street.” A staggering number of people— more than 7,000—were locked up before the day was over, in what remain the largest mass arrests in US history.

Many observers, including sympathetic ones, called it a rout for the protesters. “It was universally panned as the worst planned, worst executed, most slovenly, strident and obnoxious peace action ever committed,” wrote esteemed antiwar journalist Mary McGrory in the Boston Globe afterwards. In the New York Times, reporter Richard Halloran flatly declared, “The Tribe members failed to achieve their goal. And they appear to have had no discernible impact on President Nixon’s policy in Vietnam.” Even Rennie Davis, the Chicago 7 defendant and New Left leader who had originally conceived of the Mayday action, announced at a press conference that the protest had failed.

But the government’s victory, if you can call it that, came only as a result of measures that turned the workaday bustle of the district’s streets into what William H. Rehnquist, the assistant attorney general who would later become chief justice of the Supreme Court, called “qualified martial law.” While the government hadn’t been stopped, there was a very real sense that it had been placed under siege by its own citizens, with the nation’s capital city transformed into “a simulated Saigon,” as reporter Nicholas von Hoffman put it in the Washington Post. Nixon felt compelled to announce in a press conference, “The Congress is not intimidated, the President is not intimidated, this government is going to go forward,” statements that only belied his profound unease. White House aide Jeb Magruder later noted that the protest had “shaken” Nixon and his staff, while CIA director Richard Helms called Mayday “a very damaging kind of event,” noting that it was “one of the things that was putting increasing pressure on the administration to try and find some way to get out of the war.”

Mayday, the scruffy and forgotten protest that helped speed US withdrawal from Vietnam, changed the course of activist history as well. It came at a time of crisis for the left—indeed, the distress call embedded in the mobilization’s name could apply equally well to the state of American radical movements in 1971 as to the conduct of the war they opposed. The last major national protest against the Vietnam War, Mayday was also a crucial first experiment with a new kind of radicalism, one rooted as much in its practices as in its ideas or demands. This quixotic attempt to “stop the government”—so flawed in its execution, yet so unnerving in its effects—was organized in a different manner than any protest before it, in ways that have influenced most American protest movements since.

The history of American radicalism since the sixties, when it’s been considered at all, has typically been misunderstood as a succession of disconnected issue- and identity-based movements, erupting into public view and then disappearing, perhaps making headlines and winning fights along the way but adding up to little more. Mayday 1971 provides the perfect starting point for a very different tale, a story about deep political continuities, hidden connections, and lasting influences. It’s a story rooted less in radicals’ ideas about how the world ought to change than the evolving forms of action they’ve used to actually change it—whether hastening the end of an unpopular war, blocking the construction of nuclear power plants, revolutionizing the treatment of AIDS, stalling toxic trade deals, or reforming brutally racist police practices. Many movements contributed to this long process of political reinvention, but feminism and queer radicalism played special, central roles, profoundly redefining the practice of activism in ways that have too rarely been acknowledged. And because this is an American story, it’s shaped at every level by questions and divisions of race. The story begins with a major racial shift in the practice of disruptive activism, as the direct-action tradition refined by the black civil rights movement in the fifties and sixties to such powerful effect was taken up and transformed by mostly white organizers in the seventies and eighties.

* * *

The Mayday direct action took place a year after the Nixon Administration invaded Cambodia, an escalation of the Vietnam War that had provoked angry walk-outs on more than a hundred college and university campuses. At one of these, Ohio’s Kent State University, National Guardsmen fired into a crowd of protesters, killing four and wounding nine; ten days later, police killed two students and wounded twelve more at Jackson State University in Mississippi. The deaths sparked strikes at hundreds more campuses and inspired thousands who had never protested before to take to the streets. By the end of May 1970, it’s estimated that half the country’s student population—perhaps several million youth—took part in antiwar activities, which, in the words of former University of California president Clark Kerr, “seemed to exhaust the entire known repertoire of forms of dissent,” including the bombing or burning of nearly one hundred campus buildings with military ties. So many people were radicalized during the spring 1970 uprising that the antiwar movement suddenly swelled with a new wave of organizers spread all throughout the country, many in places that had seen relatively little activism before then.

To read the rest of this book excerpt click here.
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Re: General Strike

Postby brainpanhandler » Sun Feb 05, 2017 4:00 am

Wombaticus Rex » Sat Feb 04, 2017 1:33 pm wrote:
brainpanhandler » Sat Feb 04, 2017 1:13 pm wrote:I can't wait to see what the teamsters do when Uber and their ilk try to put driverless trucks on the road.


Indeed, watching them come to grips with the fact they have no actual power anymore and can only complain as the future marches over their faces will be quite entertaining.


I'm imagining they'll blow the fucking things up or at a minimum make them inoperable. Maybe I shouldn't be anticipating that with so much relish, but I have a personal loathing for Uber. Conceivably the rise of the robots in the absence of any sort of equitable redistribution of the increased productivity will finally ignite people to rebel. The country would come to a grinding halt if the trucks stopped for even a short time.
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Re: General Strike

Postby American Dream » Sun Feb 05, 2017 4:03 am

Certain Teamster locals might have the power to help effect an East Coast weed shortage but who would profit from that?
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Re: General Strike

Postby Blue » Sun Feb 05, 2017 12:39 pm

brainpanhandler » Sun Feb 05, 2017 2:00 am wrote:
I'm imagining they'll blow the fucking things up or at a minimum make them inoperable. Maybe I shouldn't be anticipating that with so much relish, but I have a personal loathing for Uber. Conceivably the rise of the robots in the absence of any sort of equitable redistribution of the increased productivity will finally ignite people to rebel. The country would come to a grinding halt if the trucks stopped for even a short time.


We need some 21st Century Monkey Wrench Gangs.

http://www.abbeyweb.net/books/ea/monkey_wrench.html

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Re: General Strike

Postby Luther Blissett » Sun Feb 05, 2017 1:03 pm

The Rich and the Corporate remain in their hundred-year fever visions of Bolsheviks taking their stuff - JackRiddler
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Re: General Strike

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Sun Feb 05, 2017 1:10 pm

American Dream » Sun Feb 05, 2017 3:03 am wrote:Certain Teamster locals might have the power to help effect an East Coast weed shortage but who would profit from that?


Small businesses run by Americans who didn't sell out to Mexican cartels?

Anyways, one thing I expect the Teamsters to do is make damn sure the guy sitting in the self-driving trucks doing yoga is a teamster.

Just like I expect Uber and Lyft and Boeing and Ford and whoever else to make damn sure that guy is an H-1B.
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Re: General Strike

Postby Cordelia » Sun Feb 05, 2017 4:11 pm

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We may not choose the parameters of our destiny. But we give it its content. ~ Dag Hammarskjold 'Waymarks'
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