________________________________________
From: Portside Moderator [[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, July 07, 2011 1:57 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: The Meaning of Blair Mountain

The Meaning of Blair Mountain

By John Case

Submitted to Portside by the author

July 6, 2011

The Battle of Blair Mountain, in Logan County West Virginia
was the largest armed insurrection since the Civil War. For
five days in late August and early September 1921 15,000
miners confronted an army of police and strikebreakers
backed by coal operators during a struggle by the miners for
the right to collectively bargain, and to end horrendous
working conditions and poverty in  the southwestern West
Virginia coalfields. One million rounds were fired and the
US Army intervened by presidential order.

Management and their shameful scab friends prevailed in the
short run, but the UMWA returned in the 1930's and overcame
all obstacles to unionization. A monument to the battle was
established on Blair Mountain -- a record of and tribute to
the most militant labor struggle in American history,
one in which thousands of miners faced down death,
imprisonment, terror, evictions from company housing, and
firings to defend the dignity of miners, their families and
communities. The battle was memorialized in the movie
Matewan, directed by John Sayles.  Blair mountain was added
to the National Register of Historic Places in 2009, but
coal operators pressured to have it removed in 2010. Why?
Because they want to blow it up in a Mountaintop Removal
Orgy that will blot out the history, capture a few seams of
coal, and poison downstream waters, leaving a mountain sized
garbage dump in their the wake.

Despite being an icon of labor rights, a chunk of Blair
mountain was purchased by Coal operator Massey Energy. They
plan to destroy it -- and the legacy for which it stands.
Massey Energy is already tarnished by the unsafe conditions
which led to the 2009 explosion in its Upper Branch mine
that killed 29 miners. Don Blankenship, the loud-mouthed
former Massey chairman, was forced to resign after saying an
unacceptable number of very stupid things about the
environment, climate change, and mine safety, and by
attempting to buy WV supreme court judges. Massey had to be
sold to Alpha Group (a holding company sponsored in part by
George Soros) to get out from under the sting of
Blankenship's blunders.

Environmental activists and celebrities from around the
nation have descended on Blair Mountain as a symbol of the
social and environmental costs of mountaintop removal (MTR)
mining. When you get to the point where wiping out -- and
poisoning with chemicals --  a complete mountain is the
"only profitable" means of extracting a modest seam of coal
-- its time to RE- THINK coal mining!

During the week ending June 10, over 500 Community leaders,
union members, celebrities and conservationists honored the
Blair mountain battle, called for an end to surface mining,
and demanded safe, sustainable jobs in Appalachia in an
event dubbed Appalachia Rising: The March on Blair Mountain.
Marchers followed the same route as the coal miners who
marched to Blair Mountain in 1921. Robert F Kennedy Jr was
the featured political speaker. Entertainers Ashley Judd,
Emmylou Harris and others participated and contributed as
well.

Numerous union members joined the week-long march. However,
the UMWA withdrew its early endorsement of the march
because, while it opposes Blair Mountain MTR  for obvious
historical reasons, it does not oppose  MTR in general, a
brutal and polluting technology -- but one on which the
remaining mining jobs in modern Appalachia are increasingly
dependent.. It is almost impossible for an industrial union
in the US labor relations environment to oppose the
industrial policies of the industry in which its members
work. The company owns the jobs, the unions negotiate only
over SOME of the effects of management rights.

Environmental activists on the march were disappointed the
UMWA "kept its distance". On the other hand, the activists
have given little importance to the most profound question
for coal communities: "what do we do when the coal is gone?"
Where are the scholarships, retraining, health care and
safety nets for them? Heartfelt questions that cause the
blood to rise among miners! But, As former Senator Robert
Byrd, a man who fought long and hard to improve those
protections for miners, prophesied in 2009: "the major
threats to the coal industry are not regulations on
mountaintop mining or other environmental laws. Rather they
come from rigid mind sets, depleting coal reserves and the
declining demand for coal as more power plants shift to
biomass and other resources as a way to reduce emissions,"
he said. "West Virginians can choose to anticipate change
and adapt to it, or they can choose to resist and be overrun
by it."

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