The Opinion Pages | Op-Ed Contributor 

When Work Loses Its Dignity
By SHERROD BROWN       NOV. 17, 2016 Cleveland — Start with this: When you call 
us the Rust Belt, you demean our work and diminish who we are.To create wealth 
in America, we make it, we grow it or we mine it. In the industrial Midwest, we 
do all three. Ohio has the largest manufacturing work force in the country 
aside from California (which has three times our population) and Texas (more 
than twice our size). And we make things with dignity.Many years ago, as a 
state representative, I spent countless hours at United Steelworkers Local 169 
in Mansfield, a small industrial city north of Columbus. I would listen to 
workers who stopped in at the hall before or after their shifts. I learned how 
they made steel and how they built cars. I learned that strikes are always an 
act of back-against-the-wall desperation because workers never make up for the 
wages lost, no matter how good the new contract is or how briefly they are on 
the picket line.They worked hard. Most gladly accepted six-day workweeks 
because of the overtime pay. Most of these workers, especially those lucky 
enough to carry a union card, had a shot at upward mobility. They owned modest 
houses, they could buy new cars every four or five years, and they could send 
their children to the local Ohio State campus or to North Central Technical 
College.Few of these workers, white or black, expected to have the 
opportunities I had as a doctor’s kid. But they understood intuitively that 
their daughter at Johnny Appleseed Junior High could have more than they 
did.Their goal — to achieve the American dream and send their children up the 
economic ladder — was more difficult for them to reach than it was for my 
parents. More things could go wrong for them: a layoff, a strike, a work 
injury, an illness in the family, each coming with more devastating 
consequences than those life deals out to more affluent white families.I 
learned about the role circumstance played in success — where you were born, 
how much education and income your parents had, what neighborhood you lived in, 
what school you attended. At the union hall, we often discussed books, articles 
and news about strikes and heroes of the labor movement. They were novels like 
Wallace Stegner’s “Joe Hill” and John Steinbeck’s “Grapes of Wrath” that tell 
the very real stories of the lives of American workers, stories that too many 
in Washington have forgotten or ignored for far too long.As the Rev. Dr. Martin 
Luther King Jr. taught us, all work has dignity and importance, whether done by 
a street sweeper, Michelangelo or Beethoven. People take pride in the things 
they make, in serving their communities in hospitals or schools, in making 
their contribution to society with a job well done.But over the past 40 years, 
as people have worked harder for less pay and fewer benefits, the value of 
their work has eroded. When we devalue work, we threaten the pride and dignity 
that come from it.American workers understood then and understand now that you 
build a society and an economy from the middle class out. Trickle-down 
economics was discredited decades ago. Workers paid good wages are also good 
consumers, which means companies can sell more of their products. Executives 
have always been paid well, but nothing close to the 300 to 1 pay ratio 
separating chief executives from workers today. Most Americans have always 
wanted to believe that their children’s lives will be better than their 
own.Ohio workers know they toil harder and are paid less than their parents, 
and have less power to control the hours they work and their share of the 
wealth they create for their employer. This diverse force feels betrayed by 
trade and tax policies that create immense affluence at the top and take wealth 
from workers. Much of Washington — and that now includes Donald J. Trump — 
doesn’t seem to understand this.Ohio families will watch to see if the new 
president follows the billionaire agenda of the Republican leadership in 
Washington, which has called for overturning a new rule that increases overtime 
pay for many workers — an action that would strip thousands of dollars in wages 
from 130,000 of Ohio’s moderate-income workers. They will measure this 
president to see if he continues to oppose increasing the minimum wage, which 
is worth nearly 20 percent less than in 1980. Workers will expect the president 
to keep his promise of a trade agenda that puts their jobs above corporate 
profits. And they will scrutinize whether he will throw in with Washington’s 
moneyed interests at the expense of middle-class and working-class families.If 
President Trump takes the likely path that almost all Washington Republicans 
hope — tax cuts for the rich, an easing up on Wall Street, more voter 
suppression — Ohio workers will feel betrayed. Again. And they will 
respond.Sherrod Brown, a Democratic senator from Ohio, is the author of “Myths 
of Free Trade: Why American Trade Policy Has Failed.”  
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/17/opinion/when-work-loses-its-dignity.html?action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=opinion-c-col-right-region&region=opinion-c-col-right-region&WT.nav=opinion-c-col-right-region&_r=0
  From: Jack Berger [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, November 02, 2016 9:39 PM
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Cc: 'Dan Jorgensen'; 'Taylor Stephen D.'; 'John Kulp'; '[email protected]'; 
'[email protected]'; '[email protected]'; 'Crabtree Steve'; 
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Subject: Donald Trump Voters, Just Hear Me Out  The purpose of this message is 
less about indicating what a loathsome turd -- Donald Trump is (utilizing 
Kulp-ese argot), but more aimed more at giving IRWAs a much needed education 
since they all have shit for brains, and couldn’t understand reality even if 
they put their pea-brained minds to work at it.  I refer here to my oft-called 
“Challenge of the Century.”   At one time, I quoted the statistics of my 
favorite steel plant in Gary, Indiana (I’m not sure Mike Pence even knows it’s 
there), but Tom Friedman today provided an incredibly telling update, to that 
point, that drives home the nature of the problem:  But there is an even more 
important reason Trump supporters, particularly less-educated white males, 
should be wary of his bluster: His policies won’t help them. Trump promises to 
bring their jobs back. But most of their jobs didn’t go to a Mexican. They went 
to a microchip.The idea that large numbers of manual factory jobs can be 
returned to America if we put up a wall with Mexico or renegotiate our trade 
deals is a fantasy. Trump ignores the fact that manufacturing is still by far 
the largest sector of the U.S. economy. Indeed, our factories now produce twice 
what they did in 1984 — but with one-third fewer workers.Trump can’t change 
that. Machines and software will keep devouring, and spawning, more work of all 
kinds. Did you hear that IBM’s cognitive computer, Watson, helped to create a 
pop song, “Not Easy,” with the Grammy-winning producer Alex da Kid? The song 
was released on Oct. 21, IBM noted, and within 48 hours it climbed to No. 4 on 
iTunes’s Hot 
Tracks.http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/02/opinion/donald-trump-voters-just-hear-me-out.html?action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=opinion-c-col-right-region&region=opinion-c-col-right-region&WT.nav=opinion-c-col-right-regionThis
 is another reason Ayn Rand is also full of shit.  
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