Why Aren't There More Radicals at Work?
Radicals at Work
February 8, 2010

http://www.radicalsatwork.org/content/why-aren-t-there-more-radicals-work

Works sucks and it's been getting worse in the U.S. for
decades.

So why aren't there more radicals at work?

For the first part in a series about radicals and labor
today, we asked a dozen radical workplace organizers-
teachers, Teamsters, telephone technicians, union
organizers, and more-that question. Read what they had
to say.

The activists we talked to blamed the American Dream,
persistent racism, and a feeling that struggle and
collective won't do any good. They also laid some of
the blame on radicals themselves, for failing to
connect with working people.

It hasn't always been this way. Before World War II,
radicals in the United States had much deeper roots in
the working class. Employers, the government, and even
union officials purged those Reds after the war.

If we want to rebuild those connections, we have to
understand the barriers that hold us back.

American Dreams

For over a century, historians and organizers have said
that American prosperity-and the hope of getting a
slice of the pie-explained why there was "no socialism
in America."

Millions of workers still see the path to success
through individual hard-work, not collective struggle.

"There's a sense among some-not all-that `I got to
where I am by hard work, and other people should be
able to as well,'" said a telephone technician in New
York.

That hope doesn't just apply to people who've "made it"
and are living the American Dream.

"Most of the folks that I worked with in the Army,
construction and restaurant industries, ended up in
those low-wage jobs because of a lack of resources and
education," said a union organizer in Pennsylvania. "A
good percentage still subscribed to the whole `pull
your self up by the bootstraps' bit, even though they
were clearly struggling with no end in sight."

The same is true for jobs with a lot of prestige-even
though many of those jobs are getting worse.

Take college professors. There are way more Ph.D.s
looking for work than tenure-track positions. Many are
getting by cobbling together part-time adjunct work.

But that doesn't stop many Ph.D.s from hoping. "In grad
school TAs think: `I don't need a union, I'm going to
get a cushy job,'" said a college professor in New
York. "That's just not really the reality anymore."

"Then when someone lands a full-time position, they
think, `I realized my goal and compared to most people
I have it good, so no there's no need to rock the
boat,'" she said.

American Nightmares

For years, many white workers achieved their own
American Dream by keeping workers of color out of
"white" jobs, "white" neighborhoods, and "white"
schools.

Competition over jobs, housing, and schools has led
many white workers to identify as white first, workers
second-if at all.

And that's still true today. "A lot of the white folks
I work with are really drawn to the Tea Party
movement," said a telephone operator in the South.
"Part of it is backlash against having a Black
president. Part of it is backlash against immigrant
workers in their communities."

"White workers often respond to exploitation by pushing
others downwards rather than attempting to tear down
those at the top," said a union organizer out West.

Today, those fears are played up by the right-wing
press. "A lot of my co-workers get almost all of their
news of the world from the New York Post or other
tabloid papers, supplemented by the local news or CNN,"
said a telephone technician we interviewed. "There's
almost no counter-weight to the conservative B.S. they
hear on the radio, the TV news, the tabloid papers,"
she said.

Historically, many unions have helped to confront
working-class racism. Unions formed in the great
upsurge of the 1930s brought together workers across
the color line, promoted the leadership of workers of
color, and challenged white racism.

But historian and activist Bill Fletcher points out
that many U.S. unions have followed a different
strategy: rather than including all workers, some
unions have reserved jobs for white men by excluding
workers of color and women.

That practice goes back to the nineteenth century, when
craft unions kept Black workers out of skilled trades,
and unions promoted legislation to exclude Chinese
workers from the U.S. And that's why white males still
dominate the construction trades to this day.

We're Getting Our Butts Kicked

It's hard for most workers to imagine an alternative to
those individual survival strategies offered by the
American Dream and racism. Why?

Being a radical means that you think ordinary people
can improve our lives and change the world when we work
together. But the organizers we talked to said that
most workers feel alone, isolated, and powerless.

"People don't feel empowered in life. Their entire life
they've been socialized to defer to authority," said a
UPS part-timer in Pennsylvania. "People aren't sure
they deserve better. People have never seen collective
action."

A big part of that powerlessness is the weakness of the
labor movement. Factory closings. Lockouts and
permanent replacements. Tough anti-union employers:
Organized labor has been getting its butt kicked since
the 1980s. Only 12.3 percent of workers in the U.S.
were in unions in 2009.

Even when workers are in unions, many don't feel the
power.
A New York nurse sums up the problem: "Nurses feel
powerless and vulnerable. Management has managed to
structure things in a way that reinforces that feeling,
and there is no history of recent collective struggle
and solidarity to chip away at that overwhelming
feeling."

For decades, officials treated their unions like a
business-not a social movement. When employers went on
the attack in the 1980s, they were caught off guard,
and the union movement is still scrambling to respond
today.

That's not to say that there isn't fightback on the
job. But the barriers to collective action are high:
Most workers don't have any experience in fighting
back. And most aren't in unions. And many unions have
given up challenging "management's right" to run their
business-even when workers pay the price.

Sometimes workers who speak out are sidelined-either by
the employer, or even by their own union officials:
"When anyone speaks out about some injustice on the
job, they are called a troublemaker and harassed until
they learn their lesson: just do your job and shut up,"
said a union dissident in the longshore industry.

Given all that, it's no wonder most workers choose
individual, not collective, solutions to their
problems.

Freaks and Geeks

Even if they are open to alternative ideas, most
workers in the United States have never met a radical.

"There is very little exposure to radical culture: arts
and literature that is motivated by radical politics,
news analysis of the effects of capitalism on our
lives, a sense of history of radical struggles, a
familiarity of leaders of radical movements," said a
former hotel worker on the West Coast.

Many people associate radicals with the mistakes and
tragedies of Russia under Stalin. "They think that's
Stalin's Russia was real socialism-and that socialism
is doomed to failure. Totalitarian Communism couldn't
be more different than grassroots, bottom-up
socialism," said a web designer in New York.

But without contact with real radicals, most people
don't make that distinction.

Even when they have met a radical, that experience
isn't always that good. For many, their first
experience meeting a radical is someone trying to sell
them a newspaper, or getting in an argument with them.

Let's face it-we're partly to blame for our isolation
because so often we fail to meet workers where they're
at.

All that doesn't mean that people don't have some
radical ideas. Here's what one teacher in a small town
in the mountain states said: "One reason that people
who have left views on a wide range of issues don't
identify as radicals is because they don't know what it
means to be a radical, or all the self-professed
radicals they've met have been off-putting in some
way."

"In my case, this was definitely true until I met
radicals who seemed smart, relatable and sane," she
said. "Once I met them, and they exposed me to more
radical ideas and perspectives, I was ready to join!"

Breaking Through the Isolation

Radicals haven't always been so isolated.

Scratch a union struggle before World War II in the
United States, and you'd find some Reds. Anarchists at
the Haymarket. Socialists in the garment industry.
Communists in the auto union. Trotskyists in the
Teamsters. Reds inspired and led some of the greatest
organizing drives and union battles in our history.

Socialists, Communists, and Trostkyists were on the
frontlines of building the CIO during the thirties and
helped build big industrial unions in meatpacking,
auto, steel, and transportation.

But in the Red Scare after World War II, the union
leadership purged these Reds-and since then, most
radicals have done a pretty poor job of re-connecting
those roots.

Here's what socialist activist and theorist Kim Moody
had to say about that:

At no time since the 1950s has the isolation of
socialists from the working class been greater.
Socialist organizations in the U.S., including
Solidarity, remain small and largely populated by
people with an educated middle class background. Many
socialist groups' connection with the working class is
limited to support work for various strikes. The gap
between the socialist organizations and the active
sections of the working class who are the organizers of
much of the resistance to the employers and rebellions
within the unions is too great. The gap has many
facets: some arise from different class origins, others
from the habit of defeat on the left and the proclivity
for symbolic actions and campaigns that flows from it.
Most of the gap, however, is one of consciousness. The
left with its highly theorized, often moralistic
politics, and the worker activists with an un-theorized
pragmatic outlook are often like trains passing in the
night. This can be true even where left groups or
individuals work within the unions. (Kim Moody. The
Rank-and-File Strategy for Building a Socialist
Movement in the United States. Solidarity. 2000)

Some radicals are trying to break through that
isolation-including all of the activists we talked to.
You'll hear about what they're doing differently in
future articles in this series.

Now tell us what you think.

Why do you think that there aren't there more radicals
at work? Share your ideas and your stories in the
comments below.
http://www.radicalsatwork.org/content/why-aren-t-there-more-radicals-work

_______________________________________________
Marxism-Thaxis mailing list
[email protected]
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism-thaxis

Reply via email to