-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Sept. 12, 2002
issue of Workers World newspaper
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BY MUMIA ABU-JAMAL FROM DEATH ROW:
WAR ON THE WATERFRONT

In times of war, even one so nebulous as the "War On 
Terrorism," there are wars within wars. Wars not merely 
fought abroad, but little, internal wars of
interests battling for dominance.

With the elevation of George W. Bush to the nation's highest 
office by the Supreme Court, business interests know they 
have "their guy" in the White House, and they are now trying 
to change the rules of the game, using government muscle and 
federal power to threaten labor into compliance with their 
bosses' interests. This can be seen clearest in the struggle 
between the Pacific Maritime Association (PMA--the 
waterfront employers) and the International Longshore and 
Ware house Union (ILWU--the unionized workers).

The PMA allowed the labor contract to expire on July 1 and 
has issued harsh demands to the unions that would seriously 
undermine long-standing and hard-fought labor rights. The 
PMA wants to introduce new technology into the shipping 
industry, which the ILWU has agreed to; but the PMA wants to 
use these technologies to circumvent the time-honored union 
hiring hall, a move that cuts into pivotal union power.

The union hiring hall didn't always exist; it came into 
being as a result of long, hard, deadly struggles, organized 
not by union leaders, but by everyday rank-and-file ILWU 
members, who pushed the Great Maritime Strike of 1934 into 
labor history.

Historian Howard Zinn writes that "[L]ongshoremen on the 
West Coast, in a rank-and-file insurrection ... held a 
convention, demanded the abolition of the shape-up (a kind 
of early-morning slave market where work gangs were chosen 
for the day), and went out on strike. Two thousand miles of 
coastline were quickly tied up. The teamsters cooperated, 
refusing to truck cargo to the piers, and maritime workers 
joined the strike. When the police moved in to open the 
piers, the strikers resisted en masse, and two were killed 
by police gunfire. A mass funeral procession for the 
strikers brought together tens of thousands of supporters. 
And then a general strike was called in San Francisco, with 
130,000 workers out, the city immobilized." (See Zinn, "A 
People's History of the United States," pp. 386-7.)

While union organizers recall it was six strikers killed by 
cops, the point remains that the hiring hall wasn't a gift 
bestowed by the bosses, but a right won by blood and death. 
The PMA wants to computerize it away, to distant points like 
Utah, Arizona, and even overseas!

Another tool of the wealthy owners has been the corporate 
press, which has falsely portrayed the longshoremen as if 
they were pro baseball players, making over $100,000 a year, 
when, in fact, their average wage is closer to half that. 
While the ILWU quite rightly takes pride in the fact that it 
has fought for decent wages for its members--over 70 percent 
of whom are African American or Latino in the San 
Francisco/Oakland ports--the PMA's tactic is designed to 
stir up labor envy in the midst of a falling and faltering 
economy.

Into this simmering labor conflict now comes 
"Unconstitutional Tom" Ridge, the stone-faced Homeland 
Security Czar, and guess on whose side? Czar Ridge placed a 
less-than-veiled threatening call to Jim Spinosa, ILWU 
president. The message? A breakdown in talks (not to mention 
a strike!) threatens "national security." Why isn't it ever 
that when a worker, or even thousands of workers, faces job 
loss, that isn't a "national security" threat? Why isn't job 
security "national security"? How is it in the "interests" 
of a nation to abolish a hard-fought right that labor won 
through terrible battle?

Despite the whines of the wealthy and the bloats of the 
corporate press, the ILWU has every right to hold firm in 
the face of this state-managerial assault on their glorious 
traditions.

The radical writer Randolph Bourne once observed, "War is 
the health of the state." By this, he meant that governments 
accrue tremendous powers during war, and rarely, if ever, 
return power to the people.

The ILWU should fight, and fight hard, in its noble 
tradition, against this new-age "shape-up" scheme pushed at 
them by management, and threatened by the Bush regime. The 
ILWU, with the aid and assistance of sister unions, can once 
again teach an historic lesson, that "Labor security is 
national security."

- END -

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