Monday, February 20, 2017

History of Labor Unions Part I

The union label song was a happy little jingle for a happy group of Americans. So happy, in fact, Al Gore once told a group of teamsters it was a “lullaby” his mother sang to him at night. Interestingly, Al Gore must have been 27 years old when his mother serenaded him, because the union label song was written in 1975.*

From the beginning, unions, communism, socialism and democratic socialism have gone hand-in-hand. It may have something to do with Karl Marx and his feelings about unions:

Let the ruling class tremble at a communist revolution. The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains. Workers of the world unite.

Since both Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, authors of the Communist Manifesto, seemed to care so much for the working class, organizing workers and communism made a natural fit. That may well explain why communists were pervasive within union leadership, the union movement and the Democratic Party.

The labor movement also had significant racism.^ In San Francisco in the late 1880s, the union developed a slogan for their strike: “The Chinese must go.” In the cigar industry, union labels signaled customers that products were made by whites, as blacks were excluded from joining unions.

Source: History of Labor Unions Part I

*Not so surprising. Since he claimed he invented the Internet.

^An interesting facts: No republican during the civil war owned slaves. FDR had to bribe the Dems in Congress  to sign on to the Civil Rights bill. The republicans already supported it.

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