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The Endless Censoring of Labor

by: Dick Meister, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

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(Photo Illustration: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t; Adapted from: Steve Rhodes, v a i r o j / flickr)

Did you know about the Bush administration's rotten treatment of the air traffic controllers whose work is essential to air safety? That controllers were forced to work long, fatiguing shifts with little time to rest? That many quit because of that? Were you aware of the great potential for serious accidents that posed?

Did you know that President Obama's appointees to the Federal Aviation Agency - FAA - stepped in to rescind the onerous conditions imposed by Bush's FAA appointees and end the controllers' long struggle for decent treatment?

Well, you wouldn't know about those vital developments if you relied solely on mainstream media. To most mainstream outlets, it was just another labor story to be ignored - another labor story to be, in effect, censored.

Despite the importance of labor to our economy, despite the fact that most people work for a living and would be interested in - and need - information on a regular basis about that most important aspect of their lives, mainstream media generally fail to provide it. Their focus is not on those who do society's work, but on the corporate interests and other employers like themselves, who finance, direct and profit from the work.

The list of important labor stories that mainstream media have ignored or distorted is seemingly endless. Let me cite just a few that are on this year's list with the air traffic controllers' story.

The media are forever telling us how unpopular unions are, but in January, a largely unreported Gallup Poll showed that almost 60 percent of those surveyed approved of unions and fewer than 30 percent disapproved. Almost two-thirds said unions should have more or at least the same influence as now. What's more, a generally unreported survey by the Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics showed union membership growing significantly after years of steady decline.

President Bush's mistreatment of air traffic controllers was hardly the only instance of his virulently anti-labor actions against nongovernment as well as government employees. But that wasn't of much interest to the media.

The media absolutely ignored a study by two leading academic economists showing that thousands of workers have been fired for simply trying to organize unions at their workplaces, a right supposedly guaranteed them by federal labor law.

The study concluded that there's been "a systematic attack on unions, especially on union efforts to organize workers" that employers have been waging for more than two decades "with substantial legal support and cover."

Another neglected study, by one of the nation's most highly regarded labor experts, Kate Bronfenbrenner of Cornell University, similarly showed that because of widespread illegal employer interference, "the overwhelming majority of workers who want unions don't have them."

The media also ignored a major agreement by organized labor and the Catholic health care system to abandon their longtime hostility and set up procedures to allow workers to vote freely on whether to unionize. The agreement was especially important because the procedures are the same as those in the proposed Employee Free Choice Act that's become a major goal of labor because it would prohibit employers from using the underhanded tactics that many have used to block unionization of their workers.

Two other key health care stories involving labor also got virtually no mainstream media attention. One, a report from the Federal Institute of Medicine, found that exhaustion and possible error is common among the 100,000 residents in the country's hospitals. The report noted that the young doctors in training are forced to work as many as 80 hours a week, often as long as 30 hours in a single shift.

The other neglected story concerned nurses, who formed an alliance of three major nurses' organizations to join in the drive for reform of the health care system and a related drive to unionize the country's largely nonunion nurses. Although nurses perform some of society's most important work, often under stressful, exhausting and dangerous conditions, they're generally paid less and receive fewer benefits than many others whose work is not nearly as vital and demanding.

The media, however, hardly noted the nurses' efforts. Nor did they note a report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showing that women workers will soon outnumber male workers for the first time in US history. That means women now have the numbers to more effectively combat workplace discrimination by male bosses, who frequently treat them as second-class workers.

Male and female workers alike face serious on-the-job hazards that result in nearly 6,000 deaths annually, more than two million serious injuries and 50,000 deaths from cancer, heart and lung ailments and other occupational diseases caused by exposure to toxic substances.

The Bush administration did very little to lower the deadly numbers, but Obama's Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis moved quickly to hire dozens of investigators to "vigorously enforce" the safety laws and regulations and develop badly needed new rules, among other long overdue steps to make work safer. But you wouldn't likely know that, or even know of the hazards that caused Solis to act, if you relied strictly on the mainstream media for your labor information.

Thanks to the efforts of Cesar Chavez, the workers he led and their millions of supporters, mainstream media once did pay a great deal of attention to the long-standing plight of farm workers. But the charismatic Chavez is gone, and the media have shown little interest in the continuing struggle of farm workers for decent treatment.

Despite the successes of the United Farm Workers before and after Chavez' death, farm workers still lack the basic union rights guaranteed nonagricultural workers by the 74-year-old National Labor Relations Act. Two former UFW staffers have launched a drive to get Congress to amend the act to include not only farm workers, but also housekeepers, nannies, and other domestic workers. They've also been excluded from the law despite their great need for legal protection, but mainstream media have shown no signs that they know or care.

The media have likewise paid little attention to a recent major victory by the workers in Florida who pick most of the country's tomatoes. The poverty-stricken workers, most of them migrants, have long been among the most poorly treated and highly exploited of all workers, even though the $400 million tomato industry obviously couldn't exist without them.

The pickers have struggled for many years to win decent pay and working conditions, and finally they've done so, in what the AFL-CO called "a huge win for farm workers." Their victory came after a nationwide campaign to win broad public support that was waged without benefit of much media coverage.

The tomato pickers were fortunate. They managed to win important support in spite of the mainstream media's general indifference. Theirs was a dramatic struggle that undoubtedly would have interested, if not inspired, many people. So would many other stories from the world of work. Telling them adequately is the media's job, a crucial job that's been neglected for far too long.

  

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Dick Meister is a San Francisco-based writer who has covered labor and politics for a half-century as a reporter, editor, author and commentator. You can contact him through his website, www.dickmeister.com.

Comments

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Not surprising at all,

Not surprising at all, considering this is Corporate America. It's all rather disgusting. Most people are brought up to be fair and respectful of others. Apparently, those in business and positions of leadership were raised on other ideals. Perhaps there really is a Devil.

Look who was in charge of

Look who was in charge of the Department of Labor, McConnell's Wife! This is how it works in DC, corporations *appoint* leadership to captive agencies. It's perfect to blame the "Government" when issues arise on the way to profit. It's fine when bodies pile up, look how they do it at the Pentagon. (with some of the same contractors)

You need to add that since

You need to add that since Reagan, the US has been fighting a war against unions and union organizing world wide, but especially in Central and South America. One of the major targets of the US sponsored right wing terrorist groups in Central and South America was trade unionists, all of whom are call communists or socialists to justify their murders. . And least you forget, Ron Reagan opened California borders to immigration, much now called illegal, to stamp out the incipient farm workers union under Chavez.

Are you aware that Obama's

Are you aware that Obama's Democratic Majority in the Senate, in one of their first DUMB political maneuvers, voted DOWN, UNANIMOUSLY, a reinstatement of the Fairness Doctrine? Not only was this bill voted down, but voted down by an enormous majority of Democrats! I'd say this country is [like] a sick dog ready to be put to sleep. There's really no hope for it, unless a revolution and labor party candidate enters the White House.

Bravo to Truthout for

Bravo to Truthout for posting this! But judging from the scarcity of comments, how little interest this subject seems to stir up among Truthout readers!

It isn't only the mainstream press that have silently censored "boring" worker-related issues--so have "alternative" sources like Truthout much of the time, at least until recently.

I suspect that the audience for Truthout and similar sources consists largely of the WholeFood-shopping classes, who feel a sort of empathy for workers, but do not identify with them and shrink from contact with them. Perhaps many of these have swallowed the fashionable nonsense about a "post-industrial economy, " and regard actual workers as a sort of quaint anachronism.

I think this group includes a lot of people who really are workers, but--because of education, "professional" self-identification and slightly superior income when actually working--would die before admitting it.

I hope the new direction (as I see it) being taken by Truthout gets echoes elsewhere, and brings at least some of these indifferent folk into the fold of the committed.

GREAT article. Thank you

GREAT article. Thank you Dick Meister.

The cancer that we all see

The cancer that we all see but do not recognize as such is the ascendency of the corporations from, originally, being just businesses to personhood (circa 1889) . . . to super-persons in the pre-Reagan years . . . to their current status of a congregation of rich, autonomous City-States . . . massive tails that wag the American dog! They exist to grow through cannibalization or through any other means that may be convenient or available. The major characteristic that I see is their bicameral - or perhaps tri-cameral - morality: Nothing is too good for the members of the Board and senior executives. Their pension plans are invariably fully funded and their benefits are rarely reduced. Money taken from the corporation is how they keep score, and one hand washes the other. And speaking of hands: there ain't one on the throttle. Mid-to-low-level management scrapes along, but not as well as in the hey-days of Big Blue, Ma Bell and the other large, paternally oriented corporations of the pre-Carter & Reagan down-shift. Two salaries are now necessary to make the ends meet, and pink-slips for those "making too much money" are always a possibility. And then there are the blue collar, Joe-six-pak, guys and gals and the lower level white-collar workers. These folks are, simply stated, consumable items that may be used and ARE thrown away when they either are not "pulling their weight" or become "too expensive to maintain." Blue collar stiffs are "carried on the books" as spare parts and their pensions and benefits are used (by many corporations) as ballast to be reduced or entirely jettisoned when corporate profits begin to wane. The need for unions has not been this pressing, and that need NOW extends well up into the midst of the previously sacrosanct and off-limits realm of middle management.

The pervasiveness of the

The pervasiveness of the corporate environment makes this article seem surprising. We consider unions minor and annoying players in the market according to the quantity of reporting on them. Democrats along with Republicans including the president are all trickle down types. All the major support goes to corporate America which hardly needs it. The bad loans that bail out money a year ago was created to get rid of are still here because that debt is not corporate debt, it's home owners or consumers debt. We only count as consumers. We are allowed to loose our jobs and even our homes while the gamblers who made profits before and after the crisis get major support from taxpayer resources. Unions are an obstacle to better quarterly reports.

Good for Truthout for

Good for Truthout for publishing this! Yes, our mainstream media are anti-union and anti-labor. More generally, they are opponents of popular activism -- unless they agree with its aims. And they don't hesitate to freely use their most potent weapon against it: news suppression. I grew up in the 60s and 70s and I've seen our media pull some incredible stuff. It's hard to overestimate the degree to which the media suppress news of popular activism. And sometimes they do some truly sleazy things, like the San Francisco Chronicle writing one of three fully participating panelists out of detailed coverage of a three-person panel discussion on Central America that took place at San Francisco State U. in the early 1980s. The person dropped down the memory hole was a strongly leftward woman from a Catholic relief agency who spoke equally as long as either of the other two, moderate congressman Christopher Dodd of Connecticut and rightwing crazy "B1 Bob" Dornan of Orange County, California, who the Chronicle left in the story. I read the story carefully and it never said there were only two members of the panel, so it was "technically" truthful. But anyone reading the story would have thought it was just a panel with Dodd and Dornan, a dialogue between a moderate and a conservative -- which would have been a joke at SF State with all of its Central America activism in those years.

I was born in 1933, quite a

I was born in 1933, quite a year. The "rise" of Me, FDR, and Hitler, the end of Prohibition. Whew! All my life I have seen the militant abusive treatment of all workers, "labor", unions(*) -from EVERY administration-Democratic & Republican, if anything even more so by the "Democratic" regimes, likely to demonstrate they are "not soft" on those dirty laborers, god-less socialist/communists, you know, those unpatriotic lefties who fought & (literally) bled/died to bring all 8hr days, 40 hr weeks, safety laws in the workplace and beyond, Social Security, etc. So RonnieRaygun wasn't the first to oppose labor, all have done it, from Gov. approved private company thugs with club and guns backed up by local police, to city cops, state police, Natl Guard, and Federal Troops, (led by some of our most illustrious hero- generals). ~John L.

Sorry all, I didn't follow

Sorry all, I didn't follow through with my *asteric* >>>Except those unions that fell in line and aquiested to the corporate/goverment line. ~John L.

Your article starts with

Your article starts with stuff about the air-traffic controllers. I seem to remember that Ronald Raygun sacked them all the last time they unionised and wanted fair treatment. Who protested then? I'm a brit, a long way away, but it seems to me that Republican Presidents attack unions, or anything that gets in the way of corporate profit. (What a surprise!) And I'm not surprised that the corporates control the media. So, how are we to bring such issues before the public?