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NO PEACE, NO WORK

Saturday, April 26, 2008

(Dick Meister)NO PEACE, NO WORK
By Dick Meister
 
Organized labor is set to mark May Day - International Workers' Day - with
what could be the loudest and most forceful demand yet for rapid withdrawal
of U.S. forces from Iraq.
 
Members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union -- the ILWU --
will lead the way by refusing to work their eight-hour morning shifts at
ports in California, Oregon and Washington.  For them, it will be a "no
peace, no work" holiday  -- in effect, a strike against the war. They will
instead lead and other anti-war demonstrations in the port cities.
 
Like many other unions and labor organizations nationwide, the ILWU has long
opposed the war in Iraq as an imperialist action in which the lives of young
working-class Americans and Iraqi citizens are being needlessly wasted.
 
"It is not liberation," as an Iraqi labor leader, Ghasib Hassan, told
delegates to a recent U.S. labor convention. "It is occupation."
 
The ILWU hopes the dramatic act of shutting down West Coast ports will
inspire Americans everywhere to oppose the war. As one longshoreman said,
"President Bush wants working and poor folks to fight his war ... the sons
and daughters of working-class families. We want them out of harm's way."
 
That's one of the main messages of the coalition, U.S. Labor Against the War
(USLAW), which has been growing steadily since the invasion of Iraq.  It's
by now the largest organized group of any kind to protest the war and is
drawing important support, not only from unions, but also from a  wide
variety of socially-conscious activist groups outside the labor movement.
 
USLAW's members, which represent millions of workers, significantly include
the AFL-CIO and most of the federation's 56 affiliated unions - among them,
of course, the ILWU. No one can doubt USLAW's ability to organize a massive
protest such as ILWU is hoping to lead. For it was  USLAW that put together
the anti-war demonstration that drew half-a-million marchers to Washington,
D.C., last year.
 
USLAW is demanding primarily that "our elected leaders stop funding the war,
bring our troops home and start meeting human needs here at home," notes
Fred Mason, an  AFL-CIO official in Maryland.  The needs being neglected to
fund the war include many public services -- education, health care and so
much more.
 
In the meantime, says Gerald McEntee, a key public employee union leader,
"We are spreading violence in Iraq, not democracy." The Bush
administration's policies, says Musicians Union leader Tom Lee, "make us
less secure, increase the threat of terrorism, and have put Iraq on a path
of civil war."
 
ILWU President Robert McEllrath has urged unions and allied groups outside
the United States to also mount protests - "to honor labor history and
express support for the troops by bringing them home safely."
 
The AFL-CIO'S opposition is particularly notable. For it marks the first
time the federation has ever opposed a war, whether the president was a
pro-labor Democrat or, as now, an anti-labor Republican. The AFL-CIO was an
outspoken supporter of the Vietnam War and of the first Persian Gulf War.
Even at the start of the Iraq war, the federation backed Bush.  But it soon
realized its error.
 
The longshoremen's union, which was not affiliated with the AFL-CIO at the
time, was firmly opposed to the Vietnam and Persian Gulf wars. The ILWU also
was a major opponent of  dictatorial regimes in South and Central America
and the apartheid regime in South Africa, its members often refusing to
handle cargo coming from or going to those countries. Just recently, ILWU
members in Tacoma, Washington, refused for "conscientious reasons" to load
cargo headed for the Iraq war zone.
 
We can only hope -- and hope fervently -- that the union's May Day show of
strong opposition to the war in Iraq will help prompt millions of others to
conclude that they, too, cannot in good conscience support that seemingly
endless war.
 
Copyright (c) 2008 Dick Meister, a San Francisco-based writer who has
covered labor and political issues for a half-century as a reporter, editor
and commentator. Contact him through his website, www.dickmeister.com
 

 

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