Archive for the ‘economic justice’ Category

Don’t Get Caught in a Bad Hotel

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

The Westin St. Francis in San Francisco is a bad hotel and Sleep with the Right People wants to make sure we don’t get caught there until they grant their workers fair contracts and affordable health care.

Sleep with the Right People is a coalition of LBGT folks and UNITE HERE, a union representing over 300,000 hospitality and manufacturing workers across North America.

Recently, the coalition spread the word about the worker-initiated boycott of the Westin St. Francis with a flash mob parody song called “Bad Hotel,” based on Lady Gaga’s hit song “Bad Romance.” Check out the video below:

Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about what “good” activism is. Direct action and other forms of public protest are essential to drawing attention to invisible or poorly understood issues and igniting the passion of others for the cause. As activists, we have a rich and proud history of marches and protests and occupations and yet sometimes others use this history to justify tuning us out before our message reaches them (an ‘if i’ve seen one protest, I’ve seen them all’ mentality).

Well, a mob of people dancing, singing, and playing instruments in the middle of a hotel lobby to the tune of a song that almost everyone knows is a good way to dodge that mentality and get people’s attention. The added bonus of performance is that it can come off as less threatening than a march or a ‘teach-in.’

From Gangster Octopus:

To learn more about how to honor the boycott and support the workers visit: 
http://www.sleepwiththerightpeople.org
http://www.hotelworkersrising.org/…

this event was organized by: 
San Francisco Pride at Work / HAVOQ http://www.sfprideatwork.org
One Struggle One Fight http://www.onestruggleonefight.org
The Brass Liberation Orchestra http://brassliberation.org

Also, check out Hotel Workers Rising! for a guide to hotels that employ UNITE HERE workers.

You Fight, We’ll Fight

Monday, March 8th, 2010

I went to an Organizing for America 2010 Strategy Session yesterday and was psyched to learn about the “You Fight, We’ll Fight” campaign. From OFA’s website:

COMMIT YOUR TIME TO BACK UP CANDIDATES WHO FIGHT HARD FOR HEALTH REFORM

We must show every member of Congress that if they fight for real health reform now, we’ll be there to back them up this election season.

We’re shooting for 10,000,000 hours pledged to spread the word to fellow voters. And we’ll publish the total hours pledged in USA Today, so there will be no doubt that health reform is both good policy and good politics.

Wow. Voting. Not exactly a new idea, right? (In fact, its one that many people consider worthless in our current political climate.) But, its campaigns like this one that aim to increase the power of the political voices of everyday citizens and to pass ground-breaking social justice legislation that have the potential to change this political climate.

Sometimes its damn hard to tell Democrats and Republicans apart. As Talib Kweli says:

You try to vote and participate in the government
And the m**f** Democrats is actin’ like Republicans

If President Obama’s message of change has a chance of materializing into something worth the enormous struggles ahead of us, it will depend in large part upon Democratic politicians legitimately working in service of the people. And this means challenging the staggering influence that corporate lobbyists have on our politicians. We will never come close to outspending the bloodsucking insurance lobbyists, so we have to maximize the power of the tools we do have.

The You Fight, We’ll Fight approach inserts you and me into the equation by pre-emptively strengthening our bargaining power. By identifying ourselves as potential supporters, we are a force to be reckoned with and voters potentially to be lost instead of a disengaged, disempowered public. Plus, it sends a clear message to the Democrats that Health Insurance Reform in 2010 is a deal-breaker for their constituents.

In short, the You Fight, We’ll Fight campaign is one worthy of your consideration. Organizing for America has declared March 8 – March 14 the Week of Health Insurance Reform Action, so now is the perfect time to get involved. Check out Organizing for America to pledge your support and find an event near you. And check out the President’s message to his supporters below:

S. Carolina Lt Gov Compares Poor People to Stray Animals

Sunday, January 24th, 2010

Last Friday, South Carolina’s Lieutenant Governor Andre Bauer compared giving public assistance to poor people to “feeding stray animals.” Quoting his grandmother, Bauer says that stray animals breed, so feeding them just makes it worse. He elaborates:

You’re facilitating the problem if you give an animal or a person ample food supply. They will reproduce, especially ones that don’t think too much further than that. And so what you’ve got to do is you’ve got to curtail that type of behavior. They don’t know any better.

On Saturday, he refused to apologize, saying that South Carolina needs to have an “honest conversation” about dependence on public assistance.

Bullshit, Bauer. If you were interested in an honest conversation, you would have discussed 12.6% jobless rate instead of vilifying the 58% of your states children who receive public assistance.

How dare he. His state is struggling with double-digit unemployment coming off the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, and he has the audacity to talk about his own constituents this way?

I agree with Race Wire’s Channing Kennedy. Bauer needs to quit blaming South Carolina’s struggling families and instead address the joblessness problem. He can start by creating a job opening for the position of Lieutenant Governor.