What Americans need is a Universal Income. Every adult would receive
a set amount, and every child would receive an income based upon their
age.
Can we afford such a thing as a Universal Income? The answer is
linked to whether or not we include *All Americans in supporting this
concept. Certainly there is enough money. But as we know, most of
our labor goes into off-shore banks and other holding companies. In
addition to supporting the bloated 1%, we workers also support a
highly inflated military program. This program is putting billions of
American's tax dollars in the pockets of the Military/Industrial
complex. In a word, Boeing. Another word, General Electric.
Check those two corporations out and see how much they are paying in taxes.
So without a doubt, the money is there. We just need to stand
together and take it back. It's not robbery, since it came from the
sweat of our brows in the first place. And while we are debating
Universal Income, let's toss in Universal Education. Free schooling
for our children,. either in academic or vocational school. Free to
the students. Paid for with the money being returned by the
International and American corporations currently stealing it from us.
And another thought. How about Universal Health coverage. Shouldn't
we all be entitled to the same medical care as our Corporate 1%
Corporate Rulers receive?
Another thing we can afford to do is to provide decent Elder Care.
I'm fed up with walking into convalescent centers that stink of feces
and old urine, and the few employees(being paid wage minimum) who are
running about, trying to do the job of three persons. Our elders
deserve dignity in their final days. Most of them carried our nation
through a great depression and a world war, raised their families and
paid their taxes...the same taxes being stolen and hoarded by those
bloated 1%ers.
We might even round off things by bringing our troops home, closing
most of those oversea military posts, and putting the boys and girls
in uniform to the task of rebuilding our slums, highways, bridges,
public parks, national forests and parks, and in general, making our
nation a Garden of Eden, from Sea to Shining Sea..for All Americans.
.
Carl Jarvis
On 6/1/16, Roger Loran Bailey <dmarc-noreply@freelists.org> wrote:
> https://socialistaction.org/2016/05/31/low-wage-workers-demand-15-and-a-union/
>
>
> Low-wage workers demand $15 and a union
>
> / 24 hours ago
>
>
>
>
> June 2016 Fight 15 (2)
>
> By WILLIAM WOOD
>
> — CHICAGO — Despite a torrential downpour and thunderstorms, more than
> 2000 low-wage workers and supporters marched up 22nd St. in Oak Brook,
> Ill., to the McDonald's national headquarters on May 25 to demand a $15
> minimum wage and union rights. The company's annual shareholders'
> meeting was held there the following day.
>
> Earlier, several hundred low-wage workers and supporters rallied outside
> Chicago's Rock N' Roll McDonald's restaurant to kick off two days of
> protests. Many participants were striking McDonald's workers.
>
> This is the third straight year that a major Fight for $15 demonstration
> was held at a McDonald's shareholders meeting. As they did last year,
> anticipating a large crowd of militant protesters, McDonald's executives
> shut down the entire Oak Brook campus, telling employees to stay home
> for the day.
>
> The action was organized by Fight for $15 groups around the country, and
> supported by Service Employees International Union (SEIU). Many workers
> came from the Chicago area, while buses brought others from cities
> around the country, including Milwaukee, St. Louis, Pittsburgh,
> Philadelphia, Kansas City, Columbus, Ohio, Memphis, Tenn., and Little
> Rock, Ark.
>
> Tyree Johnson, 48, a Chicago McDonald's worker and Fight for $15
> organizer, explained: "I'm living in poverty after 24 years." He earned
> $4.25 when he took his job in 1992 and now makes only $10 an hour doing
> the same work he was assigned when he started.
>
> Another participant was Shaun Goodwin, 38, from Little Rock, Ark.
> Goodwin, a McDonald's worker for two years and making $8.50 per hour,
> told labor news website Progress Illinois: "We're trying to get $15 and
> a union. Fifteen dollars is a livable wage." Noting that a $15 minimum
> wage equals roughly $31,000 per year, which happens to be the average
> cost of keeping a federal inmate in prison for one year, he asked:
> "You're saying I'm more valuable to the country incarcerated than I am
> working?"
>
> Many low-wage workers from outside the fast-food industry attended the
> protest, and other supporters included contingents from SEIU, the United
> Steelworkers Union, the Chicago Teachers Union, American Federation of
> State County and Municipal Employees, and Black Lives Matter.
>
> Antoinette Brown, 62, a janitor from St. Louis, works full time at
> minimum wage. She told the Chicago Tribune: "We really need to make more
> money. … My husband is disabled, and it's hard to make it between his
> check and mine. … It shouldn't be harder now when I'm 62."
>
> Despite the nasty weather, hundreds of low-wage workers continued their
> protest and camped out overnight in a "tent city" of about 200 tents
> outside McDonald's headquarters. They held another rally there the
> following day as corporate executives and shareholders gathered for
> their annual meeting.
>
> In response to pressure from past protests, McDonald's made a slight
> change to its salary structure prior to its 2015 annual meeting,
> increasing wages for restaurant workers about $1. However, this change
> only applies to "company-owned" (non-franchise) restaurants. Ninety
> percent of McDonald's stores are franchise-owned, so the vast majority
> of its employees did not benefit from even this token wage increase.
>
> McDonald's has claimed that they are not responsible for salaries of
> franchise-owned stores. However, the National Labor Relations Board has
> ruled otherwise, saying the corporate headquarters does have liability.
> A court case is pending on this issue, which may have an impact on
> unionization efforts and wage negotiations.
>
> Eater.com, reporting on the discussion inside the shareholders' meeting,
> said there was "much back-and-forth between shareholders arguing in
> favor of—and against—minimum wage increases." Sriram Madhusoodanan, an
> activist with Corporate Accountability International, told the
> shareholders that McDonald's "bankrolls the National Restaurant
> Association—the largest anti-worker lobby in the country" and "spends
> billions, all while miring workers in poverty."
>
> On the other hand, Justin Danhof, General Counsel for the National
> Center for Public Policy Research, representing one of its executives
> who is a McDonald's shareholder, said McDonald's shouldn't support
> "individuals and organizations that would tax and regulate McDonald's
> out of existence."
>
> Eater.com reported: "Danhof argued that the company 'crowed about
> increasing wages' at a shareholder meeting last year, but the [wage]
> increase [given in 2015] did nothing to deter protesters. … 'Look—the
> barbarians are back at the gate demanding more. They saw it as a sign of
> weakness which they could exploit.'"
>
> It's clear that Fight for $15 organizing and mass protests are bringing
> pressure to bear on McDonald's. Also, the movement has won some gains
> this year with statewide decisions to increase the minimum wage in New
> York and California. However, these decisions raise wages very gradually
> over multiple years, and include various opt-out provisions that could
> nullify future wage increases.
>
> What's necessary is an unequivocal call for $15 Now! Certainly, much
> more needs to be done to build a movement that can win. In addition to
> fast-food workers, the movement needs to continue to expand efforts
> nationally to draw in the wide range of other low-wage workers,
> including home-care and health-care workers, service industry workers,
> factory workers, airport ramp workers, logistics and warehouse workers,
> laborers, and a host of others. This involves uniting forces within the
> U.S. labor movement in an aggressive drive to unionize unorganized
> workers across a number of industries.
>
> Photo: Fight for 15
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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>
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>
> May 31, 2016 in Chicago, Labor. Tags: 15 Now, Fight for 15, McDonald's,
> SEIU
>
>
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>
>
> May 2016 Chicago $15
>
>
> Fight for $15 in Chicago
>
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> McDonald's workers win legal victories
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> April 15: Huge protest by low-wage workers
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