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This boils my blood. I don't know the US labour history, but I do know how hard public sector workers in Canada and Alberta had to fight to gain collective bargaining rights, which they were not allowed because they were "civil servants".
All public worker strikes were wildcat strikes and illegal until 1967 when Federal workers gained the right to collective bargaining through the Public Service Staff Relations Act which took 2 years to pass through Parliament after the wildcat Postal Workers Strike of 1965.
Federal government employees responded by joining unions in record numbers.
Public sector workers in Alberta did not gain these rights until 2016, when the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that ALL Canadian workers have the fundamental right to strike, essential to even the playing field between workers and employers.
That hasn't even been 10 years ago, that our Provincial healthcare workers, education workers, social workers, wildlife workers, custodial workers, and many more have had access to such basic fundamental rights to legal collective job action! You may not have realized that all these strikes you are seeing now are history in the making!
We are living out a struggle for the right of the working-class to SURVIVE.
It breaks my heart to see our fallen comrades losing this fight with such desperation to the south, and makes me fearful of the coming storm we will have to face in Canada as our populist shadow government pushes to put us down in Canada.
#union #unionstrong #cdnpoli #abpoli #uspol #strike
Most of the most impactful strikes in history have been illegal. It’s easier if they’re legal but it’s not a requirement.
I feel like it wouldn’t bad too bad an idea if some kind of important stuff was illegal at all times, just to keep people in the right mind space. I actually used to have a whole conspiracy theory that that was why drugs were illegal in the United States, so that it would drive a whole shadow economy and battle-tested organization that could keep getting away with supplying them and wouldn’t get soft and complacent, so the US would stay sharp and have a wellspring of behavioral wilderness to draw from so we could stay competitive in the cut and thrust of the world stage. I don’t think that anymore. But I think it’s good to get used to fighting for your stuff.
Most of the most impactful strikes in history have been illegal. It’s easier if they’re legal but it’s not a requirement.
I feel like it wouldn’t bad too bad an idea if some kind of important stuff was illegal at all times, just to keep people in the right mind space. I actually used to have a whole conspiracy theory that that was why drugs were illegal in the United States, so that it would drive a whole shadow economy and battle-tested organization that could keep getting away with supplying them and wouldn’t get soft and complacent, so the US would stay sharp and have a wellspring of behavioral wilderness to draw from so we could stay competitive in the cut and thrust of the world stage. I don’t think that anymore. But I think it’s good to get used to fighting for your stuff.