Punjab’s Land for the Landless Movement

 Scheduled Caste or Dalit people are almost 37% of Punjab’s population but have only 3.6% of the arable land! Again, 61% of village households have less than 15% of the arable land — their land size is less than 1 hectare – they are called “Marginal Farmers” by economists and govt. 

Some of such household have such scarce land and such minimal resources they lease out their land to richer farmers — among which started first in Punjab — it is called “Reverse Tenancy” by economists. Some of such poor ‘owners’ become agricultural labourers or other rural labourers who depend more on wages than on the money they can get from ‘ownership’.

Report Of Struggle Of  Punjab’s Fight-for-Land Movement By  ZPSC And Agricultural Labourers | Countercurrents

Protecting American Workers



Michigan  Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib delivered an impassioned speech in support of rail workers.

“Corporate greed is a disease in this country,” Tlaib explained during a rail worker solidarity rally. “We do live in the richest country on the planet, and no worker should have to choose between their health and a paycheck.” Tlaib said, “We cannot allow corporate greed to continue to kill workers and our families.”

The International Union of Painters and Allied Trades (IUPAT) president Jimmy Williams and Communications Workers of America (CWA) secretary-treasurer Sara Steffens—co-chairs of the Worker Power Coalition, a nationwide alliance of labor and environmental advocacy groups representing 24 million workers, accompanied by Democratic Reps. Jamaal Bowman, Ro Khanna, Andy Levin, Donald Norcross. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and Ilhan Omar, demanded more funding for the cash-starved National Labor Relations Board.

While the NLRB’s budget has effectively shrunk, its workload has soared. The federal agency tasked with enforcing U.S. labor law hasn’t received a funding increase in nearly a decade. The NLRB’s annual budget has been frozen at $274.2 million since 2014, which amounts to a 25% cut when inflation is taken into account.  From 2021 to 2022, the number of union representation petitions and unfair labor practice charges filed grew by 53% and 19%, respectively. Meanwhile, the number of NLRB officials who oversee union elections and investigate employer abuses has been slashed by 50% since 2002.

AFL-CIO president Liz Shuler and the presidents of more than 40 unions called on Congress to “fund the NLRB so the agency can hire staff and procure the necessary resources to conduct hearings and elections, investigate ULP charges, and obtain full and prompt remedies for workers whose rights are violated.”

“Our country is experiencing a moment of mass worker organizing—71% of Americans approve of unions and tens of millions of Americans would join a union right now if they could without retaliation or harassment,” said Williams. “But the drastic underfunding of the NLRB means that many of these workers will face delays in getting a union vote or receiving justice for illegal retaliation or termination from their employers…”

 The Economic Policy Institute  warned that “the consequences of a funding shortfall could be disastrous for workers who rely on the NLRB to fairly oversee their efforts to unionize and to hold employers accountable for violating their rights, including Amazon and Starbucks workers.”

“Big corporations and their CEOs routinely violate the law to bust unions and cling to their profits,” said Omar. “It is the NLRB that holds these billionaire CEOs accountable when they try to stand in the way of worker power.” However, the enforcers of labor law “are under threat from Republicans who want to weaken them and undermine their work,” Omar continued. “We will not stop fighting to ensure that they have the resources they need to hold these union-busters accountable and make sure everyone’s basic rights to organize and collectively bargain are protected.”

‘To Hold Billionaire CEOs Accountable,’ House Dems and Union Leaders Push for Fully Funded NLRB (commondreams.org)

Power in the Union – Rishi says no.



 “UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has said he will support “tough new laws” targeting labor actions, even suggesting an outright ban on walkouts by certain employees, after thousands of emergency workers announced upcoming strikes, demanding pay raises amid soaring inflation.

Addressing MPs on Wednesday, Sunak warned that a wave of imminent strikes in multiple sectors, including healthcare and public transit, would cause major disruptions, and pledged to do “whatever I need to do” to prevent work stoppages in vital industries.

“If the union leaders continue to be unreasonable, then it is my duty to take action to protect the lives and livelihoods of the British public,” he continued, adding: “since I became prime minister I have been working for new tough laws to protect people from this disruption.”

The prime minister’s comments came just one day after the Unite, Unison and GMB unions – which represent ambulance workers, paramedics, call handlers and emergency care assistants – said they would launch coordinated strikes involving more than 10,000 employees on December 21 and 28. A number of other walkouts are scheduled in the coming weeks, including a strike by up to 100,000 nurses, as well as actions by railway, mail, bus and education workers across the UK.

Asked if he would consider a ban on walkouts in emergency services, Sunak refused to rule out the idea, but insisted the “government is always going to be reasonable.”

Different administrations have proposed laws that would enforce minimum levels of service during labor strikes since 2019, and a bill containing that requirement is now passing through Parliament. Lawmakers have yet to debate the legislation, which is still at an early stage.

British public sector workers are campaigning for a pay rise above inflation, which exceeds 12% amid the cost-of-living crisis. The UK has been suffering from rising energy prices since last year, and the crisis worsened when Western nations imposed economic sanctions on Russia due to the Ukraine conflict.

Last week, a top official in Sunak’s cabinet urged the unions to drop their demands, arguing it was not “not the time” to ask for higher wages and calling for unity to send a “very clear message” to Russian President Vladimir Putin”

RT 8\12\22

Dave C.

Mexico’s Informal Workers

  The majority of workers, at least 60 percent, in Mexico have informal jobs. That typically means seven-day work-weeks and no rights such as social security or retirement pensions.

Mexico, the country with the longest average working hours in the world, passed a labor reform early last month extending annual paid vacation from 6 to 12 days. However, most workers won’t benefit from the change, because they don’t have contracts.

The International Labour Organization estimates that worldwide, about 2 billion people are informal workers, and 93 percent of those are in the Global South.

 In Mexico, sales, agriculture and manufacturing are the sectors with the largest numbers of informal workers. Some 85.4 percent of clothing businesses are informal. The consequences of this are far-reaching because poverty isn’t just expressed through a low daily income but through the precariousness and vulnerability of not having a guaranteed income. Informal work is unsafe, as workers are unable to defend themselves from abuse and their workplaces are often undefined or small and hazardous.

The most common informal job is selling goods or food from street stalls, in markets, or on buses and trains. And while these markets are essential for the poorer classes because they provide basic foods and meals at much cheaper prices than Walmart and shopping centers, they regularly face repression from local governments who want to remove them in order to cater to the upper classes and to tourists from wealthy countries.

The Hidalgo Market in Puebla state, and it is self-run by the Popular Union of Mobile Vendors (UPVA) 28 De Octubre organization. Uniting 3,800 stall vendors who come from various rural, Indigenous communities and nearby towns, the union protects workers from police stealing their products or shutting their stalls down, and customers from common practices like under-weighing produce.

“People live from day to day. They work in the market as a last option in order to survive. The fruit vegetable sellers buy their goods at 4 am in order to start selling at 7 am,” Rita Amador

Food deliverers in Mexico earn a median of 40 pesos ($2.02) an hour, and work an average of 46 hours a week. A survey conducted late last year found that people who delivered via apps paid a higher percentage of their income (8 percent) in taxes than the biggest companies in Mexico (with manufacturing and pharmaceutical companies paying 1.2 to 5 percent). But while the deliverers pay taxes, they don’t get social security, and the companies don’t comply with the legal requirement to provide them with the equipment they need to work, nor accident insurance.

Uber’s profits depend on avoiding paying formal work benefits. If the two founders of Uber, Garrett Camp and Travis Kalanick, paid 3.5 percent of their wealth to social security in Mexico, the country’s 350,000 food deliverers would have access to it for five years.

Because informal workers are more exposed to risks and shocks than formal workers — including policy that is biased against them, shifts in demand, prices and inflation, and occupational health risks — they are more likely to develop physical and mental health problems. In a study on workers in Latin America, it was found that informal workers have a 27 percent higher prevalence of depressive symptoms, and studies have found that only strong welfare states with services available to everyone can soften the physical health inequality between the two workforces.

The high levels of informal employment in Mexico are an unstated but deliberate policy aimed at increasing profits for local and U.S. businesses. The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and other neoliberal policies prompted huge migrations from rural areas to the cities in the 1990s, as the U.S. sent its subsidized corn to Mexico and local small businesses were ruined. With little work available in the cities, people had to sell goods on the streets in order to survive.

Mexico’s minimum wage decreased from 1980 through 2000, as the country was pressured to remain “competitive” for “investment” from U.S. companies — that is, to keep wages as low as possible so that transnationals could use Mexico to increase their profits. Adjusting for purchasing power and inflation, in 1979, the minimum daily wage was 330 pesos ($16.89), while in 2000 it was 90 pesos ($4.61). This imposed poverty caused the amount of informal work to increase.

Many industries in Mexico and the Global South depend on informal work. The apparel industry uses home-based garment workers paid by piece in order to offload the monetary risk of fluctuating demand on to them, as well as the non-wage costs of production like machinery and electricity.

 A recent study calculates that richer countries, through unequal trade, have drained the equivalent of $152 trillion from the Global South since 1960.

When governments of countries in the Global South have sought to resist this dynamic by increasing wages and combating poverty, Western powers have all too often removed them from power, as happened in Indonesia in 1965, Congo in 1960, Chile in 1973 and Honduras in 2009, to name a few. As a result, richer countries continue to exploit cheap labor and resources, and take advantage of lower environmental standards (set at the pressure of wealthy countries) while paying little to no taxes, leaving poor countries’ governments with few resources to pay for public sector jobs.

NAFTA’s Imposed Poverty Paved the Way for Mexico’s Informal Work Economy – Truthout

Dig out old copy of Protect and Survive

 



Raise your hands if you’re in favour of nuclear obliteration

“A direct confrontation between Russia and the West in Europe could happen, Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg says

The Ukraine conflict could erupt into a full-fledged war between Russia and NATO, the military bloc’s Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has said. He also claimed that NATO has been focused on avoiding a new global conflict.

“I fear that the war in Ukraine will spiral out of control and become a major war between NATO and Russia,” Stoltenberg told Norwegian broadcaster NRK on Friday, adding that “if things go wrong, they can go horribly wrong.” 

“NATO’s most important task is to prevent a full-scale war in Europe, and that is something we work on every single day.” 

The head of the US-led bloc however warned Russian President Vladimir Putin that NATO would defend its members. According to Article 5 of its founding treaty, an armed attack on one member state “shall be considered an attack against them all.” Stoltenberg said that Putin “knows that it’s one for all and all for one.” 

After Russia launched its military operation in Ukraine in late February, NATO deployed 40,000 troops to its eastern flank, nearly ten times more than a year before. Moscow, meanwhile, considers NATO military sites close to its border as a national security threat and has warned that sending heavy weapons from the West to Kiev risks a direct confrontation between Russia and NATO.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said this month that the US and NATO were already “directly involved” in the conflict by supplying Ukraine with arms and training its soldiers.”

RT 10\12\22

Dave C.

Capitalists increase their share of surplus value

 



“Actual earnings in the UK have shrunk by £76 ($93) a month over the course of a year as a result of pay not keeping pace with inflation, the nation’s federation of trade unions, the Trades Union Congress (TUC) has said.

According to its report on Monday, Britons have seen the sharpest drop in real wages since 1977 and the second worst on record since the end of World War II in 1945. Real wages are defined as the amount people earned in relation to their cost of living.

Data showed that key workers in the public sector are now £180 ($221) a month worse off in real terms than they were a year ago.

The report comes as many workers across the UK, including postal workers, train and bus drivers, as well as NHS workers and teachers, have either started or are about to strike for increased pay.

The current wave of industrial action in Britain is the result of workers “being pushed to breaking point” by years of pay austerity, TUC general secretary, Frances O’Grady explained. She has accused ministers of being more interested in escalating disputes than resolving them.

“Family budgets have been shredded by soaring bills and more than a decade of pay being held down. The Conservatives have presided over the longest real wage squeeze in over 200 years,” O’Grady stressed.

“The Tories’ failure to get pay rising has left millions of households brutally exposed to the cost-of-living emergency. We cannot be a country where NHS and teaching staff have to use food banks, while City bankers are given unlimited bonuses,” the TUC general secretary concluded.”

RT 12\12\22

Dave C.

Another War Looming?

 North Kosovo, the area north of the Ibar River, has a population almost exclusively ethnic Serb, holding allegiance to Serbia. Most do not recognize that Kosovo is a state. However, they have 10 guaranteed seats in Kosovo’s parliament and two minister seats in the government in Pristina.

Since the end of the Kosovo war in 1999, the Kosovar government has never had full control in the north of the country — this means that the area, which has a population of about 60,000, is effectively a lawless zone.

The Serbs of Kosovo distrust the government in Pristina leading to special police units being regularly sent into the northern area, allegedly to fight crime.

Once again, Serbs in North Kosovo are on the barricades, blocking roads and border crossings. They are protesting against the arrest of a former police officer suspected of terrorism for a bomb attack on the premises of the election commission.

The Serbs want to prevent local elections that became necessary in the north after all ethnic Serbs resigned from Kosovo’s state institutions in early November. They withdrew from both parliament and government and all four mayors in North Kosovo resigned. Several hundred Serb police officers left the Kosovo police force, and Serb judges stopped going to work.

This boycott was a reaction to Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti’s plan to bring in new vehicle license plate regulations. The aim was to ban plates issued by the Serbian authorities and to swap them for Kosovo plates. As far as Kurti was concerned, it was a matter of principle because Serbia does not accept Kosovo license plates but for Serbian President Vucic and the Kosovo Serbs, it was preparation for “ethnic cleansing.” The introduction of new license plates has been put on hold.

 Serbia’s President Vucic has put troops on “heightened readiness” and ordered them almost to the border with Kosovo. Serbia seeks for its security forces to be stationed on the territory of Kosovo under UN Security Council Resolution 1244 adopted in 1999. It allows for a few hundred law enforcement officers to be sent to Kosovo — but only if the KFOR international peacekeeping mission agrees.

There has been concern that Russia could use its close ties with Serbia to open a “second front” in the Balkans. Kosovo Prime Minister Albin Kurti has suggested that Serbia, like Russia, also dreams of restoring a “Serbian world” in the region. While Serbian President Vucic has said that Kurti is comporting himself like a “little Zelenskiyy.”

Serbia has not joined the sanctions against Russia. According to polls, over 80% of Serbs reject imposing these on a “brother state.” Serbia is not only dependent on Russian gas, but also on Russian support in the Kosovo issue. Yet much of the Serbian economy is oriented toward the West. German companies in Serbia provide about 75,000 jobs.

What are the tensions in North Kosovo all about? – DW – 12/14/2022

The Twilight Zone

 Britain is the only G-7 nation whose GDP is still lower than before the pandemic— no more does it seem like the 6th richest country in the world,  as its economic performance comes to resemble that of an Eastern European country with an emerging economy. Government figures show the following:

+ the Consumer Prices Index (CPI) rose by 11.1% in October, a 41-year high,

+ the UK’s top energy companies are set to make almost $200bn/$245bn in excess profits over the next 2 years. In the same time energy bills are set to rise to their highest levels in 40 years causing a cost of living crisis. Average bills for electricity and home-heating natural gas have doubled in the last year and are expected to rise further in April. The government does nothing about this bare-faced price gouging,

+ the purchasing power of the pound decreased by 13.20% in 2022 compared to 2021, fuelling a resulting rise in import prices,

+ 1 in 6 British households rely on some form of social welfare,

+ almost a third of British children live in poverty,

+ the number of children eligible for government-funded free school meals is just under 25%,

+ 1in 4 households are in financial difficulty or on the verge of it,

+ almost 1 in 10 households have failed to pay bills,

+ in the 12 months to March 2022, 2.1m emergency food parcels were distributed by a continuously expanding web of more than 2,000 food banks — an increase of approximately 1 million from 2014-15, according to the food-bank organizing charity, the Trussell Trust. This need is driven by spiraling food and energy prices (the price of cooking oil and pasta, for example, has risen 60% in the last year), and plunging wages.

+the sharp decline in public services and public sector wages has ensued in months of industrial strikes by train workers, postal workers, London bus drivers, university teachers and staff, paramedics and ambulance drivers, road workers, workers at Heathrow airport, passport and visa staff, courthouse staff, with nurses due to have their first ever strike beginning on 15 December. This has all the makings of a general strike as the winter starts to intensify.

The Tory government blames the war in Ukraine and the pandemic for causing these problems, without however fooling too many Brits as people realize several other countries have also had to deal with the consequences of the war and the pandemic.

Taken from here

The Twilight Zone of the UK’s Holographic Politics – CounterPunch.org

The Pain of Pakistan’s Floods Persist

 The media headlines of Pakistan’s floods have disappeared but the tragic consequences continue. An estimated 33 million people have been affected, of which 20 million are still living in dire conditions.

It’s been almost six months since the floods in Pakistan, and homes and farmland in many parts of the country remain underwater. In the areas where floods are receding, health and hygiene concerns including cholera, dengue, and malaria, pose severe threats to people’s well-being. Many areas also have been reporting cases of scabies, especially in children as they play in the floodwater.

Contaminated water is another big issue, especially in Sindh where the quality of water in the entire region is exceptionally poor. The few handpumps that existed to offer clean water were severely damaged during the floods.

Shelter continues to be a top priority. Many people were forced to leave their flooded homes and retreat to the nearest evacuation centre. Some resorted to sleeping on the roadside – unprotected and with barely any resources to build a roof over their heads. 

Pakistan floods: Six months on, humanitarian needs remain dire – Pakistan | ReliefWeb