💾 Archived View for library.inu.red › file › workers-solidarity-movement-for-starters-ws46.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 14:53:06. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
➡️ Next capture (2024-07-09)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Title: For starters (WS46) Author: Workers Solidarity Movement Date: 1995 Language: en Topics: Ireland, Workers Solidarity Source: Retrieved on 28th November 2021 from http://struggle.ws/ws95/start46.html Notes: Published in Workers Solidarity No. 46 — Autumn 1995.
THERE IS A new mood out there. It is demonstrated by the magnificent
support for the Dunnes Stores strike, and the occupations at Sunbeam and
the Irish Press. As management push ahead with redundancies, yellow pack
jobs, contract working and casualisation, workers are pushing back. When
your back is against the wall you have to push back or be squashed.
However this should not be confused with a fight for a better life. For
many, expectations of job security and a decent standard of living are
being shattered. And some are determined not to take it lying down.
Not only do we all need to hang on to our jobs, wages, promotional
outlets and all the other things that we won over the last twenty five
years, we also need to rebuild the solidarity and strength that allowed
us to win these things in the first place.
Victories achieved in defensive battles will encourage others to resist
the bosses’ offensive. They will also contribute to rebuilding the
confidence needed to fight for more of the good things in life. If you
can not defend what you already have, it is much harder to believe that
you can win improvements. But if you win on one issue, then you are open
to the idea that you can win a lot more.
Charlie and Bill
“Begrudgers, throwbacks and die hards”. That is what the media called
anyone objecting to the official state visit by Prince Charles. Their
consensus had decided that anyone who would object must be “living in
the past”. You would think that the British ruling class had done
nothing at all to stir up the troubles, that Prince Charles’ Parachute
regiment had never murdered 14 civil rights marchers on Bloody Sunday.
And we were supposed to feel privileged that a filthy rich parasite was
condescending to have a free holiday here at our expense.
Not everyone swallowed this forelock touching embarrassment,
orchestrated by the politicians and their Dublin 4 media friends. 2,000
republicans, socialists, anarchists and anti-royalists took to the
streets of Dublin on May 31^(st). The Workers Solidarity Movement played
its part by giving out 5,000 leaflets urging support for the march, and
organising a lively contingent on the night.
Demonstrations like this play a useful role. They remind us that there
are rich and poor, workers and bosses, rulers and ruled. To recognise
this and object to it is not begrudgery but realism! We know how things
are now and we are declaring we want something better.
When Bill Clinton comes over on November 30^(th) he should not be able
to live the high life without encountering a protest or two. It will
certainly give heart to dissident Americans to know that in Ireland
there are those who oppose the US state’s intervention in other peoples’
countries and support for dictatorships in the third world. One question
is whether Sinn FĂ©in will be on the streets or at the dinner? Will a
handshake for Gerry Adams be more important than taking a stand against
injustice?