I had been planning on writing today about Thanksgiving v. greed. When I checked my emails, I found that someone, somehow, has deleted the blog I had posted on The Charleston Patch on Monday. The article was about shopping on Thanksgiving, and about choosing to give our holiday business to those who respect their employees enough to give them a living wage and time to spend with family. It may have been an error, but I am tending to think that I ruffled some feathers, and that the feathers didn't belong to a Thanksgiving turkey.
As I get older I am tending to focus ever more on the quality of my remaining years. I am more likely to want to spend time reading a good book than cleaning house. Although I have to pinch pennies, I am glad that I am retired and no longer under the control of a boss. I am very happy to finally have the time to write, and the internet and blogosphere where I can share my thoughts with others.
The shame is just how much time we are forced to spend trying to make ends meet. Jumping through hoops to keep a job. Paying more and more for things that provide less -- less quality of life, less security, less peace of mind, less joy. The greed that grows each year as corporations continue to get fatter and more powerful is a tragedy. It is wrong that so few can control so many, and do so in their own interest. Our health care is driven by the profit motive, and the movement to privatize and profit is continuing to encroach and jeopardize the ability to enjoy the best education available.
So this holiday season, I will continue to ask that you do not shop at those stores who do not pay a living wage and who force their employees to work on that day that has up till now been left for the freedom to enjoy one's family, or just a day of rest.
And finally, I am glad that, despite whoever banished my words from the Charleston Patch, I am able to send them to you here.
Happy Thanksgiving.
Showing posts with label Workers Rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Workers Rights. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Saturday, October 6, 2012
Back to Basics
The politicians agree that it's a "great country." And the Supremes have told us that corporations are people. I wonder if there continues to be a place for the actual humans who live here.
Because if we still have a place here, there are a few things we need. In fact, things I always assumed I would have.
We need to be healthy.
We need to know that there will be food on the table and a roof over our heads.
We need to be productive, to do good work and be paid fairly for that work.
Each of us needs to know that our children will have those guarantees throughout their lives.
And we each need to be assured that our parents will have the same, the means to live their lives to the fullest, until the end.
But in this country, we struggle constantly to maintain those assurances. And we struggle against those for whom capitalism is not just a way of living in this democracy, but the end itself. When corporations have become people, we have become mere tools to a corporation and its profits.
And look at where it has taken us.
As the wealthy few own more and more of us and our country, our standard of living has sunk ever lower. We of all civilized nations have determined that health care should be a commodity, in other words, for sale and not for certain.
Our system of education erodes as the rich attack the high cost of teaching our children. Educating children, once thought of as a worthy investment in the future, has become one more item the corporation would like to snatch away, for a profit.
And sing praise to high productivity, which means corporations get more and more from each worker, who in turn is forced to concede wages, vacation, benefits. Because it is no longer a source of pride that a corporation treat its workers fairly. Somewhere along the Reagan years, we were all told that a corporation has no obligation to be moral; it's sole obligation is to increase profit. And so it does.
So when the young man from Occupy Charleston said a year or so ago that it really is no longer about who wins the next election, he was right.
But this coming election does offer us a chance to change our path. The choice is clear: we can continue to allow corporations to profit from our lives, or we can demand that our lives be respected. We can choose those who will be sure that our basic needs are not snatched from us by the powerful, for their profit. And after that election, we must keep our eyes on that prize: our liberty and our dignity.
Because if we still have a place here, there are a few things we need. In fact, things I always assumed I would have.
We need to be healthy.
We need to know that there will be food on the table and a roof over our heads.
We need to be productive, to do good work and be paid fairly for that work.
Each of us needs to know that our children will have those guarantees throughout their lives.
And we each need to be assured that our parents will have the same, the means to live their lives to the fullest, until the end.
But in this country, we struggle constantly to maintain those assurances. And we struggle against those for whom capitalism is not just a way of living in this democracy, but the end itself. When corporations have become people, we have become mere tools to a corporation and its profits.
And look at where it has taken us.
As the wealthy few own more and more of us and our country, our standard of living has sunk ever lower. We of all civilized nations have determined that health care should be a commodity, in other words, for sale and not for certain.
Our system of education erodes as the rich attack the high cost of teaching our children. Educating children, once thought of as a worthy investment in the future, has become one more item the corporation would like to snatch away, for a profit.
And sing praise to high productivity, which means corporations get more and more from each worker, who in turn is forced to concede wages, vacation, benefits. Because it is no longer a source of pride that a corporation treat its workers fairly. Somewhere along the Reagan years, we were all told that a corporation has no obligation to be moral; it's sole obligation is to increase profit. And so it does.
So when the young man from Occupy Charleston said a year or so ago that it really is no longer about who wins the next election, he was right.
But this coming election does offer us a chance to change our path. The choice is clear: we can continue to allow corporations to profit from our lives, or we can demand that our lives be respected. We can choose those who will be sure that our basic needs are not snatched from us by the powerful, for their profit. And after that election, we must keep our eyes on that prize: our liberty and our dignity.
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