https://twitter.com/SenatorDurbin/statu ... 5888929792
>>>"Jobs processing meat and poultry are hot, dirty, monotonous, and dangerous. Across America immigrants have always taken these jobs. ICE raids should focus on those who are a threat to our safety, not those who work hard every day to put food on our tables."<<<
I am old enough to remember when slaughterhouse jobs were good-paying union jobs that provided for a family. Now they just bring in an endless stream of cheap immigrant labor and externalize the costs to the larger community.
I am Old Enough to Remember-Even if Sen Durban doesn't
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Spock
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- silverscreenselect
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Re: I am Old Enough to Remember-Even if Sen Durban doesn't
And, as Paul Harvey would say, "And now, for the rest of the story..."Spock wrote: I am old enough to remember when slaughterhouse jobs were good-paying union jobs that provided for a family. Now they just bring in an endless stream of cheap immigrant labor and externalize the costs to the larger community.
https://monthlyreview.org/2019/05/01/un ... hterhouse/Meatpacking was once considered a good job. From the Second World War through the 1950s, “packinghouse wages rose to 20 percent above average manufacturing wages.” Strong unions such as the Packing Workers Organizing Committee ensured living wages and decent working conditions for slaughterhouse workers. This changed during the 1960s. To increase their profits, meatpacking companies shut down unionized, urban slaughterhouses and built new ones in the countryside where unions were weak and automation was used to lower a company’s labor force. This resulted in great gains for the meatpacking giants in the form of reduced labor costs and increased labor productivity. Waltz notes that in 1952, “one man-hour of labor produced 51.4 pounds of dressed meat; by 1977, that had tripled to 154.6 pounds.”3 As corporate profits soared, meatpacking workers’ wages were decimated. By the 1990s, the wages of packinghouse workers were 20 percent less than the average manufacturing wage.4 Today, meatpacking workers are among the lowest paid and most exploited manufacturing workers.
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- Bob78164
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Re: I am Old Enough to Remember-Even if Sen Durban doesn't
I thought this was likely to be an object lesson in the effect the decimation of unions has had on wages. —Bobsilverscreenselect wrote:And, as Paul Harvey would say, "And now, for the rest of the story..."Spock wrote: I am old enough to remember when slaughterhouse jobs were good-paying union jobs that provided for a family. Now they just bring in an endless stream of cheap immigrant labor and externalize the costs to the larger community.
https://monthlyreview.org/2019/05/01/un ... hterhouse/Meatpacking was once considered a good job. From the Second World War through the 1950s, “packinghouse wages rose to 20 percent above average manufacturing wages.” Strong unions such as the Packing Workers Organizing Committee ensured living wages and decent working conditions for slaughterhouse workers. This changed during the 1960s. To increase their profits, meatpacking companies shut down unionized, urban slaughterhouses and built new ones in the countryside where unions were weak and automation was used to lower a company’s labor force. This resulted in great gains for the meatpacking giants in the form of reduced labor costs and increased labor productivity. Waltz notes that in 1952, “one man-hour of labor produced 51.4 pounds of dressed meat; by 1977, that had tripled to 154.6 pounds.”3 As corporate profits soared, meatpacking workers’ wages were decimated. By the 1990s, the wages of packinghouse workers were 20 percent less than the average manufacturing wage.4 Today, meatpacking workers are among the lowest paid and most exploited manufacturing workers.
"Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason than that of blindfolded fear." Thomas Jefferson