As
Christians I don't believe we cannot support labour unions and yet at the same
time I understand why people form them and on one level it's hard to not be
sympathetic to their concerns.
Unions use the threat of violence to bring about change. They
block entrances and use physical intimidation to impose their will on management
and workers who walk across the picket line.
In the United States the Evangelical Right has undermined
union support in the Church by decrying their long-time association with the
Democratic Party... a party that ostensibly once stood for populism and the
working man. The political shift as well as the Right wing campaign focusing on
Democratic Party support for abortion and other sins has successfully led a new
generation of Christians to abandon the unions. And besides the jobs aren't
there anymore.
But the real reason for Christians to eschew union membership
is rarely addressed because if followed through it would mean a Christian
divorce from politics in general, not to mention law enforcement and the
military. The principles are the same.
However one views labour unions when one reads about the
machinations of corporations and how they cheat their workers and put profits
above people. They will without hesitation decimate communities which at one
time bent over backwards to accommodate them.
Additionally when one learns about corporate tactics to
suppress workers and labour organisers it's hard to not sympathise with their
efforts.
In the end I view labour unions as a necessary corrective to
corporate greed but at the same I cannot join with them in their struggle. And
as was seen in the United States organised labour grew wealthy and corrupt.
It's alliances with the political machines and organised crime as well as the
avarice of its members led to a corruption as repugnant as that of the corporate
leaders and Wall Street puppet-masters.
But in 1970's and 1980's Argentina the political angle took a
particularly bad turn as corporate executives collaborated with the state to
destroy any hint of leftist labour politics. People were tortured and killed as
a result and the corporate world was in many cases happy to work with and aid
the state.
It has taken decades but a few people are being held to
account. However the true story and the extent of the crimes will never be
known.
And of course these articles all ignore or more critical
angle to the story... to what extent did the corporate masters in the United
States and NATO know about this? Was this official policy, part of a larger
programme at work throughout the Western world?
Given the scale of Operation Condor and the scope of other US
programmes it's a viable question. Additionally given the relationship of large
corporations with the state apparatus and the long history demonstrating these
connections... both ideological, financial and sometimes in terms of policy...
it's certainly worth exploring.
There's a lot of smoke but as the years slip by the story
will continue to slip away.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.