home / subscribe / donate / books / t-shirts / search / links / feedback / events / faq
Inside the New Print Edition of Our Subscriber-Only Newsletter!
"Better Killing:" Anthropology Goes to War in Afghanistan
David Price describes how the Pentagon is recruiting PhDs to fight its counter-insurgency campaigns: today Afghanistan, tomorrow the world . Mark Grueter reports from Sulaimani, Iraqi Kurdistan, on a multi-million dollar campus designed to sell the American way of life. Welcome to the American University of Iraq. “Move your ass and your brains will follow.” Joe Paff remembers an astounding mobilization in San Francisco, 1967-1973 and the lessons it holds for left organizers today. Get your new edition today by subscribing online or calling 1-800-840-3683 Contributions to CounterPunch are tax-deductible. Click here to make a donation. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now! CounterPunch books and t-shirts make great presents.
Order CounterPunch By Email For Only $35 a Year !
Meet & Debate (Perhaps Even Date) CPers Online at CounterPunch's New Facebook Page
|
Today's Stories October 16-19, 2009 Saul Landau October 15, 2009 Andrew Cockburn Brian M. Downing Ramzy Baroud Danny Weil M. Idrees Ahmad Margaret Kimberley Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada Harvey Wasserman Nirmal Ghosh Charles R. Larson Website of the Day October 14, 2009 Michael Neumann M. Reza Pirbhai Gareth Porter Paul Craig Roberts John Strausbaugh Fortress Moon Ralph Nader Dean Baker Charles Modiano Nadia Hijab Walter Brasch Website of the Day October 13, 2009 Peter Linebaugh Shamus Cooke John Ross Brendan Cooney Frida Berrigan Yves Engler David Macaray Dave Lindorff Mark Weisbrot Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada Binoy Kampmark Website of the Day October 12, 2009 Pam Martens Mike Whitney Martha Rosenberg Jessica Arents Eamonn McCann Bill Hatch Sen. Russell Feingold Niranjan Ramakrishnan Gideon Levy Iyad Burnat Alan Cabal Dan Bacher Website of the Day October 9-11, 2009 Alexander Cockburn James Bovard Kathleen and Bill Christison Andy Worthington Marc Levy Tariq Ali Mike Whitney Paul Craig Roberts Alan Nasser Jack Z. Bratich Steve Breyman David Michael Green Dave Lindorff Paul Buchheit Jim Goodman Missy Beattie Michael Leonardi Nadia Hijab Mel Packer David Macaray James T. Phillips Charles R. Larson Michael Donnelly David Yearsley Lorenzo Wolff Poets' Basement Website of the Weekend October 8, 2009 Saul Landau Paul Fitzgerald / Linn Washington, Jr. Marshall Auerback Dave Lindorff David Rosen Chris Darimont / Misty MacDuffee John V. Walsh Stewart Lawrence Charles R. Larson Website of the Day October 7, 2009 Brendan Cooney Paul Craig Roberts Dean Baker Jonathan Cook John Stanton Joanne Mariner Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada Stephen Lendman Sen. Russell Feingold Mary Lynn Cramer Website of the Day October 6, 2009 Mike Whitney Gareth Porter Jonathan Cook Boris Kagarlitsky Iain Boal Ron Jacobs John Ross Michael Dickinson Stephen Fleischman Ira Glunts Missy Beattie Website of the Day October 5, 2009 Pam Martens Mike Whitney Paul Craig Roberts Harry Browne Sara Mann Omar Barghouti Shamus Cooke Brenda Norrell Fred Gardner Binoy Kampmark Copenhagen Blues: McChrystal and the Afghan Trap Website of the Day October 2-4, 2009 Alexander Cockburn Saul Landau Diana Johnstone Greg Moses William Blum Brian Cloughley Russell Mokhiber John Ross Ellen Brown David Ker Thomson David Macaray Gary Engler Robert Fantina Lisa Stolarski / Naomi Archer Anthony Papa Joe Allen Harry Browne Ron Jacobs Charles R. Larson David Yearsley Poets' Basement Website of the Weekend
|
Weekend Edition The Great Marginalization IIWhere $18 an Hour is Too MuchBy CARL GINSBURG The trucks rolled through the prison-like gates of the Stella D’Oro factory on upper Broadway in the Bronx this week, there to begin the process of moving the eighty year-old plant’s baking machinery to a facility in Ohio. Same cookies, same cakes, same breads, not same union wage. It seems that America cannot afford to pay a baker $18 an hour; that’s take home pay of $2,300 a month. It’s especially painful for this workforce, watching their tools and ovens carted off, having been on strike for more than a year after the owners – a private equity firm out of Greenwich, CT (do they do anything else in Greenwich, CT?) -- cut pay to $14 an hour, provoking the strike. More pain as the illegality of the company’s wage cut slowly wound its way to the NLRB, which upon hearing ruled in the workers' favor, ordering their jobs restored … and only then did the bakers get a message from Greenwich that the plant would be shut, forever, its production siphoned off to greener pastures where union wages are ancient history. Add the Stella D’Oro workers to the swelling ranks of New York’s unemployed, the most unfortunate of whom hit the streets before too long. First comes loss of housing. The losses of rent-regulated apartments to market forces, begun under Mayor Giuliani and continuing apace under current Mayor Bloomberg, keep escalating… net declines in low and moderate rental housing now a widely accepted, seemingly unstoppable fact. These same market forces dictate the “costs of innovation” – nothing more than a bargaining term of the hoarders of capital, whose banks today have twelve times capital reserves as pre-crisis levels, spiking stocks yet again, and whose agents are anxiously awaiting another big feeding at the bonus trough. Can’t keep good people without a good feeding. Money is being made big time and in those circles the recession is indeed over and done with, an expression heard hourly on Cable TV business reports, when in fact hardly anyone else thinks the recession’s declared absence has any meaning whatsoever to their lives, present and future. New York City’s homelessness is at an all-time high… 120,000 men, women and children called the shelter system home at some point during the fiscal year that ended in June… 10,000 families live in those shelters today. More would come but there’s simply no more room. Barack Obama believes in banks over jobs. He would have the Stella D'Oro workers believe that growth in the GDP (as will happen at the Ohio plant) will free up markets, loosen credit and create good jobs, somewhere… a simplistic and one-sided proposition at best and certain not to lead to jobs in any substantial numbers this year or next. Or even in 2011. That’s a long, long time. Especially if you just came off a year-long picket line. These are very hard times. How the Fed governors resolve their conflict about the pace of purchasing $1.25 trillion in T-bills and mortgage-backed securities, whether to keep interest rates low and credit easy, or to pull back government spending, let others step in to buy and bid up rates, inducing some inflation… this matters little to the Stella D’Oro workers. The trucks are packed and have hit the road to Ohio. Nor do the details of the competing health care proposals hold the interest of these laid off workers… the fact that, even if a public option were to be included in the end, hospitals, clinics and doctors are free to opt out of it… the same providers who express a preference not to serve Medicaid patients. Not noticed by the workers. On COBRA, yes, the workers would take notice that the government picks up 65% of their health care premium for nine months.. but that still leaves hundreds of dollars a month per person to be paid for COBRA coverage to insurance companies. The bottom line with all the plans debated today in Congress is that they will cost people money every month, money they don’t have, or certainly could not keep paying given rates of increase of health care premiums – which averaged 8.9% a year for a decade (!) and are projected to keep going up and up. What these workers know is that they are not likely to get a job with a living wage again anytime soon. Reports out this week point to NYC job growth in retail and other services in the $14,000-$19,000 annual pay range—poverty wages. No wonder tens of millions of working Americans qualify for food stamps, as the numbers of workers earning poverty wages grows. Food stamps: a government subsidy to low wage-paying factory owners. As those trucks pulled away this week they took with them the prospect of decent lives for several hundred workers and their families, for whom demise is now a near certainty. These trucks are making the rounds in every city in America. And there is no plan to stop them. Carl Ginsburg is a tv producer and journalist based in New York. He can be reached at carlginsburg@gmail.com |
Now Available from CounterPunch Books! Yellowstone Drift:
"Powerful and shocking .. Waiting for
Lightning
|