Monday, July 30, 2018

US Teamsters Labor Union Misleaders Blame Workers Vote Against Sell-Out Contract on Internet Trolls - 30 July 2018



https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=120&v=jaxFj7AfK5A

30 July 2018

Facing mounting anger from UPS workers to its sellout contract proposal released on July 10, the Teamsters union is seeking to slander workers’ opposition as the work of “internet trolls.”

Last Thursday Teamsters Local 174 published a three-minute video, complete with Beethoven background music and all the technological sophistication of a high-school animation project, warning workers not to listen to statements by “trolls” criticizing the UPS agreement on social media.

The union’s agreement includes the creation of a new second tier of warehouse driver “hybrid” workers who will be paid less than current drivers. It allows for the continued exploitation of workers for more than 70 hours a week during peak season, and it maintains poverty-level wages for part-time workers who make up more than 70 percent of the workforce.

The Teamsters’ attack on “internet trolls” recalls nothing so much as the propaganda campaign waged by the United Auto Workers (UAW) union during the 2015 contract negotiations with the big three automakers.

After Fiat Chrysler workers rejected the UAW sellout contract by a 2-to-1 margin, the union executives spent almost half a million dollars to hire BerlinRosen, a Democratic-Party aligned New York City public relations firm, to push through the sellout. Their campaign included claims that information spread by workers online, including from the WSWS Autoworker Newsletter, was “fake news.” The union was widely denounced by workers for stuffing the ballots to eventually push through the deal.

It has since been revealed that high-level UAW officials were accepting millions of dollars in payoffs from the automakers throughout the negotiations between 2009 and 2015, during which time the union introduced a new second-tier position for new hires on poverty level wages and an alternative work schedule with 10-hour shifts. Last week, it was reported that Dennis Williams, the recently-retired UAW president, personally signed off on these corrupt payoffs.

The UAW’s attacks on the online commentators anticipated the ongoing “fake news” campaign by the Democratic Party and intelligence agencies aimed at justifying the censorship of left-wing and alternative news sites. This campaign has been intensified in the wake of strikes by teachers in West Virginia, Oklahoma and Arizona this year, during which teachers used social media to organize independently of the unions.

If anything, the Teamsters’ attack on “internet trolls” is even less sophisticated than the UAW campaign over “fake news.” Its video actually underscores the naked character of the sellout, because it is unable to answer any of the attacks on the agreement that it itself cites.

The video includes a series of animated speech bubbles with quotes ostensibly made by “trolls,” but which are actually attacks on the agreement widely made by workers on social media, including on the “Vote No on UPS Contract” Facebook page, which has over 20,000 members.

These include: “I heard you guys sold us out on the 70-hour week;” “I heard the new [tier] are going to take all our work and do it for less money;” “I heard the [new tier] are going to be completely abused by the company;” and “I heard we could have gotten a way better deal if you guys weren’t afraid to strike!” These accusations are not answered with arguments; they are crossed out with red lines and a giant “NO,” followed by a plea for workers not to trust “internet trolls” but only their “trusted local union leadership.”

The well-heeled pro-capitalist labor misleaders sitting on top of the Teamsters Union obviously think workers were born yesterday.

https://xenagoguevicene.livejournal.com/90615.html

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