Afleveringen
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âI did not start out as a writer interested in organized labor,â Hamilton Nolan writes in The Hammer: Power, Inequality, and the Struggle for the Soul of Labor; âI started out as a writer interested in why America was so fucked up. Why did we have such gargantuan levels of inequality? Why were thousands of homeless people living in the streets of cities where billionaires frolicked in penthouses? Why was it that certain classes of people worked hard their entire lives and stayed poor, just as their parents had been, and just as their children seemed doomed to be? Even while labor unions had fallen almost completely out of the public mind, it turned out that they were central to all our most fundamental problems.â In this live episode of Working People, recorded at Red Emmaâs cooperative bookstore, cafe, and community events space in Baltimore on Dec. 6, 2024, Max speaks with Nolan about his new book, what the ongoing war on workersâ rights and unions tells us about the âfucked upâ society weâre living in, and what lessons labor can teach us now about how to fight and win, even in the darkest of times. Sara Nelson, International President of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, AFLâCIO, also makes a special guest appearance in the second half of the episode.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
Hamiltonâs website, Facebook page, and X page
Hamilton Nolan, Hachette Books, The Hammer: Power, Inequality, and the Struggle for the Soul of Labor
Red Emmaâs website, Facebook page, and Instagram
David Dayen, In These Times, âMeet the militant flight attendant leader who threatened a strikeâand helped stop Trumpâs shutdownâ
Permanent links belowâŠ
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured MusicâŠ
Jules Taylor, âWorking Peopleâ Theme SongStudio Production: Max Alvarez
Post-Production: Jules Taylor -
âIn late September,â Timothy Pratt writes in Capital & Main, âa massive billow of smoke from a chemical fire spread over metro Atlanta, lingering for weeks and prompting national news coverage. The smoke has cleared, but the anger has not dissipated in Conyers, the city of 20,000 where the fire occurred, and in surrounding areas... Smoke from the blaze left some residents with breathing difficulties, headaches, dizziness and skin rashes in the days that followed, along with a deepening worry about their communityâs safety... The fire was pool-chemical company BioLabâs fourth in the last two decades, a track record that has created what one observer described as âgenerational rageâ among residents.â In this installment of our ongoing series Sacrificedâwhere we speak to people living, working, and fighting for justice in Americaâs âsacrifice zonesââwe speak with Hannah Loyd, Christina O'Connor, and Jeramie Julian: three residents who live near, and have been directly affected by, the September fire at the Conyers BioLab facility.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
Christinaâs Facebook page and TikTok
Hannahâs Facebook page
Conyers, GA, Facebook group: Helping Our Health
Timothy Pratt, Capital & Main, âChemical fire at Atlanta-area plant sparks local movement against BioLabâ
Holly Yan, CNN, âWeeks after a chemical plant inferno, nearby residents say theyâre suffering prolonged illnesses and financial upheavalâ
Status Coup News, âPOISONED Georgians DEMAND toxic chemical plant close after chlorine gas infernoâ
Joi Dukes, FOX 5 Atlanta, âEPA whistleblower on BioLab debris testing: 'You canât find what you donât look for'â
Maximillian Alvarez, Working People / The Real News Network, ââLetâs unite!â: Poisoned residents of Americaâs sacrifice zones are banding togetherâ
Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, âTrainwreck in âTrump Countryâ: Partisan politics hasnât helped East Palestine, OH (DOCUMENTARY)â
Maximillian Alvarez, Working People / The Real News Network, ââTowns are goneâ: In Helene-devastated Asheville, NC, volunteers battle misinformation and âapocalypticâ wreckageâ
Maximillian Alvarez, In These Times / The Real News Network, âScenes from a sacrifice zone: South Baltimore residents fight back against industrial pollutionâ
Permanent links belowâŠ
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured MusicâŠ
Jules Taylor, âWorking Peopleâ Theme Song -
Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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âDuring the Great Depression of the 1930s, the US economy almost completely collapsed,â historian Dana Frank writes in her new book, What Can We Learn from the Great Depression? âBy 1933 a third of all those whoâd had jobs were unemployed; another third were scraping by with lesser work. Racism, far from collapsing, festered and metastasized as insecurity rippled through the country, pushing people of color even further downward... As we face our own crises todayâa precarious economy, outrageous inequality and poverty, growing racism, climate changeâand lie awake at night, facing our own fears, these stories from the Great Depression offer us new and often surprising insights into our own time, our own choices.â In this live episode of Working People, recorded at Red Emmaâs cooperative bookstore, cafe, and community events space in Baltimore, TRNN Editor-in-Chief Maximillian Alvarez speaks with Frank about her new book and what taking a fresh look at poor and working peopleâs struggles in the dark 1930s can teach us about navigating our own perilous moment in history.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
Dana Frank, Beacon Press, What Can We Learn from the Great Depression?: Stories of Ordinary People & Collective Action in Hard Times
Dana Frank website
Red Emmaâs website, Facebook page, and Instagram
Dana Frank, The Los Angeles Times, âTrump Says Heâll Expel a Million Immigrants. Believe HimâIt Happened Beforeâ
Dana Frank, History News Network, âOhioâs Little-Known Fascist Member of Congressâ
Permanent links belowâŠ
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured MusicâŠ
Jules Taylor, âWorking Peopleâ Theme SongStudio Production: Max Alvarez
Post-Production: Jules Taylor -
Longtime Working People listeners will be familiar with Max and Melâs extended work discussing the supply chain, the workers who keep that system running day in and day out, and the dangerous and exploitative working conditions that many workers labor under. Our global economy relies on these workers to stay runningâand bosses around the world use this pressure as a cudgel against the workers.
For todayâs episode of Working People, weâre zooming out and taking a look at the global supply chain with Judy Gearhart, research professor with the Accountability Research Center at American University and host of the Labor Link Podcast, a podcast about âthe brave individuals organizing the workers who make our stuff.â With decades of experience collaborating with organizers and rights advocates supporting worker struggles in the Global South, Judy is uniquely positioned to bring the stories of these workers forth to her listeners.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
Check out the Labor Link podcast here.
Labor Link Podcast, âS2E4 - Hariyanto Suwarno (Indonesian Migrant Workers' Union) and Charli Fritzner (Greenpeace USA)â
Mel Buer, âCorporate billionaires are wrecking the supply chain. Just look at the railroads.â
Teddy Ostrow and Ruby Walsh, âUPS and the Logistics Revolutionâ
Permanent links belowâŠ
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured MusicâŠ
Jules Taylor, âWorking Peopleâ Theme SongStudio Production: Mel Buer
Post-Production: Jules Taylor -
On November 12, unionized nurses at Ascension St. Agnes Hospital in Baltimore held a rally in front of the Marriott Hotel downtown, where the US Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) was holding a meeting. St. Agnes nurses rallied with supporters from around the city, and they were even joined by fellow Ascension nurses who traveled from Wichita, Kansas, and Austin, Texas.
According to a press release from National Nurses Organizing Committee / National Nurses United (NNOC-NNU), the purpose of the rally was to âhighlight how Ascension has failed to follow USCCB directives to Catholic health care organizations to both serve and advocate for patients âat the margins of societyâ and âtreat its employees respectfully and justly.â... Baltimore nurses have been in negotiations since Feb. 2024, following a successful union election in November 2023. Ascension has failed to bargain in good faith with Saint Agnes nurses on language that would improve safe staffing and protect patients from cuts to services, lawsuits for billing disputes, and surprise billing or excess charges.â In this on-the-ground episode, youâll hear speeches and chants from the Nov. 12 rally, and we speak with Gideon Eziama, a registered nurse with over 20 years of experience who has worked at Ascension St. Agnes for the last six years, and Lisa Watson, a registered nurse at Ascension Via Christi St. Francis Hospital in Wichita, who traveled to Baltimore to stand in solidarity with her coworkers at Ascension St. Agnes.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
National Nurses Organizing Committee/National Nurses United website, Facebook page, Twitter/X page, and Instagram
NNOC/NNU Press Release: âAscension nurses call on US bishops to hold Catholic hospital chain accountable to church directivesâ
Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, âBaltimore nurses at largest Catholic health network in US fight on for first contractâ
Aleja Hertzler-McCain, Religion News Service, âAscension nurses receive tepid response from Catholic bishops after rallyâ
Permanent links belowâŠ
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured MusicâŠ
Jules Taylor, âWorking Peopleâ Theme SongStudio Production: Max Alvarez
Post-Production: Jules Taylor -
Sacrifice zones are areas where people have been left to live in conditions that threaten life itself, from toxic industrial pollution to the deadly, intensifying effects of man-made climate change. In a more just and less cruel society, the very concept of a âsacrifice zoneâ wouldnât exist. And yet, in America, after decades of deregulation and public disinvestment, more working-class communities are becoming sacrifice zones, and more of us are being set up for sacrifice at the altars of corporate greed and government abandonment.
Americaâs sacrifice zones are no longer extreme outliers; they are, in fact, a harrowing model of the future that lies in store for most of us if the corporate monsters, corporate politicians, and Wall Street vampires destroying our communities arenât stopped. And residents of different sacrifice zones across the country, fellow workers on the frontlines of all this reckless and preventable destruction, are connecting with each other, learning from one another, and working together to fight back. In this Working People liveshow, recorded on Oct. 19 at Red Emmaâs worker cooperative bookstore, cafe, and community events space in Baltimore, we speak with a special panel of residents from four different sacrifice zones in the US about how the situations theyâre facing in their own communities and their struggles for justice and accountability are connected.
Panelists include: Hilary Flint, communications director of Beaver County Marcellus Awareness Community and a former resident of Beaver County, Pennsylvania, a few miles from the site of the Feb 2023 Norfolk Southern train derailment and chemical disaster in East Palestine, Ohio; Melanie Meade, a community organizer, educator, and life-long resident of Clairton, Pennsylvania, the site of US Steel's Clairton Coke Works, which was named the most toxic air polluter in Allegheny County in a 2021 report by PennEnvironment; Elise Keaton Wade, a real estate attorney by trade, longtime environmental justice activist, and a native of Southern West Virginia; Angela âAngieâ Shaneyfelt, a resident of Curtis Bay in South Baltimore, who lives just blocks away from an open air coal terminal owned and operated by rail giant CSX Transportation, which has been polluting her community for generations.
Special thanks to Dr. Nicole Fabricant and the South Baltimore Community Land Trust for organizing this live show.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
Coal-Free Curtis Bay Facebook page and Instagram
South Baltimore Community Land Trust website, Twitter/X page, Facebook page, and Instagram
Beaver County Marcellus Awareness Community website, Facebook page, Instagram, and Twitter/X page
Hilaryâs Instagram
Nicole Fabricantâs Instagram
Melanieâs Facebook page
Angelaâs Facebook page
Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, "South Baltimore residents on the toxic reality of living in a 'sacrifice zone'"
Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, "East Palestine residents demand fully-funded healthcare"
Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, âOne year later, East Palestine residents want Norfolk-Southern held accountableâ
Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, ââTowns are goneâ: In Helene-devastated Asheville, NC, volunteers battle misinformation and âapocalypticâ wreckageâ
Maximillian Alvarez, In These Times / The Real News Network, "Scenes from a sacrifice zone: South Baltimore residents fight back against industrial pollution"
Maximillian Alvarez & Molly Crabapple, In These Times, âWasteland warriorsâ
Laura Gottesdiener, The Nation, âYou can wipe out coal, but you canât bring the mountains backâ
Nicole Fabricant, University of California Press, Fighting to Breathe: Race, Toxicity, and the Rise of Youth Activism in Baltimore
Nicole Fabricant, The Real News Network, âOpinion | CSX explosion in Curtis Bay should alarm Baltimore City and accelerate real changeâ
Adam Willis, The Baltimore Banner, "A state-backed report found coal dust across Curtis Bay. CSX isnât convinced"
Melanie Meade, PublicSource, âFamily history, loss and hopes for a bright future fuel my fight for clean air in Clairtonâ
Daniel Shailer, PublicSource, âThe Mon Valley holds its breath as the latest U.S. Steel settlement promises a fresh approachâ
Permanent links belowâŠ
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured MusicâŠ
Jules Taylor, âWorking Peopleâ Theme SongStudio Production: Max Alvarez
Post-Production: Jules Taylor -
Two years ago, the US was on the cusp of seeing its first national rail strike in decades. Then, President Joe Biden, at the urging of the rail companies, and with the help of both parties in Congress, preemptively blocked railroad workers from striking in December of 2022. Workers were forced to accept a contract that did not address the vast majority of issues that have been putting them, our communities, and our supply chain at hazard. How has this all shaped railroad workersâ attitudes and approaches to the upcoming elections? In this urgent panel discussion, we pose this question directly to three veteran railroaders, and we have an honest discussion about how working people should act strategically within and outside the electoral system to advance their interests.
Panelists include: Hugh Sawyer, a veteran locomotive engineer with 36 years of experience, a member of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen Division 316, and a founding member and acting treasurer of Railroad Workers United; Mark Burrows, a retired locomotive engineer with 37 of experience, who has served as co-chair and organizer for Railroad Workers United, where he still edits RWUâs quarterly newsletter âThe Highballâ; Ron Kaminkow, a recently retired former brakeman, conductor, and engineer who worked for many years in freight rail before working 20 years as a passenger engineer at Amtrak, a founding member of RWU and delegate in the Northern Nevada Central Labor Council.
Additional links/info below⊠Railroad Workers United website, Facebook page, and Twitter/X page Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, âRailroad workers speak out after Congress and Biden block rail strikeâ Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, âWhy do railroad workers keep dying on the job?â Maximillian Alvarez & Mel Buer, The Real News Network, âLabor militancy can't be stopped: Palestine and Labor Notes 2024â Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, âUS freight workers say itâs time to nationalize the railroadsâ Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, "âThis was preventableâ: Railroad workers explain how Wall St caused the East Palestine derailment" Mel Buer, The Real News Network, âCorporate billionaires are wrecking the supply chain. Just look at the railroadsâ Adam Johnson, Nima Shirazi, Maximillian Alvarez, & Mel Buer, Citations Needed / The Real News Network, âBiden and Congressional Dems partner with GOP and corporate media to discipline railroad workersâ Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, âRailroad workers are being ground to dust. Who will help them?â Permanent links below⊠Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show! Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter pageFeatured Music...
Jules Taylor, âWorking Peopleâ Theme Song -
Last year, we summoned all the Alvarez siblings from the ether to record our annual Halloween episode. Sadly, we were not able to record a new Halloween episode in 2024, but to celebrate the holiday and give listeners a break from all the heavy news, we are publicly releasing last year's spooky special. Jesse, Zak, Max, and MacKenna break down THE defining horror movie of our childhood, the movie that scarred us all: John Carpenter's The Thing. From the whole Alvarez family, we're wishing everyone out there a Happy Halloween!
Permanent links below...
Working People Patreon page
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured Music (all songs sourced from the Free Music Archive: freemusicarchive.org)
Jules Taylor, "Working People Theme Song
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On Monday, Oct 21, 2400 behavior health workers at Kaiser Permanenteâs Southern California locations walked off the job in their ongoing struggle for a fair contract. Over the summer, negotiations between the health system and the bargaining committee, represented by the National Union of Healthcare Workers (NUHW), failed to close the gap between their proposals, opening the door for a strike. The workers are now well into their second week on strike.
The healthcare giant refuses to bargain seriously with the workers, offering paltry raises instead of agreeing to the workersâ demands for better pay, pensions, and safer staffing levels at the Kaiser mental health clinics in and around Southern California. These gains, the union believes, would allow Kaiser to compete with other health systems, drastically improve patient care quality, and solve many of the scheduling issues that have plagued the health system since before the start of the pandemic.
The union hopes that by striking, they can show management that they are serious about securing a fair contract for their members. Last week, on the first day of the strike, Mel sat down with Chris Reeves and Lisa Caroll, two behavioral health workers who work in Los Angeles and San Diego, respectively, to talk about the state of negotiations, what workers are demanding, and how it feels to be out on the picket line in the struggle for a fair contract.
Note: This episode was recorded on Oct 21, 2024, on the first day of the strike.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
NUHWâs Strike Announcement Release
Donate to the NUHW Mental Health Workersâ Strike Fund
Stay up-to-date on the strike here
Check out TRNNâs previous coverage of Kaiser workers striking in the east coast
Permanent links belowâŠ
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured MusicâŠ
Jules Taylor, âWorking Peopleâ Theme SongStudio Production: Max Alvarez
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Weâre coming up on a pretty mind-blowing anniversary in the news labor worldâTwo years ago, in October 2022, after the newspaper unilaterally cut off insurance benefits to production workers and newsroom workers filed ULPs for bad-faith bargaining, the workers of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette walked off the job on strike.
The Newspaper Guild of Pittsburgh has been in negotiations for a contract with Post Gazette management for SEVEN years - since 2017 - and have battled bad faith bargaining, illegal and unilaterally imposed changes to working conditions, and loss of vacation time and insurance benefits. In October 2022, newsroom workers voted to go on strike, and strike they did.
Now, two years later, the workers of the Post Gazette are still on strikeâand despite the NLRB upholding their Unfair Labor Practice charges against the company, still have a long way to go to total victory.
Today, weâve brought some of the striking workers onto the show to talk about the last two years of striking, the welcome updates from the NLRB, and whatâs next for the workers as their battle continues.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
Steve Mellon, âThis has to stopâ: Pittsburgh news workers mark 2 years on strike with billboard truck that names names
The Pittsburgh Union Progress website
Donate to the strike fund here
Permanent links belowâŠ
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured MusicâŠ
Jules Taylor, âWorking Peopleâ Theme SongStudio Production: Max Alvarez
Post-Production: Jules Taylor -
Over the past two weeks, people around the country have watched in horror as our neighbors and fellow workers have been battered by the successive disasters of Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton. âAfter making landfall as a Category 4 hurricane on Sept. 26 and tearing through the Gulf Coast of Florida,â Adeel Hassan and Isabelle Taft write in The New York Times, âHelene plowed north through Georgia and walloped the Blue Ridge Mountains, washing out roads, causing landslides and knocking out power and cell service for millions of people. Across western North Carolina, towns were destroyed, water and fuel supplies were disrupted, and residents were in a communications black hole, scrambling for Wi-Fi to try to reach friends and family... As of Oct. 6, there were more than 230 confirmed deaths from the storm.â The hurricanes have passed, but the devastation and dire need they left in their wake remain. In this urgent mini-cast, we speak with two guests who are on the ground in Asheville, NC, providing relief and mutual aid to their community: Byon Ballard, a cofounder of the Mother Grove Goddess Temple in Asheville, where she serves as Senior Priestess, and Lori Freshwater, a journalist and relief aid volunteer who is originally from North Carolina.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
Mother Grove Goddess Temple website, Facebook page, and Instagram
Mother Grove Goddess Temple volunteer and donation information page
Beloved Asheville website, Facebook page, and Instagram
Adeel Hassan & Isabelle Taft, The New York Times, âWhat we know about Hurricane Heleneâs destruction so farâ
Dharna Noor, The Guardian, âDouble punch of hurricanes could become common due to climate crisisâ
Oliver Milman, The Guardian, ââItâs mindblowingâ: US meteorologists face death threats as hurricane conspiracies surgeâ
Oliver Milman & Jonathan Watts, The Guardian, âGlobal heating makes hurricanes like Helene twice as likely, data showsâ
Lauren Aratani, The Guardian, âInsurance is failing hurricane survivors: âPeople thought they were coveredââ
Permanent links belowâŠ
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured MusicâŠ
Jules Taylor, âWorking Peopleâ Theme SongStudio Production: Max Alvarez
Post-Production: Jules Taylor -
The student encampment movement last school year turned institutions of higher education into flashpoints of struggle over Israelâs ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, US support for it, and the right to speak out against it. This year, college and university campuses have become laboratories of repression where different administrative efforts to silence Palestine solidarity and antiwar demonstrators are being deployed. And that is playing out right now at Cornell University.
As Aaron Fernando writes at The Nation, âCornell University, in Ithaca, New York, has taken disciplinary action against an international student that will likely force him to leave the country, and could have a chilling effect on other international students participating in political protests.
Momodou Taal is a PhD candidate in Africana studies and a graduate student worker, attending Cornell under the F-1 visa program. In the last academic year, Taal joined student-led actions demanding that Cornell divest from industries complicit in Israelâs attacks on civilians in Gaza.â
The Cornell grad worker union, Cornell Graduate Students United-UE, released a statement condemning the universityâs disciplinary actions against Taal, and is demanding the administration bargain with the union âover the effects of the discipline administered to Taal.â âCGSU-UE condemns Taalâs suspension, which represents a disturbing pattern of discriminatory discipline against marginalized graduate workers. The union is still fighting for just cause protections in discipline and discharge, due process for academic evaluations, strong academic freedom, and nondiscrimination protections inclusive of political affiliation and action, religious practice, and caste.â In this urgent episode, Max speaks about Cornellâs actions against Taal with two members of the CGSU-UE bargaining committee: Jenna Marvin, a third-year PhD student in the History of Art & Visual Studies at Cornell; and Jawuanna McAllister, a sixth-year PhD candidate in Molecular Biology and Genetics at Cornell.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
Cornell Graduate Students United-UE website and Instagram
Petition: âUE Local 300 Member Facing Firing and Deportation for Exercising Free Speechâ
Call for other grad unions to sign âSolidarity Statement of Support for Momodou Taalâ
Aaron Fernando, The Nation, âA Cornell graduate student faces deportation after a pro-Palestine actionâ
Miles Klee, Rolling Stone, âCornell grad student who attended pro-Palestine protest could be forced to leave U.S.â
Permanent links belowâŠ
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured MusicâŠ
Jules Taylor, âWorking Peopleâ Theme SongStudio Production: Max Alvarez
Post-Production: Jules Taylor -
As the climate crisis intensifies, billions of poor and working people around the world are suffering from lack of regular (or any) access to clean water, but the dawn of âAIâ is about to make the problem much worse. In their recent report for Context, âForget jobsâAI is coming for your water,â Diana Baptista and Fintan McDonnell write, âArtificial intelligence lives on power and water, fed to it in vast quantities by data centres around the world. And those centres are increasingly located in the global south.â In ColĂłn, a municipality in Central Mexico that is home to Microsoftâs first hyperscale data center campus in the country, working people are already bearing the environmental costs of man-made climate change, and they will be the ones to bear the costs of AI and Big Tech. âThe town of 67,000 is suffering extreme drought. Its two dams have nearly dried up, farmers are struggling with dead crops, and families are relying on trucked and bottled water to fulfill their daily needs.â In the latest installment of our ongoing series, Sacrificed, Max speaks with Diana Baptista, a data journalist at the Thomson Reuters Foundation based in Mexico City, about Mexicoâs ongoing water crisis and about the human and environmental costs of AI and cloud computing.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
Dianaâs Context author page and X page
Fintan McDonnell & Diana Baptista, Context, âForget jobs. AI is coming for your water (Video Report)â
Fintan McDonnell & Diana Baptista, Context, âThirsty data centres spring up in water-poor Mexican town (Text Report)â
David Berreby, Yale Environment 360, âAs use of A.I. soars, so does the energy and water it requiresâ
Tamara Pearson, The Real News Network, âIndigenous Mexicans risk their lives to defend the environment from organized crime and âinsatiable, predatoryâ transnational corporationsâ
Maximillian Alvarez, Working People / The Real News Network, âIn Brazil, the climate crisis is already turning working people into climate refugeesâ
Maximillian Alvarez, Working People / The Real News Network, âEast Palestine residents have been left behindâand they're running out of waterâ
Permanent links belowâŠ
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured MusicâŠ
Jules Taylor, âWorking Peopleâ Theme SongStudio Production: Max Alvarez
Post-Production: Jules Taylor -
Two years ago, workers from several different Trader Joeâs grocery stores joined the wave of unionization efforts spreading across the country. Workers in Hadley, Massachusetts, made history in 2022 by not only becoming the first Trader Joeâs store to vote to unionize but also by opting to form an independent union, Trader Joeâs United (TJU). However, like with Starbucks, Amazon, Medieval Times, and other companies where workers have been exercising their right to organize in recent years, rampant union busting has been part of the Trader Joeâs story from the beginning. Whatâs worse, as Alex Press writes in Jacobin, rather than be compelled to follow the law and play by the rules, the supposedly progressive grocery chain has joined Elon Muskâs SpaceX in attacking the very constitutionality of the National Labor Relations Board. What is the current state of the union drive at Trader Joeâs? What issues are employees (âcrew membersâ) still dealing with on the job, and what can supporters do to help? In this episode, Max speaks with Alec Plant, a worker organizer at the Lincoln and Grace Trader Joeâs in Chicago and a member of Trader Joeâs United.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
Trader Joeâs United website, Twitter/X page, and Instagram
Lauren Kaori Gurley, The Washington Post, âAs Chicago Trader Joeâs votes on unionizing, grocer fights other effortsâ
Alex Press, Jacobin, âTrader Joeâs rejects the New Dealâ
Dave Jameison, HuffPost, âTrader Joeâs threatened workers ahead of union vote, feds allegeâ
Talia Soglin, Chicago Tribune, âWorkers at North Center Trader Joeâs are first in Chicago to file for union electionâ
Steven Greenhouse, The New Republic, âHow corporations crush new unionsâ
Steven Greenhouse, The Guardian, âMajor US corporations threaten to return labor to âlaw of the jungleââ
Maximillian Alvarez, Working People / The Real News Network, "Want to unionize your workplace? These worker-organizers have some adviceâ
Permanent links belowâŠ
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured MusicâŠ
Jules Taylor, âWorking Peopleâ Theme SongStudio Production: Max Alvarez
Post-Production: Jules Taylor -
While Max was inside the Labor Notes conference this past April, attending panels and sharing space with intelligent, hard working organizers, Mel was wandering the conference grounds outside, meeting folks and talking about the joy of being a member of the working class as they sat in the grass and ate their lunches and talked with friends, old and new. Thereâs something to be said about the people you meet when youâre sharing cigarettes outside a conference centerâone such person was todayâs guest, adorned in UFCW buttons and sharing his poetry with Mel while they smoked together on a bench near the conference.
On this weekâs episode of Working People, Mel sat down with labor poet and union grocer George Fish, a wonderful man full of stories about his life and work, his experiences growing up and ultimately leaving the Catholic Church, his politicsâhoned through decades of life experienceâand his relationship to his writing and poetry.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
To hear more about our time at LN 2024 - check out our Dispatches from Labor Notes episode
Permanent links below...
Working People Patreon page
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured Music...
Jules Taylor, "Working People" Theme Song
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The death toll in Gaza continues to climb, with conservative estimates putting the numbers of dead around 40,000, but a recent report in the British medical journal The Lancet estimates the actual death toll could be 186,000 or even higherâthatâs roughly 8% of Gazaâs population. And with each passing day, the humanitarian crises unfolding in Gaza and the West Bank gets orders of magnitude worse. Seeing the dire situation in Palestine, seven major US labor unions collectively drafted, signed, and sent a letter to President Biden demanding that US military aid to Israel stop immediately. The letter reads, in part: "Large numbers of Palestinian civilians, many of them children, continue to be killed, reportedly often with US-manufactured bombs. Rising tensions in the region threaten to ensnare even more innocent civilians in a wider war. And the humanitarian crisis deepens by the day, with famine, mass displacement, and destruction of basic infrastructure including schools and hospitals. We have spoken directly to leaders of Palestinian trade unions who told us heart-wrenching stories of the conditions faced by working people in Gaza." In this episode, Max and Mel speak with George Waksmunski, president of the United Electrical, Radio, & Machine Workers of America (UE), Eastern Region, and Brandon Mancilla, Region 9A Director for the United Auto Workers, about why their unions signed onto this call for an end to US aid to Israel and what organized labor can do to end the genocide in Gaza.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
UAW website, Facebook page, Twitter/X page, and Instagram
UE website, Facebook page, Twitter/X page, and Instagram
Michael Sainato, The Guardian, "Seven major US labor unions call on Biden to âshut off military aid to Israelâ"
Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, "UAW endorses Harris, but wonât stop fighting for ceasefire in Gaza"
Mel Buer, The Real News Network, "Organized labor shows up for Palestine"
Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, "Labor organizers explain why theyâre marching on DC for Palestine"
Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, "Tortured Palestinian activist describes military and settler carnage in the West Bank"
Permanent links belowâŠ
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured MusicâŠ
Jules Taylor, âWorking Peopleâ Theme SongStudio Production: Max Alvarez
Post-Production: Jules Taylor -
In 2024, Working People officially crossed the 300 episode mark! Since we published our first episode back in 2018, the show has grown in ways we never could have imagined, and the world itself has changed in radical, hopeful, terrifying ways, the labor movement has undergone incredible changes, and weâve done our best to document that change and this moment in history through the conversations weâve had with workers across industries, from all walks of life, about their lives, jobs, dreams, and struggles.
Over the past seven seasons of the show, we've interviewed working people, young, old, and middle-aged, union and non-union, worker-owners at worker cooperatives, workers who were just laid off, workers on strike, workers unionizing, families of workers who were killed by their jobs, Indigenous workers living on reservations, workers whose children were murdered in a school shooting, sex workers, academic workers, manufacturing workers, railroad and airline workers, educators, yoga instructors and professional massage therapists, social workers, baristas, journalists, healthcare workers, service workers, construction workers, coal miners, lumberjacks, Amazon workers. We've spoken with working people in Cuba, Canada, Brazil, Slovenia, Turkey, Myanmar, the UK, France, and more. In this special episode commemorating 300 episodes of Working People, Max and new cohost Mel Buer reflect on how far the show has come and where weâre going next.
To all of our listeners and supporters, to those who have been with us since the beginning and to those who found the show at some point over the past 7 seasons, to everyone who has ever listened to the show, shared our episodes, donated to our Patreon, to everyone who ever reached out to remind us that someone was listening and encouraged us to keep going, to everyone who has supported us , THANK YOU. We love you, and we wouldn't be here without you. We hope to keep making you and all our fellow workers proud with this show, and it's an honor to be in this struggle with you.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
Maximillian Alvarez, Current Affairs, "Can the Working Class Speak?"
Working People, "Jesus Alvarez" (the first episode)
Mel Buer's TRNN Author Page and Twitter/X profile
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Permanent links below...
Working People Patreon page
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured Music...
Jules Taylor, "Working People" Theme Song
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Today we have an urgent and important conversation with members of the NEA Staff Organization, the union of staffers at the National Education Association, who have been locked out of their workplace by NEA management for the past four weeks. The NEA, representing over 3 million members, is the largest union in the country. Staffers working for the NEA have been bargaining for higher wages and fairer treatment by the union, and have instead been locked out of their workplace after a 3-day ULP strike a month ago. Weâve brought on former educator Rowena Shurn and national board-certified teacher Ambereen Khan-Baker, both of whom are NEASO members and Senior Policy Program Analysts at the NEA, to talk about the lockout, what it means for a union to engage in union-busting tactics with their own staff, and how NEASO members are keeping each otherâs spirits up on the picket line.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
NEASO Website NEASO Strike Fund Nationâs biggest labor union has locked out its employees for 4 weeks now Union With Labor Dispute of Its Own Threatened To Cut Off Workersâ Health Benefits NEA Staffers Locked Out After 3-Day Strike Disrupts Convention, Biden Speech Why Did the National Education Association Just Lock Out Its Own Staffers? Staff Who Disrupted NEAâs Assembly Will Be Locked Out of WorkPermanent links belowâŠ
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show! Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter pageFeatured MusicâŠ
Jules Taylor, âWorking Peopleâ Theme SongStudio Production: Mel Buer
Post-Production: Jules Taylor -
From East Palestine, Ohio, to South Baltimore and beyond, weâve been connecting you with residents living in the toxic wastelands left by private and government-run industryâordinary working people who have been thrust into extraordinary fights for their lives. In the latest installment of our ongoing Sacrificed series, we go to Toledo, Ohio, a city that, in 2014, lost access to its water supply for three days straight due to a massive, toxic algal bloom caused by runoff from industrial animal farming.
We speak with filmmaker Mike Balonek and welcome back Chris Albright, a resident of East Palestine, to discuss the connections between the Norfolk Southern train derailment disaster and the Toledo Water Crisis. We also talk about an upcoming conference in Toledo on Saturday, August 3, hosted by the Justice for East Palestine Residents & Workers coalition: âIs your community a sacrifice zone? A conference on corporate-caused disasters.â The conference will focus on the Toledo Water Crisis, the derailment in East Palestine and the need for better railroad safety, and the radioactive poisoning of residents living near the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant in Pike County, Ohio. The conference will also feature the world premiere of filmmaker Mike Balonekâs new documentary The Big Problem In The Great Lakes, a film about the Toledo Water Crisis of 2014.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
Toledo conference details: Saturday, Aug. 3, 9:30AM
Mike Balonek, The Big Problem In The Great Lakes
WTOL 11, "Timeline | Looking back at the 2014 Toledo water crisis"
Maximillian Alvarez, Cameron Granadino, & Hannah Faris, The Real News Network, "Factory farms pose an 'existential threat' for rural Wisconsin communities"
Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, "Before East Palestine, there was Portsmouth"
Stephanie Elverd, The Pakersburg News & Sentinel, "East Palestine residents express frustration with settlement from train derailment"
Permanent links below...
Working People Patreon page
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured Music...
Jules Taylor, "Working People" Theme Song
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On Monday, July 15, on Day 1 of the Republican National Convention, Sean OâBrien, general president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, became the first Teamsters president ever to address the RNC. Invited by former president Trump, who is now officially the Republican nominee for the 2024 presidential election, OâBrienâs speech was no ordinary RNC filler. And to anyone watching, or anyone paying attention to the political reality in this country, this was no ordinary RNC either. Oâbrienâs very presence on the RNC stage, and the contents of his speech, which lasted for 17 minutes, have sparked a firestorm of intense reactions and furious debates within the labor movement and the Republican and Democratic parties alike. Everyone is talking about this speech and what it all means for workers, but workers themselves need to be driving that conversation. In this special episode, cohosted by Max and Mel Buer, we bring together a diverse panel of Teamster members from across the country to have a spirited, fair, and productive discussion about O'Brien's speech, the 2024 elections, and the future of the labor movement.
Speakers include: Amber Mathwig, a UPS warehouse worker and member of Teamsters Local 638 in Minnesota; Tony, a UPS worker, member of Teamsters Local 174 in Seattle, and a member of Teamsters Mobilize; Chantelle, a part-time UPS worker and member of Teamsters Local 177 in New Jersey; Rick Smith, a 35-year Teamster working in the freight industry and host of The Rick Smith Show; Zoey Moretti Niebuhr, a UPS worker, third-generation Teamster, member of Teamsters Local 391 in North Carolina, and president of Pride at WorkâNorth Carolina; Jess Leigh, a UPS worker, shop steward for Teamsters Local 728 in Atlanta, and a member of the Teamsters LBGTQ Caucus and Teamsters Mobilize; Kat, a part-time UPS worker and shop steward for Teamsters Local 70 in Oakland; and Robert Conklin, a third-generation Teamster and member of Teamsters Local 665 in San Francisco.
Additional links/info belowâŠ
PBS NewsHour, "WATCH: Teamsters President Sean O'Brien speaks at Republican National Convention | 2024 RNC Night 1"
Sean O'Brien post on X about Sen. Josh Hawley
Ryan Bort, Rolling Stone, "Union Twitter account goes rogue after president speaks at RNC"
Maximillian Alvarez, The Real News Network, "Everybody hates Sean"
The Rick Smith Show website, Facebook page, Twitter/X page, and Instagram
Teamsters Mobilize website, Facebook page, Twitter/X page, and Instagram
Teamsters LGBTQ Caucus website
Pride at WorkâNorth Carolina Instagram
Maximillian Alvarez & Teddy Ostrow, The Real News Network, "UPS and Teamsters reach tentative agreement, but is a strike still possible?"
Teddy Ostrow, The Upsurge / The Real News Network, "The UPS Teamsters contract has been ratified. What now?"
Permanent links below...
Working People Patreon page
Leave us a voicemail and we might play it on the show!
Labor Radio / Podcast Network website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
In These Times website, Facebook page, and Twitter page
The Real News Network website, YouTube channel, podcast feeds, Facebook page, and Twitter page
Featured Music...
Jules Taylor, "Working People" Theme Song
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