Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Video: Marxist analysis of ‘Low-Wage Capitalism’ at NYC’s Brecht Forum

0 views
Skip to first unread message

jayroth6

unread,
Nov 6, 2009, 2:42:08 PM11/6/09
to
Video: Marxist analysis of ‘Low-Wage Capitalism’ at NYC’s Brecht Forum
http://brechtforum.org/events/low-wage-capitalism
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iszm4yqAdz0
http://www.workers.org/2009/us/meetings_1112/

Meetings hear Marxist analysis of ‘Low-Wage Capitalism’
By Dee Knight
New York

Published Nov 4, 2009 9:43 PM

Fred Goldstein, author of “Low-Wage Capitalism,” was the featured
speaker at two recent New York events: a Brecht Forum meeting and a
conference of the Union of Radical Political Economists (URPE) in
Brooklyn. He was also interviewed on radio station WBAI-FM in New York
and KFAI-FM in Minneapolis. These activities were part of the
launching of the new book, a process that began formally in September.

Another radio interview is slated for Nov. 16 on WHCR-FM in New York
with Nellie Bailey, chair of the Harlem Tenants Council. And on Nov.
22 Goldstein will be hosted at the Hue-Man Bookstore and Cafe in
Harlem.
Goldstein’s talk at the radical Brecht Forum in Greenwich Village
coincided with an official announcement that the U.S. economy had
finally registered some growth in the third quarter of 2009, after two
years of decline. Goldstein seized the moment to point out that
official unemployment figures also grew in the same period, and are
poised to top 10 percent. The so-called “jobless recovery,” he
observed, is a recent phenomenon, reflecting the growing crisis of
capitalism overproduction brought on by the overall rise in the
productivity of labor.

Goldstein highlighted two key causes of the decline of workers’ wages
in the imperialist countries over the past three decades.
The first was the collapse of the Soviet Union and the concomitant
opening of China and India to external capitalist penetration,
resulting in a doubling to three billion of the number of workers
available for exploitation by imperialism.

The second was the scientific and technological revolution—computers,
the Internet, supertankers, satellites and software—which have made it
possible for large corporations to create global webs of production,
which he characterized as “global chains of superexploitation.” He
illustrated this by describing how a Dell computer is made in a web of
factories around the globe, each with a cluster of suppliers that are
forced to compete with each other. These combined factors have allowed
the large corporations to push wages down drastically—and they are not
yet satisfied.

In his comments on the prospects for a fightback, Goldstein noted that
two unions whose traditions are still rooted in the struggles of the
1930s have set examples for the future: the United Electrical Workers
and the International Longshore and Warehouse Union on the West Coast.
It is no accident, he observed, that these two unions have defied
traditional “business unionism” methods.

UE Local 1110 carried out the seizure and occupation of Republic Doors
and Windows in Chicago last fall, while the ILWU staged a one-day
shutdown of West Coast ports on May Day, 2008, to protest the war in
Iraq. It is notable that in the plant occupation at Republic Doors and
Windows, immigrant and women workers took the lead. And in the port
shutdown, a large percentage of the workers were African-American.
These developments reflect a significant change in the makeup of the
working class.

Goldstein also highlighted the importance of labor-community
alliances, not only to confront the bosses and the government but also
to loosen the grip of union officials who are caught in the old
patterns of “labor peace” and class collaboration.

Both of Goldstein’s presentations were captured digitally by People’s
Video Network and will be available soon both at www.workers.org and
on YouTube. The same is true for the radio interviews.

Other aspects of the ongoing launch of “Low-Wage Capitalism” include
its presentation at a forum of progressive intellectuals in Europe by
Workers World managing editor John Catalinotto and anticipated reviews
in a number of progressive publications. Goldstein’s plans include
visits to conferences and bookstores across the country during the
coming year.


Articles copyright 1995-2009 Workers World. Verbatim copying and
distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without
royalty provided this notice is preserved.

0 new messages