Mission: To work to build a democratic economy and a just society.

What 401(k)s Can't

Street Walking 04/14/08

Last night was another productive night for our crew of street walkers in New Haven.  We signed up 39 new members of Working America/Working Indiana in the Meadowbrook subdivision in New Haven.  Jane Gresham, Howard Traxmoor, Tom Braun, Tom Lewandowski, and I were out for about an hour and a half and heard more tales of woe--especially about layoffs.  There does seem to be greater interest in this neighborhood in receiving more information and participating in issue forums. 

When Living Wills Won't

What Makes Corporations Bad Bosses?

Using the DSM-IV (the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) as their guide, filmmakers Joel Bakan, Mark Achbar and Jennifer Abbott persuasively argue that Corporations like human beings fall within a professional psychiatric taxonomy.  In their 2003 documentary,

Jim Crow at Work

Wheel about and turn about and do jus' so.  Eb'ry time I wheel about I jump Jim Crow

--Thomas "Daddy" Rice--

Who is the more disabled, me or my Disability Plan?

In 1974 Congress passed a comprehensive law aimed at protecting American workers’ pension and fringe benefits.  ERISA [the Employee Retirement Income Security Act] was primarily designed to address shortcomings in the nation’s pension system.  These problems arose shortly after the close of the Second World War as a flood of returning G.I.s replaced America’s aging workforce.  Following the collapse of Indiana’s Studebaker Corporation, i

THE INDIANA TOLL ROAD Part 5: Crossroads of politics and property, a bad neighborhood

Writing in the East European Constitutional Review (Fall, 1997) Christian Lucky contrasts the Yazoo case—an early land privatization scandal, with the looting of formerly public asssets in post Communist Russia.  Comparing early America’s experience with corruption and privatization with contemporary events in Russia, Lucky identifies what he believes to be a common thread: “the distribution of former state assets may largely hinge on who is situated at the crossroads of politics and property.  The allocative principal is essentially lawless and follows politi

THE INDIANA TOLL ROAD Part 4: May a hundred flowers bloom! a thousand teachers die!

Reporting in the New York Times December 19, 2007 Mary Walsh relates the findings of a Pew Center study of public pensions.  Ms. Walsh summarized the Pew findings: “Almost half of the states have been underfunding their retirement plans for public workers and may have to choose in the years ahead between their pension obligations and other public programs.” 

 

BE TRADE

NAFTA, PNTR-China, CAFTA, those great job programs enacted for us, in fact, were done to us but never with us. Why should we believe politicians, think-tank economists, and employers who make high-tech promises that bring low pay and even lower human rights standards? We can’t trust them to represent us.  We need to drive the discussion on trade, force politicians to represent us, or, better yet, put ourselves at the negotiating table.

Web Site and Last Night, 4-07

Last night was another great night, in fact, our best ever with 53 new Working Indiana members joining from New Haven. Jane, Howard, Bill, Cheryl and I continue to be stoked up by the responses from the doorsteps. There are now 861 of us, signed-up Working Indiana members. We're reaching the point of critical mass for our education and organization efforts to take form on this web site.

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