Hidden Story of Silicon Valley's High-Tech Workers
Friday 04 March 2011
Up Against the Open Shop - the Hidden Story of Silicon Valley's High-Tech Workers
David Bacon, Truthout: "On January 29, 1993,
workers at the Versatronex plant in Sunnyvale, California,
filed out of its doors for the last time. Seventeen years
have passed since, but there are still electronics workers
in Silicon Valley who remember the company's name. It was
the first Valley plant struck by production employees and
the first where a strike won recognition of their union. The
struggle of these workers, almost all immigrants from
Mexico, Central America and the Philippines, demolished some
of the most cherished myths about the Silicon Valley
workforce."
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Daniel Ellsberg:
"Bradley Manning Is Acting in the Interest of the United
States"
Nadia Prupis, Truthout: "The US Army on Wednesday
brought 22 new charges against Pfc. Bradley Manning, the
soldier accused of leaking classified military and
government documents to whistleblower web site WikiLeaks.
Manning was arrested in May 2010 for transferring classified
data onto his personal computer and disclosing classified
information concerning the national defense."
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Article
Really Bad Reporting in Wisconsin: Who
"Contributes" to Public Workers' Pensions?
David Cay
Johnston, Tax.com: "When it comes to improving public
understanding of tax policy, nothing has been more troubling
than the deeply flawed coverage of the Wisconsin state
employees' fight over collective bargaining. Economic
nonsense is being reported as fact in most of the news
reports on the Wisconsin dispute, the product of a breakdown
of skepticism among journalists multiplied by their lack of
understanding of basic economic principles."
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Article
Loyalist Forces Open Fire on Tripoli
Protesters
David D. Kirkpatrick, The New York Times News
Service: "Forces loyal to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi opened
fired with tear gas and what a witness described as live
ammunition to scatter protesters who had gathered after
Friday noon prayers outside a mosque in a restive
neighborhood of Tripoli, chanting slogans and defying the
authorities' attempt to lock down the capital."
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Article
Dean Baker | Unemployment Edges Lower as Job
Growth Returns
Dean Baker, The Center for Economic and
Policy Research: "The number of workers unemployed less than
5 weeks is fewer than at any point in the 90s. The
unemployment rate edged down to 8.9 percent in February, as
the Labor Department reported that the economy generated
192,000 new jobs. This number is undoubtedly inflated some
by the weather-weakened January performance, when the
economy generated just 63,000 jobs. The unemployment rate
has now dropped by 0.9 percentage points in the last three
months. During this period job growth as reported by the
establishment survey has averaged just 136,000, only
slightly faster than the 90,000 rate needed to keep pace
with the growth of the labor force."
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Julian Assange: At the Forefront of 21st Century
Journalism
Kevin Zeese, Truthout: "If there were ever a
doubt about whether the editor in chief of WikiLeaks, Julian
Assange, is a journalist, recent events erase all those
doubts and put him at the forefront of a movement to
democratize journalism and empower people. The US Department
of Justice is still trying to find a way to prosecute
Assange and others associated with WikiLeaks. A key to their
prosecution is claiming he is not a journalist, but that
weak premise has been made laughable by recent events."
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AFL-CIO's Trumka: No American Should
Face Choice Between Rights, Job (Video)
Judy Woodruff
talks to Richard Trumka, president of the AFL-CIO, a
voluntary federation of 57 US and international labor
unions. Many AFL-CIO members would be affected by pending
state-level legislation that would cut collective-bargaining
rights for public employees.
Watch the Video
Arm
Sales, Especially by Russia and China, Continue to Penetrate
Latin America
Alex Sanchez, Council on Hemispheric
Affairs: "Russian military sales have become so frequent in
recent years that they no longer make for major headlines.
However, as Washington policymakers continue to voice
concern about Iran's growing influence in Latin America,
some alarmists argue that Russia's eagerness to supply the
region with weapons is likely to trigger a 'soft arms race'
and present itself as a threat to the United State's
historic hegemony in the Western Hemisphere. Adherents to
this point of view persist in looking at Moscow through a
nostalgic Cold War lens that sees Russia (and probably
China) as a growing and certain threat to U.S. national
security. Little, if anything, is heard of Washington
concerns about other countries (like Israel or France)
selling weaponry to the region."
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Kevin Willmott | Dr. King and the Tea Party
Kevin
Willmott, Truthout: "February may have been Black History
Month, but let's be honest: the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. was a problem. He was always challenging governments,
challenging attitudes, challenging our moral compass. He
tried to make us see things we did not want to see: poverty,
racism, war. He was attempting to bring us closer to an
America that could only be called a dream. The Tea Party
thinks they are doing that, too. Unfortunately, their
beliefs and attitudes are the part of the American
experience that Dr. King gave his life trying to change."
Read the Article Click here for more Truthout
articles
BUZZFLASH DAILY HEADLINES
It took Scott
Walker to make the seat of Wisconsin government the Kremlin
on Lake Mendota. BuzzFlash at Truthout has documented over
the past two weeks Walker's disregard for accountability to
the Milwaukee County Board when he was its executive
director. Not only did he bypass the board's reviews on
several actions, he ended up costing the taxpayers money
because of his Nixonian sense of imperial decision making.
The video seen round the nation of a Wisconsin legislator,
Democratic Rep. Nick Milroy, being tackled by Walker's
police force as Milroy attempted to enter the State Capitol,
is a visual reminder of the tactics employed in the Soviet
Union and dictatorships throughout the world, not America.
Walker has turned the Wisconsin State Capitol, owned by all
the people of the state, into his own Politburo fiefdom. It
took a judge to make the building once again a public place,
despite Walker's defiance. Although public unions have
expressed a willingness to negotiate compensation issues,
Walker has acted as if he has assumed dictatorial control,
insisting that there will be no negotiation. But negotiation
is the lubricant of democracy. Either you believe in
democracy or you don't respect the Constitution of the
United States of America. Walker is starting to make Dick
Nixon look like a member of the ACLU. Mark Karlin
Editor,
BuzzFlash at Truthout Indiana Republican Secretary of State
Indicted on Multiple Counts of Voter Fraud
Read the
Article at Talking Points Memo US Unemployment Rate Dips to
8.9 Percent
Read the Article at The Washington Post
Wisconsin Legislator Tackled in Capitol by Walker's
Police
Read the Article at The Chicago Tribune Judge
Restores Public Access, With Restrictions, to Wisconsin
Capitol
Read the Article at The Jansesville Gazette Scott
Walker Let State Republican Chair and Campaign Donor Off the
Hook in Pension Scandal
Read the Article at BuzzFlash
Paul Krugman: How to Kill a Recovery
Read the Article at
the New York Times Boehner Wants to Cut Entitlements
Read
the Article at The Wall Street Journal Click here for more
BuzzFlash headlines
ends