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Pastimes : Let's Talk About Our Feelings!!! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bill who wrote (107557)8/21/2005 12:06:55 AM
From: Grainne  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 108807
 
From everything that I have read, Powell was very dubious about quite a lot of what the CIA was telling him before he have the speech at the U.N. He was also very dubious about the U.S. going to war with Iraq the way it did. Perhaps you have forgotten that Powell was the token moderate in the first Bush administration? Many Democrats thought very highly of him and believed he was a man of honor and integrity. I believe he did argue his position privately within the administration, but of course those neocons were chomping at the bit to go to war, and small problems like the possibility of huge civilian casualties, increasing bad feelings against the U.S. all over the world, and the total lack of a post-war plan in a tribal area the U.S. didn't understand at all did not seem to be anything these people wanted to hear about.

Unfortunately for all of us and the Iraqis, Powell ultimately decided to trust the intelligence he was given, which of course turned out to be inaccurate.



To: Bill who wrote (107557)8/22/2005 12:37:21 AM
From: Grainne  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 108807
 
In globalization twist, unions target Wal-Mart worldwide
[22 Aug 2005]
WASHINGTON (AFP)

A global coalition of unions is launching an unprecedented campaign to organize workers around the world at US retail giant Wal-Mart, seeking to bring a new level of globalization to the labor movement.

The Wal-Mart campaign was set to be officially launched at a meeting in Chicago Monday of Union Network International (UNI), a group that includes 900 unions in some 140 countries.

The campaign aims to draw from labor organizations around the world to pressure Wal-Mart, the world's biggest retailer and largest private company in terms of revenues, and a frequent target of unions for driving down wages as well as prices.

Union leaders said they hope to bring collective bargaining or other improvements to the estimated 1.6 million Wal-Mart employees around the world -- possibly even in countries such as China, where western-style unions are non-existent.

"Our message is that unions are adapting to a borderless world," says UNI general secretary Philip Jennings.

UNI said it "wants to stop the Wal-Martization of the world by bringing together unions in different countries to organize the retail giant's workers and bring them the benefits of collective organization."

The global effort on Wal-Mart escalates a longstanding feud with the retailer and the US-based United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW), which has accused the retailer of "union-busting" efforts to keep US stores from unionizing.

Wal-Mart maintains that it has no official ban on unions, but in a statement on its website argues that in the United States, "we simply do not believe that unionization is right for Wal-Mart."

Globally, Wal-Mart spokeswoman Beth Keck said, Wal-Mart "is seen as a model and premier employer in many of the countries around the world."

She added: "Our policy is to operate within regulatory and customary business practices everywhere we operate. Our employees can choose whether they want to be union members or not, and overwhelmingly they have not."

The union gathering comes as UNI is currently presided by UFCW chief Joe Hansen, who has led campaigns against Wal-Mart in the United States.

According to a statement from UFCW, Wal-Mart "pays poverty wages, ships jobs to countries where sweatshops are prevalent and, in the US, shifts enormous health care costs onto taxpayers."

Additionally, the union said that because of its size, Wal-Mart is able to drive down wages and benefits, which "has become the new global economic model" followed by many other firms.

"This meeting is about creating more effective global unionization," UFCW spokesman Jim Papian said earlier. "It's the only answer to meeting the challenges of the global economy."

"We reject the Wal-Mart way and, at Chicago, UNI will be imagining a better future for working people everywhere," added Jennings. "We will work with the UFCW and those unions already established in Wal-Mart in Europe and elsewhere to stop a damaging race to the bottom."

According to UNI, Wal-Mart employees have formed unions in Germany, Japan, Brazil and other countries.

UNI and the UFCW said they have started a "dialogue" with unions in China on organizing western multinationals there and have set up a liaison office in India, even though there are currently no Wal-Mart stores in that country.

Dan Cornfield, a Vanderbilt University professor of sociology, says the plan is a bold effort to reinvigorate the labor movement, and is reminiscent of the 1930s, when unions took on the growing manufacturing sector in the United States.

"UNI taking on Wal-Mart is also the classic showdown between David and Goliath," he said.

"Wal-Mart is a savvy and resourceful corporation, and its employees represent the type of low-wage workers labor unions have gone after to increase their dwindling membership. Post-World War II, recruiting low-wage workers in the corporate service sector has been where the action is for labor unions."


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