Big Oil Using Foreign Labor at 1/2 Min. Wage on Gulf Rigs
Tue Aug 05, 2008 at 06:01:05 PM PDT
Business Week has an article about a scheme concocted by US oil companies working in the Gulf of Mexico to replace American workers making $18/hr with foreign workers making as little as $3.33/hr for 12 hour shifts. Former oil rig workers have now filed a lawsuit in a Texas federal court to reclaim wages they claim were lost due to the practice.
Johnson's suit, Cunningham, et al v. Offshore Specialty Fabricators, Inc. et al, was filed in U.S. District Court in the Eastern District of Texas, Texarkana Div. in December 2004. On July 21 the judge issued a scheduling order that calls for both sides to begin discovery and depositions on Aug. 10.
The case is about working conditions for both U.S. and non-U.S. workers, says plaintiff's attorney Tony Buzbee of Buzbee Law Firm in Galveston, Tex. The foreign workers "were paid pennies on the dollar, worked grueling hours for days on end, and were essentially captives on the rigs because they were paid when repatriated," says Buzbee. "This suit seeks remedy for the American workers who were paid less due to wage market suppression or who lost their jobs due to being replaced."
A Note for Kos on the "Evil" of GM and the UAW
Fri Aug 01, 2008 at 03:39:22 PM PDT
I am always truly disappointed when I see people who style themselves as progressives attack the UAW as an evil, evil interest group using the same old schtick blaming the decline of the US auto industry about "creative destruction" that could as easily have come from a right-wing thinktank as someone who wants to be a leader of a progressive movement. Let me pick out the statement in particular that bothers me.
For years, Democrats outside of Michigan tried to coax Detroit into making more fuel efficient vehicles. The automakers, the autoworker unions, Republicans, and Michigan Democrats all fought those efforts tooth and nail. Successfully.
At the same time as Markos is demonizing the hardworking men and women of the UAW as complicit in their own hardship, those same men and women get no praise for the time they put on the strike line to force force GM to make commitments to build more fuel efficient vehicles in the USA.
Making College Free: Put Endowments to Work for Education
Tue Jul 29, 2008 at 01:51:32 PM PDT
Crossposted from The Economic Populist.
In the Middle Ages, one of the chief means by which a man could absolve himself of his indiscretions was the purchase of an indulgence from the Church. The promise of release from eternal damnation brought with it much abuse, and the presumption that money could be called upon to put one in God's good graces was the subject of condemnation by Luther and those who protested against the excesses of the Catholic Church.
Much as medieval indulgences were presumed to absolve the penitent, the practice of charity in modern society has assumed much the same function.
Get caught killing trade unionists in Colombia?
Fund scholarships for kids going to Columbia.
Breaking: Venezuela-Colombia War Fears after Raid
Sun Mar 02, 2008 at 11:38:45 AM PDT
Tensions between Venezuela and Colombia have reached a new peak today as news has emerged the President Hugo Chavez has dispatched 10 brigades to the Colombian border in order to respond to any Colombian violation of Venezuelan territory.
BOGOTA (AFP) — Tensions in northwestern South America escalated sharply Sunday, with Venezuela shutting its embassy in Colombia following Bogota's cross-border raid into Ecuador that killed a top Colombian insurgent.
The raid Saturday by Colombia on a rebel jungle camp killed Raul Reyes, second-in-command of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), the country's largest leftist rebel group.
Ecuador bristled after the attack that it said violated it territorial sovereignty, while its ally Venezuela on Sunday announced the shuttering of its embassy in Colombia.
"I'm ordering the immediate withdrawal of all our personnel from the embassy in Bogota," Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said.
His remarks came one day after Chavez alluded to the possibility of war if the Colombian military crosses into Venezuelan territory.
$100 Billion Tax Fraud: Why isn't this news?
Mon Feb 25, 2008 at 05:06:36 PM PDT
This is not a candidate diary, it's something more important that that.
Regardless of who is elected in 2008, the continuing evasion of personal responsibility by wealthy Americans will mean that working Americans are forced to pick up the bill. It's dine and and dash for the ruling class. To the money shot.
"Liechtenstein’s LGT Bank, which is owned by the Royal family, has apparently harbored numerous secret accounts which hid the taxable assets of thousands of citizens from around the world. It is my understanding that many U.S. citizens have also hidden assets at this bank, which is a real injustice to the millions of working families in this country who honestly pay their taxes every year.....
Offshore tax evasion produces an estimated $100 billion in unpaid taxes each year.
It's Time for Primary Spending Limits: Not a Candidate Diary
Sun Feb 03, 2008 at 11:29:04 AM PDT
The time has come.
Our political system is dominated by big money, and categorizing its influence as the work of "special interests" is misleading. At its heart the corrosive influence of money on the political process is something far more sinister, it's perhaps the most subtle form of domination of our domestic political order to have ever existed. As much as pundits lament the excesses of the old days of the Democratic "machines" at least then, candidates were required to earn the support of party activists. In the post war period, this allowed working people the greatest influence that they have ever had on the political process in this country, and paid divdends for the working class.
Those days are gone, but the time has come for change to reduce the influence of money in the system. The time has come for the Democratic party to impose spending limits for our primary season.
Edwards Supporters ONLY (Please) Poll, Who is your #2?
Sat Jan 19, 2008 at 04:17:53 PM PDT
This is going to be an incredibly short diary, something that most of you who've read my writing in the past should know is not my normal writing style.
I'm posting a poll to ask Edwards supporters only who they will cast their vote for if John Edwards is not a candidate in the race.
The presumption is that Edwards supporters go to Obama if he is no longer in the race. I think that this is dead wrong, and that Edwards supporters will most likely go to Clinton, and more importantly not vote in the Democratic primary (and many I think won't vote for either candidate in the general election.)
So I'm posting a poll, and opening the comments for Edwards supporters to speak their peace (if they want to) about why they would switch to Clinton or Obama.
John Edwards decides 2008 on the DNC floor
Wed Jan 09, 2008 at 11:01:34 AM PDT
Due to the frontloading of the 2008 primary season, we are rapidly approaching a scenario in which Democratic nomination will not be decided until August. Let me start by explaining what superdelegates are, and why they matter. In 2008, there will be 4,040 delegates to the DNC convention in Denver, a candidate needs 2,020 in order to win. Of these 4,040 only 3,248 (80.2%) will be chosen through primaries and causes, the other 792 (19.2%) are elected Democratic Governors, US Senators, US Representatives, DNC members, and distrinquished party leaders.

War Down South?: The South American Arms Race
Sun Dec 23, 2007 at 12:12:52 PM PDT
For many years, South America has been a zone of negative peace, where it appeared that the military competition that had characterized the continent for much of this century had yielded to economic competition. It was living proof of the liberal belief that trade brings peace. To quote A.O. Hirschmann, the interests (commerce) had tamed the passions (conflict), and one of the most potent political arguments for capitalism was given physical form. Even the backlash against neo-liberalism at the beginning of this decade looked to accept the central premise that the world was a positive sum place, but the political underpinnings had to be moved to allow for economic justice.
Muncie, IN GOP: Ditch Black votes, and we win.
Wed Dec 19, 2007 at 06:50:11 AM PDT
This is the third in a series of diaries about Republican post election "ballot security" measures in my hometown, Muncie, IN. You can see the first and second by clicking on the links.
First, a little background.
In this year's mayoral election, the margin of victory was razor thin. 9 votes of more than 12,000 cast. Less than 1/10th of 1% divided the winner, Democratic candidate Jim Mansfield, from the loser, Republican candidate Sharon McShurley. After absentee and provisional ballots where counted, Mansfield's margin of victory rose to 11 votes.
In challenging the election, the primary target of the Republican's wrath has been precinct 18, a predominantly black precinct on the city's northeast side. Today, the GOP is arguing that the results from that precinct need to be thrown out, shredding 361 votes and giving the mayor's office to the GOP.
GOP Trying to Steal Election by Shredding Dem Votes
Fri Dec 14, 2007 at 04:19:55 PM PDT
This diary is a followup to one I wrote last night about the mayor's election in my hometown, Muncie, Indiana. The only thing that's positive about this update is that at least the precinct being targeted isn't majority-minority. It's just poor white folks. First, some background.
In this year's mayoral election, the margin of victory was razor thin. 9 votes of more than 12,000 cast. Less than 1/10th of 1% divided the winner, Democratic candidate Jim Mansfield, from the loser, Republican candidate Sharon McShurley. After absentee and provisional ballots where counted, Mansfield's margin of victory rose to 11 votes.
This Is What Republican Racism Looks Like In Middletown
Thu Dec 13, 2007 at 04:07:27 PM PDT
I want to believe that we live in a country where what matters is not the color of one's skin, nor the class they were born in, but instead the content of their character. Let's set the record straight before we start with the story I have to tell. I'm white as the snow, but what I know is that the things going on back home aren't right. Unless we stand together, we'll fall apart.
Middletown is Muncie, Indiana. My home. There's trouble back home right now.
"Vicious, closet racism."
Those were the words of Hurley Goodall on Friday night as he gathered with about 100 other local residents, most of them black, to speak out against what they say is an unnecessary and unfair Republican investigation of voting in Precinct 18, a predominantly black precinct.
Bush Given Plans to Send Troops to Pakistan
Fri Nov 30, 2007 at 07:29:25 PM PDT
This is not good. So not good.
The man who devised the Bush administration's Iraq troop surge has urged the US to consider sending elite troops to Pakistan to seize its nuclear weapons if the country descends into chaos.
In a series of scenarios drawn up for Pakistan, Frederick Kagan, a former West Point military historian, has called for the White House to consider various options for an unstable Pakistan.
These include: sending elite British or US troops to secure nuclear weapons capable of being transported out of the country and take them to a secret storage depot in New Mexico or a "remote redoubt" inside Pakistan; sending US troops to Pakistan's north-western border to fight the Taliban and al-Qaida; and a US military occupation of the capital Islamabad, and the provinces of Punjab, Sindh and Baluchistan if asked for assistance by a fractured Pakistan military, so that the US could shore up President Pervez Musharraf and General Ashfaq Kayani, who became army chief this week.
New Poll: Republicans might lose Indiana in 2008
Thu Nov 22, 2007 at 09:02:06 PM PDT
Man oh man.
You know that the Republicans have fucked up when you get a poll like this.
Disillusioned with President Bush's handling of the war, the economy and immigration, nearly half of likely voters in Indiana appear poised to buck 40 years of tradition and vote for a Democratic presidential ticket -- if it includes Sen. Evan Bayh, according to a new Indianapolis Star-WTHR (Channel 13) poll.
The poll of 600 Hoosiers -- including 449 who say they will definitely vote in the November 2008 election -- revealed a growing sense of pessimism, with nearly three-quarters saying the nation is headed in the wrong direction and 28 percent approving of George W. Bush's performance as president.
The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points for all respondents and plus or minus 4.6 percentage points for likely voters. It was conducted by telephone Nov. 13-16.
UAW on Strike for Job Security
Mon Sep 24, 2007 at 07:36:05 PM PDT
It always amazes me when people who present themselves as progressives go off on rants damning the UAW (United Auto Workers) for their own misfortune characterizing them as reactionary and uneducated, and unworthy of the support of educated "progressives." Earlier today there was a comment in a diary on the strike asking whether UAW should be supported because of the companies its members work for are not building more hybrids. A statement released tonight shows that this strike isn't about wages or even healthcare. It's about job security, and in the end American national security.
UAW Chooses GM as Strike Target
Fri Sep 14, 2007 at 08:26:08 AM PDT
I've been hoping that someone would take the time to write a diary on this, but I haven't seen anything. While there's been tremendous focus on the continuing subprime mortgage crisis, there's been little attention given to the looming cataclysmic confrontation between the United Auto Workers (UAW) union and the Big Three automakers (GM, Ford, and Chrysler.) The current contract between the UAW and the Big Three expires tonight at midnight, and while Ford and Chrysler have indefinite extensions to their contracts, GM has been chosen as the strike target.
DETROIT -- The United Auto Workers union likely chose General Motors Corp. as the lead company in labor talks with the Detroit Three because GM is considered the healthiest and the UAW wants to prevent the nation's largest automaker from moving more manufacturing overseas, industry analysts said.
Two local union officials said they received notice Thursday afternoon that GM would be the lead company in the contract negotiations and the UAW's potential strike target. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the talks are private.
Edwards pulls staff from NV- Culinary to Endorse?
Wed Aug 15, 2007 at 08:33:02 AM PDT
Union endorsements matter, and nowhere is this more true than in Nevada where the 2004 caucuses saw only 9,000 voters participate, a new record. In 2008, the role of the Culinary Worker's Local 226 more than 60,000 members will become even more important as a changes in the caucus sructure make it much easier for Strip workers to participate.
In 2004, the party had only 17 caucus sites, one per county.... Notably, the party will hold eight to 10 at-large precinct meetings for as many as 4,000 shift workers on the Strip who otherwise could not take off time from work to participate in the caucus. Those meetings, which underscore the importance of Culinary Union members in the Democratic caucus effort, could take place in hotel ballrooms, officials said.
Indiana: Progressive Property Tax Relief Plan
Fri Jul 27, 2007 at 02:22:48 PM PDT
Crossposted from Blue Indiana
Anyone who's bee watching the new lately knows that there's something of a property tax revolt going on in Indiana. Hundreds of thousands of Hoosiers have seen their property tax bills skyrocket, and if you follow the media narrative, you'd think that there's been a massive growth in government spending that's at fault here. The truth though is that there hasn't been a tax increase in Indiana, but there has been a massive
tax shift.