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Behind the media onslaught on the transit workers
By Peter Daniels
23 December 2005
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While New York Citys striking transit workers were winning
broad sympathy and support from millions of working people this
week, the mass media swung into action with a predictably unanimous
campaign of hysterical slanders against the strikers.
This may have been predictable, but it was no less significant.
Both print and broadcast media, in every case the organs of billion-dollar
corporate empires, did their best to ignore the public support
for the workers, while manufacturing their own version of public
opinion.
Rupert Murdochs New York Post was perhaps the
crudest along these lines, with an overline, A message from
New York commuters to striking workers, followed by the
screaming two-word headline, You Rats.
On television, ABC News found someone unable to get to his
brothers wake, which was blamed on the strikers. Television
reporters cornered an emergency medical technician and attempted
to get him to say that the workers had endangered the life of
a patient whose trip to the hospital was slowed by traffic. Several
individuals were featured in 20-second sound bites with one-word
punch lines like outrageous and unconscionable,
referring to the strike. No transit workers or supporters were
interviewed on camera.
The Daily News, owned by multimillionaire Mortimer Zuckerman,
took the prize for rabid labor-baiting verging on incitement to
violence, with an editorial entitled, Throw Roger from the
train! referring to TWU Local 100 President Roger Toussaint.
Roger Toussaint, we dare you to take to the Brooklyn
Bridge this morning to tell the cold, walking throngs why you
chose to disrupt the lives of millions, jacked up the expenses
of tens of thousands, shuttered and crimped business, opened
the subway system to terrorism and generally threatened the public
health and welfare, the News editors shrieked.
It would be delicious watching you try to justify the
reckless, lawless transit strike that you have inflicted on the
cityassuming your fellow New Yorkers didnt hurl you
over the railing into the icy waters before you got a word out
...
In fact, although those crossing the Brooklyn Bridge no doubt
include some disgruntled middle class and wealthy commuters, its
a safe bet that transit workers would also be met with warm support
there, as evidenced by drivers honking in support of transit pickets,
and even in numerous letters to the same papers whose editors
denounced the workers.
What passes for the liberal press joined in the
attacks on the union. The New York Times headlined its
nervous editorial, An Unnecessary Transit Strike,
while Newsday denounced this outrageous and illegal
action.
The media attacks against the workers fall into two main categories:
First, the transit workers, averaging more than $50,000 annually
in wages, are greedy. Second, in the pious and hypocritical words
of Mayor Michael Bloomberg, we live in a country of laws
where there can be severe consequences for those who break them.
Talk of greed is a bit ironic from a man who just spent more
than $70 million to buy his reelection, or more than $100 for
each ballot cast in his favor. Bloomberg is mayor of the capital
of world finance for one overwhelming reasonhis enormous
wealth. No one who stops to consider his background and qualifications,
even accepting his claims to managerial expertise, can doubt for
a moment that he would never have been considered for the post,
nor would his name even be known to the vast majority of the population,
if not for his wealth. He convinced his fellow billionaires that
he would do an effective job in defending their interests, and
he then bought the election, something that was not very difficult
considering the nature of the American two-party system and the
complete political disenfranchisement of the working class majority.
Shameless is too mild a word to describe the arrogance of the
billionaires who scream greed against workers who are paid barely
enough to live on while carrying out work that is physically and
psychologically stressful. Meanwhile, at this very moment, the
Wall Street brokerage houses are handing out million-dollar year-end
bonuses to several thousand traders whose work includes nothing
productive.
It is interesting to note, by the way, that in recent years
the newspapers have generally trumpeted the appearance of these
year-end bonuses in the financial services sector, pointing to
them as a sign of vitality for the local economy. This year, in
the midst of the strike of the greedy transit workers,
the Wall Street bonus story seems to have disappeared.
What about the charge of illegality? We are ruled by a government
in Washington that was illegal and illegitimate from its first
day in office nearly five years ago. The figurehead for this cabal
is a man who has been secretly authorizing illegal wiretapping
of thousands of US citizens over the last several years. Last
weekend George W. Bush proudly reaffirmed his right to make his
own rules and ignore laws he opposes.
None of the newspaper reporters covering the transit strike
has asked Bloomberg, the Republican mayor, for his opinion on
the rule of law in this case. Perhaps that is what he meant when
he said that there can be severe consequences
for breaking the law. It does not follow automatically. The workers
who courageously defy an anti-strike law, a law comparable to
the laws defied by the millions who organized trade unions in
the 1930s and fought against Jim Crow segregation in the 1950s
and 1960s, must be punished. A president who moves toward the
destruction of the most basic democratic rights is another matter
entirely.
Behind the lies spread against the transit workers are very
definite material interests and a definite strategy being pursued
by dominant sections of the US political and financial establishment.
The aims are spelled out in the Wall Street Journal, the
mouthpiece of extreme reaction.
The December 21 editorial explains what is at stake in the
transit strike. The editors are somewhat contemptuous even of
Republican Governor George Pataki and Mayor Bloomberg for having
caved to the municipal unions in the past. By this
they mean that the big business politicians have been unable to
push through the kinds of attacks on the wages and benefits of
public employees that are deemed necessary.
The incredible polarization and explosion of wealth for a tiny
handful on Wall Street is not enough to assure the health of the
capitalist system. The system, by its own admission, in the words
of the Journal, requires a relentless and unending series
of attacks on every gain that has been made by working people
over the past century. The editors seethe with fury over workers
salaries of $50,000 a year. Pensions and health care also have
to go, especially to set a precedent for literally millions of
government workers elsewhere. Public transit itself has to go,
according to the Journal. Pataki and Bloomberg ...
could use this strike as an opportunity to end the public transit
monopoly by legalizing all forms of private competitionincluding
jitneys.
In an Op-Ed column in the same issue of the Journal,
Steven Malanga of the right-wing Manhattan Institute think tank
calls for New Yorks Metropolitan Transportation Authority
to follow the example of Ronald Reagan. Faced with a militant
public-sector union that violated the law with a walk-out, President
Reagan dismissed thousands of air traffic controllers in 1981
and rebuilt the nations air traffic system with a new work
force. According to Malanga, the strikers, with their relatively
unskilled unionized jobs, could be replaced.
The myth of Reagan as the union-busting Superman is greatly
overstated, since he would never have been able to crush the PATCO
union without the active collaboration of the AFL-CIO bureaucracy,
which refused to lift a finger in support of those workers. Malangas
main point, however, retains its significance. More and more the
spokesmen of big business are saying that the survival of their
system demands a never-ending race to the bottom, as far as wages
and living standards are concerned. This shows what is posed by
the transit workers struggle and the venomous response it
has engendered. For the transit workers and every other section
of working people to defend even the most basic elements of their
living standards and their futures, they will have to fight politically,
and they will have to answer the onslaught of big business with
an independent political struggle and a socialist program.
See Also:
New York transit strikers confront escalating
attacks
[22 December 2005]
The New York transit strike: A new stage
in the class struggle
[21 December 2005]
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