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2020-07-20 -PC Follies
'Strike for Black Lives': Thousands to walk off job to protest racial inequality
[FoxNews] Organizers of a national workers strike say tens of thousands are set to walk off the job Monday in more than two dozen U.S. cities to protest systemic racism and economic inequality that has only worsened during the coronavirus pandemic.

Dubbed the “Strike for Black Lives,” labor unions, along with social and racial justice organizations from New York City to Los Angeles, will participate in a range of planned actions. Where work stoppages are not possible for a full day, participants will either picket during a lunch break or observe moments of silence to honor Black lives lost to police violence, organizers said.

“We are ... building a country where Black lives matter in every aspect of society — including in the workplace,” said Ash-Lee Henderson, an organizer with the Movement for Black Lives, a coalition of over 150 organizations that make up the Black Lives Matter movement.

“The Strike for Black Lives is a moment of reckoning for corporations that have long ignored the concerns of their Black workforce and denied them better working conditions, living wages and healthcare,” said Henderson, who is also co-executive director of the Tennessee-based Highlander Research and Education Center.

Among the strikers will be essential workers: nursing home employees, janitors and delivery men and women. Fast food, ride-share and airport workers are also expected to take part in planned events.

The strike continues an ongoing global reckoning on race and police brutality set off by the death of George Floyd, a Black man who died at the hands of Minneapolis police in late May. At noon in each U.S. time zone on Monday, workers are expected to take a knee for about eight minutes — the amount of time prosecutors say a white police officer held his knee on Floyd’s neck.

When the strike was announced on July 8, partnering unions included the Service Employees International Union, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, the American Federation of Teachers, United Farm Workers and the Fight for $15 and a Union. Several more worker collectives have since joined, along with social and racial justice groups.

In Manhattan, essential workers will gather outside of the Trump International Hotel to demand the Senate and President Donald Trump pass and sign the HEROES Act. The House-passed legislation provides protective equipment, essential pay and extended unemployment benefits to workers who have not had the option of working from home during the coronavirus pandemic. Organizers said New York Sen. Chuck Schumer is expected to rally with workers.

Strikers in Minneapolis, where Floyd was killed on May 25, will include nursing home and airport workers demanding a $15-per-hour minimum wage, organizers said. In Missouri, participants will rally at McDonald’s locations in St. Louis and Ferguson, a key landmark in the protest movement sparked by the death of Michael Brown, a Black teenager who was killed by police in 2014. The Ferguson strikers will also march to a memorial site located on the spot where Brown was shot and killed.

Organizers said many strikers are taking particular aim at corporations such as Walmart and McDonald's, which they say should be held accountable for widespread mistreatment and exploitation of hourly workers of color. In the wake of Floyd protests, McDonald's expressed its support for Black victims of police violence and vigilante attacks.

On Friday, a group of McDonald's workers filed a federal lawsuit against the corporation in Florida, alleging that managers at a corporate-run store in Lakeland subjected them to a “racially hostile work environment” and also had mistreated Black customers. The workers alleged that after they reported their concerns to corporate leaders, their managers retaliated by slashing their hours and changing their work responsibilities.
Posted by Skidmark 2020-07-20 10:17|| || Front Page|| [14 views ]  Top

#1 Here's hoping many of them keep right on walking to the unemployment line.
Posted by Raj 2020-07-20 11:18||   2020-07-20 11:18|| Front Page Top

#2 Quit job? No unemployment
Posted by Frank G 2020-07-20 11:41||   2020-07-20 11:41|| Front Page Top

#3 ^That's why I never quit a job in my life.
Posted by g(r)omgoru 2020-07-20 11:57||   2020-07-20 11:57|| Front Page Top

#4 Well we know who the non-essential employees are now.
Posted by DarthVader 2020-07-20 12:27||   2020-07-20 12:27|| Front Page Top

#5 And when very few strike? Because unless the unions force them, I don’t think very many will actually strike.
Posted by CrazyFool 2020-07-20 12:44||   2020-07-20 12:44|| Front Page Top

#6 It was supposed to happen at noon local time. it is now just after 2:00 in the Eastern time zone — any reports of groups of workers walking off the job or taking a knee for the recommended eight minutes?
Posted by trailing wife 2020-07-20 14:07||   2020-07-20 14:07|| Front Page Top

#7 tw - nothing of note in the greater Boston area.
Posted by Raj 2020-07-20 14:33||   2020-07-20 14:33|| Front Page Top

#8 Another Million 10-50 thousand (according to the National Park Service!) person march...
Posted by M. Murcek 2020-07-20 16:52||   2020-07-20 16:52|| Front Page Top

#9 taking a knee for the recommended eight minutes?

Kamela Harris.
Posted by swksvolFF 2020-07-20 22:50||   2020-07-20 22:50|| Front Page Top

21:00 Elmaper+McGurque1612
20:12 swksvolFF
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19:22 Frank G
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18:42 magpie
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15:12 Skidmark
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