Today in Labor History June 23, 1947: The anti-worker Taft-Hartley Act was passed, overriding President Harry Truman’s veto. It came on the heels of the largest strike wave in U.S. history. When World War Two ended, inflation soared and veterans flooded the labor market. As a result, frustrated workers began a series of wildcat strikes. Many grew into national, union-supported strikes. In November 1945, 225,000 UAW members went on strike. In January 1946, 174,000 electric workers struck. That same month, 750,000 steel workers joined them. Then, in April, a national coal strike began. 250,000 railroad workers struck in May. In total, 4.3 million workers went on strike. It was the closest the U.S. came to a national General Strike in the 20th century. And in December 1946, Oakland, California did have a General Strike, led by women retail workers. It was the last in U.S. history, and the action the most prompted Congress to take action on behalf of their corporate bosses.

Taft-Hartley rolled back many of the labor protections created by the 1935 Wagner Act. It weakened unions in numerous ways, including the banning of the General Strike, and all forms of protest in support of workers at other companies, effectively prohibiting solidarity actions. It also allowed states to exempt themselves from union requirements. Twenty states immediately enacted anti-union open shop laws. There hasn’t been a General Strike in the U.S. since then.

#LaborHistory #workingclass #tafthartley #generalstrike #union #antiunion #antilabor #unionbusting #solidarity #oakland #WorldWarTwo #congress

Today in Labor History April 14, 1930: Over 100 Mexican and Filipino farm workers were arrested for union activities in Imperial Valley, CA. 8 were convicted of “criminal syndicalism.”

#workingclass #LaborHistory #imperialvalley #mexican #filipino #union #farmworkers #immigrant #strike #syndicalism #prison #repression #antilabor

Hundreds of thousands protest anti-labor legislation in India

Farmers joined the factory and public sector workers across the country on the occasion of the fifth anniversary of the historic Delhi protests which had forced the extreme right wing government to withdraw anti-farmers laws

by Abdul Rahman
peoples dispatch
November 28, 2025

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2025/11/28/hundreds-of-thousands-protest-anti-labor-legislation-in-india/


#India #LaborLaws #LaborCodes #Labor #AntiLabor #capitalism #socialism #FarmerSuicides #FarmLaws
Hundreds of thousands protest anti-labor legislation in India : Peoples Dispatch

Farmers joined the factory and public sector workers across the country on the occasion of the fifth anniversary of the historic Delhi protests which had forced the extreme right wing government to withdraw anti-farmers laws

Peoples Dispatch
Condé Nast Fires 4 Employees, Files Federal Labor Complaint Against Union

“Extreme misconduct is unacceptable in any professional setting,” the company says after a reported altercation between HR and staffers due to Teen Vogue consolidation

TheWrap

In 1971, Ariel Dorfman and Armand Mattelart published “How to Read Donald Duck,” a book-length essay critiquing Disney comics as capitalist propaganda for U.S. corporate and cultural imperialism. It became a bestseller throughout Latin America and is still considered a seminal work in cultural studies. It was first published in Valparaiso, Chile when Allende was in power. Pinochet banned it and conducted public book burnings.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #disney #anticommunism #antilabor #unionbusting #communism #witchhunt #huac #fbi #union #censorship #bookburning #BookBans #Chile #allende #pinochet #dictatorship #writer #author #books #comics @bookstadon

2023: Gov. Bill Lee (R-TN) signs record tax break for corporations

2024: Lee signs new record tax giveaway for corporations ($2B; most went out of state)

2025, Jan: Lee signs $1.1B voucher handout to private school parents

2025, Oct: Lee says state can’t afford to feed kids

#BillLee #AntiLabor #AntiUnion #AntiGunControl #AntiGay #VoteRepublicansOut #Tennessee #NoRepublicansEverAgain #VoteBlue #USPol

"Abundance" Gang Wants To Crush Unions

YouTube

Today in Labor History April 14, 1930: Over 100 Mexican and Filipino farm workers were arrested for union activities in Imperial Valley, CA. 8 were convicted of “criminal syndicalism.”

#workingclass #LaborHistory #imperialvalley #mexican #filipino #union #farmworkers #immigrant #strike #syndicalism #prison #repression #antilabor

"Musk’s management of his own companies like X provides clues about what to expect from President Trump.

In Walter Isaacson’s biography of Musk, the business mogul lays out what he calls his five step “algorithm” for making organizations more efficient. After his first step, questioning every requirement, Musk’s second step is to remove as many processes as possible. He goes as far as saying that if you didn’t cut so deep that you have to add some parts back later, you didn’t go far enough. Here’s how Musk put it:

“Delete any part or process you can. You may have to add them back later. In fact, if you do not end up adding back at least 10 percent of them, then you didn’t delete enough.”

Sound familiar? As the Trump administration issues one sweeping declaration after another — blanket suspensions of foreign aid, DEI, federal grants, loans, and so on — the DNA of Musk’s management philosophy seems present in practically all of it.

There will be cuts. The question is: how much will be put back?"

https://www.kenklippenstein.com/p/trump-buyouts-mirror-elon-musks-twitter

#USA #Trump #Musk #PublicPolicy #AntiLabor #AntiUnions #Corporativism #Austerity

Trump Buyouts Mirror Elon Musk's Twitter Purge

Trump's sweeping orders reek of Musk's management philosophy

Ken Klippenstein