George's Senate Finance Testimony

D. L. boddhisatva at mindspring.com
Wed Mar 24 18:59:40 PST 1999


To whom...,

It makes me uncomfortable to see a labor leader acting as a frontman for domestic capitalists. After all, Japanese and Korean steelworkers are relatively well paid compared to industrial workers in the rest of the world and if steel is being dumped from those countries, that represents some sort of subsidy to keep steel and steelworkers alive in those countries. The problems in steel appear to be two. First, there is probably slightly more than adequate capacity worldwide. Second, unions in developed nations have not kept up their commitment to organizing workers in less developed nations. Thus the threat is not *from* Japanese and Korean steel companies but *to* Japanese, Korean and American steel workers from the Red mandarins, Nomenklatura of Kazakstan and Russia, and elitist thieves of Brazil who are making steel an industry with third-world wages. World War Two rhetoric is out of place from a person who should be building solid relationships among steel workers.

It's all very well for Becker to cry foul on trade policy, but the leader of a trade union should be talking about worker power first.

peace



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