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<div><font size="-3" color="#000000">What the Luddites have to do with
this escapes me completely...</font></div>
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<div><font size="-3"
color="#000000"
>http://www.guardian.co.uk/argentina/story/0,11439,944921,00.html</font
></div>
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<div>Snapshot of a nation<br>
<br>
How Argentina's new president deals with the occupied factories will
be hugely significant<br>
<br>
Naomi Klein<br>
Monday April 28, 2003<br>
The Guardian<br>
<br>
In 1812, bands of British weavers and knitters raided textile mills
and smashed industrial machines with their hammers. According to the
Luddites, the new mechanised looms had eliminated thousands of jobs
and broken communities and deserved to be destroyed. The British
government disagreed and called in a force of 14,000 soldiers to
brutally repress the worker revolt and protect the machines.<br>
<br>
Fast-forward two centuries to another textile factory, this one in
Buenos Aires. At the Brukman factory, which has been producing men's
suits for 50 years, it's the riot police who smash the sewing machines
and the 58 workers who risk their lives to protect them.<br>
<br>
Last Monday, the Brukman factory was the site of the worst repression
Buenos Aires has seen in almost a year. Police had evicted the workers
in the middle of the night and turned the entire block into a military
zone guarded by machine guns and attack dogs. Unable to get into the
factory and complete an outstanding order for 3,000 pairs of dress
trousers, the workers gathered a huge crowd of supporters and
announced it was time to go back to work. At 5pm, 50 middle-aged
seamstresses in no-nonsense haircuts, sensible shoes and blue work
smocks walked up to the black police fence. Someone pushed, the fence
fell and the Brukman women, unarmed and arm in arm, slowly walked
through.<br>
<br>
They had only taken a few steps when the police began shooting: tear
gas, water cannons, rubber bullets, then lead. The police even charged
the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, in their white headscarves
embroidered with the names of their "disappeared" children.
Dozens of demonstrators were injured and police fired tear gas into a
hospital where some had taken refuge.<br>
<br>
This is a snapshot of Argentina in the week of its presidential
elections. Each of the five major candidates is promising to put this
crisis-ravaged country back to work. Yet Brukman's workers are treated
as if sewing a grey suit were a capital crime.<br>
<br>
Why this state Luddism, this rage at machines? Well, Brukman isn't
just any factory, it's a fabrica ocupada , one of almost 200 factories
across the country that have been taken over and run by their workers
over the past year and a half. For many, the factories, employing more
than 10,000 nationwide and producing everything from tractors to ice
cream, are seen not just as an economic alternative, but as a
political one as well. "They are afraid of us because we have
shown that if we can manage a factory we can also manage a country,"
Celia Martinez, a Brukman worker, said on Monday night. "That's
why this government decided to repress us."<br>
<br>
At first glance, Brukman looks like every other garment factory in the
world. As in Mexico's hyper modern maquiladoras and Toronto's
crumbling coat factories, Brukman is filled with women hunched over
sewing machines, their eyes straining and fingers flying over fabric
and thread. What makes Brukman different are the sounds. There is the
familiar roar of machines and the hiss of steam, but there is also
Bolivian folk music, coming from a small tape deck in the back of the
room, and softly spoken voices, as older workers lean over younger
ones, showing them new stitches. "They wouldn't let us do that
before," Martinez says. "They wouldn't let us get up from
our workspaces or listen to music. But why not listen to music, to
lift the spirits a bit?"<br>
<br>
Here in Buenos Aires, every week brings news of a new occupation: a
four-star hotel now run by its cleaning staff, a supermarket taken by
its clerks, a regional airline about to be turned into a cooperative
by the pilots and attendants. In small Trotskyist journals around the
world, Argentina's occupied factories, where the workers have seized
the means of production, are giddily hailed as the dawn of a socialist
utopia. In large business magazines like the Economist, they are
ominously described as a threat to the sacred principle of private
property. The truth lies somewhere in between.</div>
<div><br>
I n Brukman, for instance, the means of production weren't seized,
they were simply picked up after they had been abandoned by their
legal owners. The factory had been in decline for several years, debts
to utility companies were piling up, and, over a period of five
months, the seamstresses had seen their salaries slashed from 100
pesos a week to a mere two pesos - not enough for the bus fare.<br>
<br>
O n December 18, the workers decided it was time to demand a travel
allowance. The owners, pleading poverty, told the workers to wait at
the factory while they looked for the money. "We waited for them
until evening. We waited until night," Martinez says. "No
one came."<br>
<br>
After getting the keys from the doorman, Martinez and the other
workers slept at the factory. They have been running it every since.
They have paid the outstanding bills, attracted new clients and,
without profits and management salaries to worry about, managed to pay
themselves steady salaries. All these decisions have been made
democratically, by vote in open assemblies. "I don't know why the
owners had such a hard time," Martinez says. "I don't know
much about accounting, but for me it's easy: addition and
subtraction."<br>
<br>
Brukman has come to represent a new kind of labour movement here, one
that is not based on the power to stop working (the traditional union
tactic), but on the dogged determination to keep working no matter
what. It's a demand that is not driven by dogmatism, but by realism:
in a country where 58% of the population is living in poverty, workers
know that they are a pay cheque away from having to beg and scavenge
to survive. The spectre that is haunting Argentina's occupied
factories is not communism, but indigence.<br>
<br>
But isn't it simple theft? After all, these workers didn't buy the
machines, the owners did - if they want to sell them or move them to
another country, surely that's their right. As the federal judge wrote
in Brukman's eviction order: "Life and physical integrity have no
supremacy over economic interests."<br>
<br>
Perhaps unintentionally, he has summed up the naked logic of
deregulated globalisation: capital must be free to seek out the lowest
wages and most generous incentives, regardless of the toll that
process takes on people and communities. The workers in Argentina's
occupied factories have a different vision. Their lawyers argue that
the owners of these factories have already violated basic market
principles by failing to pay their employees and their creditors, even
while collecting huge subsidies from the state. Why can't the state
now insist that the indebted companies' remaining assets continue to
serve the public with steady jobs?<br>
<br>
Dozens of workers' cooperatives have already been awarded legal
expropriation. Brukman is still fighting. Come to think of it, the
Luddites made a similar argument in 1812. The new textile mills put
profits for a few before an entire way of life. Those textile workers
tried to fight that destructive logic by smashing the machines. The
Brukman workers have a much better plan: they want to protect the
machines and smash the logic.</div>
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