So not only do we have so little coverage of labor but there are outlets that pass off pro-union propaganda as news. I am someone who supports unions, for the record. I am also someone who is deeply opposed to the lack of backbone in union leadership. Genevieve Leigh (WSWS) reports:
Since the start of the year, workers throughout the United States have been engaged in a series of significant class struggles that reflect the growth of anger and opposition throughout the country. Workers are fighting back against the ferocious austerity measures of the ruling elite that have followed the massive handout to the corporate and financial elite in the midst of the pandemic.
Sections of nurses, autoworkers, steelworkers, teachers, coal miners and others have been engaged in class battles spanning weeks and months, in which they confront not only the employers and the government, but the treachery of the unions.
Despite the pretense of being a socialist news publication, in Jacobin magazine, affiliated with a faction of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), one will search in vain through its pages for even a mention of any the most significant class struggles in the heart of world capitalism.
Some of the most significant struggles of the last six months alone include an ongoing strike by 1,300 steelworkers at Allegheny Technologies (ATI) in Pennsylvania, which has pitted workers against the company and their union, the United Steel Workers (USW). Jacobin has not published a single article on the strike.
At Warrior Met Coal in Alabama, 1,100 miners walked out on April 1, determined to restore previous pay cuts and fight abusive and unsafe working conditions. In direct opposition to the efforts of the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA), workers voted down a sellout contract just over a week later, by a vote of 1,006 to 45, delivering a staggering defeat of the UMWA.
Throughout the 8-week (and counting) struggle of the coal miners, Jacobin produced just under 700 words on the struggle, in one article. Not a single one of those 700 words referred to the betrayal of the UMWA and the massive opposition of workers to it.
Such an exercise could be carried on endlessly: J acobin produced exactly one article on the month-long strike by Columbia graduate workers and one article on the nurses’ strike at Saint Vincent Hospital in Worcester, Massachusetts.
Ava and C.I. wrote about this topic for Tuesday's Hilda's Mix. They noted what keeps passing for news and how it isn't news and it isn't We The People. It's sad outlets trying to pose as 'players' instead of covering what needs to be covered.
I don't read Jacobin. I do read WSWS. I don't agree with them all the time but do agree most of the time. And I'm glad they are there because they have done some great work in the past and in the present.
This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot" for Thursday:
Thursday, May 27, 2021. An arrest takes place in Iraq though the western media and the Iraqi press are in conflict over what the arrest was for. The militias surround the prime minister's compound and you may be saying, "Huh? This wasn't on THE NEWSHOUR or CBS EVENING NEWS or . . ." No, it wasn't.
One day after protests across Iraq against the wave of terrorism gripping the country since activists with The October Movement started getting assassinated, someone is finally arrested for terrorism.
REUTERS explains, "Iraqi security forces on Wednesday arrested militia commander Qasim Muslih, the military said, in a move security sources said was linked to attacks on a base that hosts U.S. forces."
Oh.
He is thought to have carried out attacks on the activists but, to read the western coverage, that is apparently not part of the charges currently against him. Elsewhere? It's a different story. Iraq's NRT reports:
Iraqi police arrested a senior official in an Iran-backed armed group Wednesday (May 26) on suspicion of orchestrating the murder of a prominent pro-democracy activist, a security source told AFP.
Qasem Muslah, a commander in the state-sponsored Hashed al-Shaabi paramilitary coalition, is the first high-ranking official in the powerful group to have been arrested in relation to a wave of murders of pro-democracy activists and journalists that started in 2019.
A spokesman and other sources within the Hashed said Wednesday evening that Muslah had been released, but the government has yet to confirm the move.
"At dawn in Baghdad, police intelligence arrested Qasem Muslah, Popular Mobilization Forces (Hashed) operations chief for Anbar province, who gave the order to kill Ihab al-Wazni on May 9 and another activist Fahim al-Taie in December 2019," the security source said.
Anti-government campaigner Wazni was shot dead outside his home by men on motorbikes using a gun equipped with a silencer early on May 9 in the holy shrine city of Karbala, sending protest movement supporters onto the streets to demand an end to such bloodshed and official impunity.
Wazni had for many years criticized Iraqi armed groups and Iran's influence in the country, leading protests in Karbala, where pro-Tehran armed groups hold major sway.
The arrest warrant was issued on May 21st.
ALJAZEERA notes, "A copy of the arrest warrant issued for Muslih that circulated on social media and was verified by the security sources said he was arrested under the anti-terrorism law, but did not have further information."
ALJAZEERA's Shelly Kittleson offers this thread:
Conflicting reports as to whether he has since been released. Iraqi Commander-in-Chief spokesman says he "will remain in the custody of the Joint Operations Command until the end of the investigation"
Not everyone is happy over the arrests. Syed WaQas Ali Tweeted:
And the PMF has issued demands:
That was online. Offline? AP reports:
Shortly
after the arrest, forces affiliated with the PMF, which maintains
offices inside the heavily fortified Green Zone, were deployed
surrounding Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi's headquarters.
Tensions
reached fever pitch when Iraqi security forces and the elite
Counter-Terrorism Service were deployed to protect the government and
diplomatic missions, sparking fears of violence. Some armed PMF factions
gathered around the Green Zone's entrance gates.
The
presence of the PMF inside the seat of Iraq's government was considered
by some senior Iraqi government officials as a way to pressure
al-Kadhimi to release Musleh.
The prime minister described the show of force as “a serious violation of the Iraqi constitution and the laws in force," adding in a statement “we have directed an immediate investigation into these movements.”
Antonio Guterres is the Secretary General of the United Nations. Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert is his Special Envoy to Iraq. She Tweeted the following:
Any arrest case should run its course, as goes for any Iraqi. And surely, nobody should resort to a show of force to get their way. Such behaviour weakens the Iraqi state and further erodes public trust. State institutions must be respected at all times. Nobody is above the law.
In Karbala some took to the streets to protest the arrest.
A much larger presence turned out in Baghdad on Tuesday to protest the killings of protesters, the government's corruption and much more.
The following sites updated: