CounterPunch,Weekend Edition
December 18-20, 2009
Green Mountain Mustering for the War at Home or
Abroad?
Burlington,
Vt.
Earlier this month, the
"People's Republic of Burlington" had a busy weekend mustering its “troops” for
active duty on several fronts, one at home and the other abroad.
On Saturday, Dec. 5,
two hundred labor and progressive activists gathered at the University of
Vermont to plan more effective resistance to job cuts and contract give-backs
demanded by recession-ravaged employers. The title of their conference
--“Turning Crisis Into Opportunity: Building Democratic, Fighting Unions and
Defending Public Services in Hard Economic Times”--was almost as long as the
list of domestic challenges its participants face.
The very next day, on
the same UVM campus, another group of working class Vermonters assembled to be
fighters and defenders of a different sort. They were the first 298 of nearly
1,500 National Guard members who will be sent from here to Afghanistan between
now and March. As reported in the Burlington Free Press, their unit’s largest
deployment since World War II was celebrated at an “emotional ceremony,”
attended by friends, neighbors, and family members at an indoor tennis court.
Flags were waved, speeches were made, a military band played, and “farewells
were the order of the day.” To keep things on an upbeat note, one Guard officer
proclaimed, with great enthusiasm and to much applause: “The Green Mountain Boys
are coming!”
Similar irrational
exuberance, in 1775, led Ethan Allen to attempt a disastrous invasion of Quebec,
which remains, to this day, part of a foreign country unoccupied by the U.S.
Allen’s Taliban-like frontier home-boys did much better fighting royalist
intruders from New York and, early in the Revolutionary War, seizing Fort
Ticonderoga. In the run up to the UVM labor gathering, worker skirmishing with
modern-day Tories was not going quite as well on the Vermont-side of Lake
Champlain.
Joblessness in the
Green Mountain state--while running lower than in the rest of the northeast--has
been high enough to leave its unemployment fund nearly broke. The region’s
largest telecom, Fairpoint, just declared bankruptcy, throwing 2,500 workers
into an uphill fight to defend their contract and customer service quality. (For
the back-story there, see “Broadband Redlining Targets Rural America,” The
Nation, May 14, 2007, about the debt-laden Verizon sale to Fairpoint that has,
as predicted, landed the latter in Chapter 11.)
And then on Dec. 3,
the Vermont State Employees’ Association (VSEA) tentatively agreed to an
unprecedented 3 percent pay cut for its 7,000 members, followed by a salary
freeze. (Some VSEAers are currently campaigning for membership rejection of this
unpalatable deal.) Already 580 state jobs have been eliminated through lay-offs
or attrition, but Republican Gov. Jim Douglas says he still faces a projected
$150 million state budget shortfall next year.
In the Free Press,
Douglas Administration official Neal Lunderville called the VSEA capitulation “a
common sense approach that should serve as a blue-print for teachers, municipal
workers, and others who receive a paycheck from tax-payers”—a clear warning that
they’re next in line for pay or job cuts too, like their public sector
counter-parts all around the country.
At the Dec. 5 UVM
conference, rank-and-file militants and campus socialists had a different
message for Douglas. Summed up in the rousing chant that ended the final
session, it was: “They say give-back, we say fight-back!” The difficult question
that local teamsters, teachers, telephone workers, nurses, and state employees
grappled with throughout the day was how to make that standard lefty bargaining
position actually stick. Their strategy discussions were aided by Labor
Notes, the 30-year old, Detroit-based labor education and research project,
which publishes a monthly newsletter for “union troublemakers” of all
stripes.
In the fifteen-minute
talk I gave to the group, which included many local stalwarts of U.S. Labor
Against The War (USLAW) and the Vermont Progressive Party, I tried to connect
some dots, related to the back-to-back events on the same campus. I noted that
everyone’s employer is chanting the mantra that times are tough, money is short,
and there must be shared national (or local) sacrifice. In Vermont, that
apparently means working class people must, in disproportionate numbers, fight
and die in Afghanistan, foot the bill, as tax-payers, for a $680 billion a year
Pentagon budget (including the soon-to-be-increased $130 billion annual cost of
two wars), and endure cuts in the pay, benefits, jobs, or public services that
they and their families depend on.
What’s wrong with this
picture, I asked? The powers-that-be (or would-be) are saying, in their usual
authoritative fashion, “there is no alternative!” But there is, in fact, an
alternative. To avoid a 3 per cent pay cut for 7,000 state workers, we could
shut down the war in Afghanistan for twenty minutes and, at the current rate of
U.S. spending there, raise the $2 million that Jim Douglas seeks from the VSEA
that way. To close the governor’s entire fiscal year 2011 budget gap would, of
course, require the additional “sacrifice” of diverting 24-hours worth of Afghan
war spending to help keep Vermont state government afloat for another
year.
The following day,
down at the Holiday Inn in South Burlington, where some National Guard families
spent the weekend saying private good-byes, the logic of my brilliant anti-war
math was not lost on a non-union waitress named Dawna. (For the record, there is
no such thing as a “union hotel” in Vermont.) As she brought pancakes and syrup
to my table late Sunday morning, everyone but Dawna was transfixed by the big
flat-screen TV hanging next to the bar in the restaurant. There, we could watch
real-time coverage of the National Guard deployment ceremony being held just up
the road at UVM. All the Holiday Inn wait staff could recognize people they had
served, in the same room, just a few hours earlier.
Now, these “citizen
soldiers” who had been their breakfast buffet and overnight guests were among
those standing stiffly at attention, wearing field caps, camo, and combat boots.
On the platform in front of them, a parade of local politicians--pro- and
anti-war alike, including Douglas, U.S. Senators Bernie Sanders and Patrick
Leahy, plus U.S. Rep. Peter Welch—praised their patriotism and devotion to duty.
Douglas has been a chicken hawk since his days as a late 1960s Middlebury
College classmate of mine, when he was an outspoken, Richard Nixon-loving Young
Republican. So from his usual perch, far from the front-lines, the governor
assured the soldiers and their families that “while you are doing your duty, I
promise you we will do ours, here on the home-front”—presumably by slashing
state programs or UI benefits?
Meanwhile, my waitress
Dawna was simply disgusted by the whole televised spectacle. “I’m tired of
seeing a lot of guys marching around in uniforms,” she confided. “I wish they’d
turn that off and go back to the ‘relax your muscles’ show”—a bit of self-help
programming for sufferers of lower-back pain that was on the TV when I entered
the restaurant. By this point in her Sunday morning shift, Dawna did not seem
particularly relaxed herself, in her white shirt, bedraggled tie, and sagging
black waitress apron. Although only in her 30s, she had the weary, weighed-down
look common among the working poor struggling to survive in northern New
England’s low-wage, service economy. Her cousin, the father of three, has been
deployed overseas multiple times already. That’s why, she informed me, the war
is “a sore personal subject” for her. “It’s ridiculous,” she declared. “We have
people living on the street, who’ve lost their jobs, can’t pay for their homes.
And now we’re sending more people over there to fight somebody else’s
battles?”
Observing the somber
family gatherings in the hotel over the weekend had clearly not been easy for
some Holiday Inn staff members. Mistaking one mother and daughter in the dining
room for a non-military family, Dawna had asked the child how she liked the
hotel pool. “I’m here to say goodbye to my Dad,” the little girl sadly informed
her.
“I’ll feel better
later on, when I get off work,” Dawna assured me, as I paid for my breakfast.
“You know—‘out of sight, out of mind, what doesn’t kill you, makes you
stronger?’”
At the same time, she
didn’t seem very convinced about the truth of those two oft-repeated but oddly
conjoined phrases. And one thing was certain: for some of the guests she had
served earlier in the day, America’s troop build-up in Afghanistan will prove
fatal, while leaving Dawna’s state, nation, and fellow workers a lot poorer and
not any stronger.
Steve
Early worked for the Communications Workers of America in New England for 27
years and, before that, was Vermont Field Secretary for the American Friends
Service Committee. He is a longtime supporter of Labor Notes and author of
“Embedded With Organized Labor: Journalistic Reflections on the Class War at
Home” from Monthly Review Press). He can be reached at Lsupport@aol.com