If you’re in favor with what I’ve said, then we’re probably not in much disagreement. We’re probably misunderstanding each other on a point not worth quibbling over.
It’s the viewing it as intrinsically hostile, and the (seeming) delight at the perception of “hurt” to the business almost over the benefits it brings to labor.
I don’t view organization as an intrinsically hostile act. It can be defensive or hostile depending on the business, and often is, but it needn’t be if the business doesn’t make it so.
Even in a situation with collective ownership, you still have a voluntary organization of that collective.
That organization isn’t hostile.
If you hoard any amount of stolen labor (and don’t play with me; I know CostCo is skimming stolen labor 'cause they chase profits), then you’re little more than a dragon; and dragons only exist to be slain and have their hoards raided.
Capitalists only know hostile competition, so we keep that same energy. They’ll cut us the moment they think they can pay someone else less-- hell, some of them cut us for no damn reason in Right-to-Work states. Nah. It’s up and stuck for capitalists and their hoards until the next world is born.
The capitalist-wage slave relationship structurally is an antagonistic one. A worker cooperative isn’t structurally antagonistic, nor is a democratic socialist state. Whether a form of organizing is hostile depends on the structure/power dynamics of its relationships.
If you’re in favor with what I’ve said, then we’re probably not in much disagreement. We’re probably misunderstanding each other on a point not worth quibbling over.
It’s the viewing it as intrinsically hostile, and the (seeming) delight at the perception of “hurt” to the business almost over the benefits it brings to labor.
I don’t view organization as an intrinsically hostile act. It can be defensive or hostile depending on the business, and often is, but it needn’t be if the business doesn’t make it so.
Even in a situation with collective ownership, you still have a voluntary organization of that collective.
That organization isn’t hostile.
This is a corporation we are talking about, and that sort of organization is intrinsically hostile to labor.
If you hoard any amount of stolen labor (and don’t play with me; I know CostCo is skimming stolen labor 'cause they chase profits), then you’re little more than a dragon; and dragons only exist to be slain and have their hoards raided.
Capitalists only know hostile competition, so we keep that same energy. They’ll cut us the moment they think they can pay someone else less-- hell, some of them cut us for no damn reason in Right-to-Work states. Nah. It’s up and stuck for capitalists and their hoards until the next world is born.
The capitalist-wage slave relationship structurally is an antagonistic one. A worker cooperative isn’t structurally antagonistic, nor is a democratic socialist state. Whether a form of organizing is hostile depends on the structure/power dynamics of its relationships.
Costco has always been one of the better employers. They should get some credit for that.
I’m not going to pat a fucking corporation’s head for doing the bare minimum.
shrug I don’t think people are saying otherwise, but what they are saying is unions will make them an even better employer.
For tactical reasons, we don’t always act belligerently toward our employers, but the relationship is still always a belligerent one, structurally.