Showing posts with label Worker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Worker. Show all posts

Friday, January 10, 2014

Fertility Clinic Worker May Have Secretly Fathered Kids

Fertility Clinic Worker May Have Secretly Fathered Kids
http://pixel.quantserve.com/pixel/p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif


(Newser) – An exceedingly creepy story out of Utah suggests that a male receptionist at a fertility clinic secretly swapped in his own sperm during treatments, fathering at least one child and probably more, reports LiveScience. Oh, and this receptionist just happened to be a convicted kidnapper who once held a woman captive and used electroshock therapy on her in a failed attempt to get her to fall for him, reports KUTV. He died in 1999, but all of this has now resulted in a website reaching out to other possible victims called Was Your Child Fathered by Thomas Lippert?


The crazy story, first reported at a genealogist’s blog, began unwinding when a couple and their 21-year-old daughter had their DNA tested as a lark via 23andMe. To their shock, they discovered that daughter and father weren’t related. That made no sense because, while the couple had used the now-shuttered Reproductive Medical Technologies Inc. for help conceiving, the husband had given his own sperm to be used in the process. Further testing then revealed that the daughter’s real biological father was Lippert, who had worked at the clinic in the late 1980s and into the 1990s. The wife recalls him having photos of babies at his desk, and she fears they were all fathered by him. The clinic was affiliated with the University of Utah, which has been conducting its own investigation, notes the Salt Lake Tribune.




Health from Newser




Read more about Fertility Clinic Worker May Have Secretly Fathered Kids and other interesting subjects concerning Health and Lifestyle at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Monday, December 23, 2013

Obama signs order for federal worker pay raises in 2014


U.S. President Barack Obama reacts to a question during his year-end news conference in the White House briefing room in Washington, December 20, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Jonathan Ernst




Reuters: Politics



Obama signs order for federal worker pay raises in 2014

Thursday, November 21, 2013

SEC charges ex-Marvell worker in Galleon insider-trade scheme

SEC charges ex-Marvell worker in Galleon insider-trade scheme
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/9e39e__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif



WASHINGTON Thu Nov 21, 2013 2:23pm EST



WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A former Marvell Technology Group Ltd employee will pay $ 60,000 to settle civil charges that he offered non-public tips to a hedge fund manager with ties to Galleon Group, U.S. regulators said Thursday.


Sam Miri, who worked at Marvell’s communications division, will also be barred from serving as an officer or director of a public company, the Securities and Exchange Commission said.


The SEC alleges that Miri gave former Galleon portfolio manager Ali Far information about Marvell’s financial performance and that Far, who was also charged in the Galleon matter, then traded with it on behalf of Spherix Capital, a hedge fund he founded.


(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick)



Reuters: Business News




Read more about SEC charges ex-Marvell worker in Galleon insider-trade scheme and other interesting subjects concerning Business at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Saturday, October 5, 2013

The World Cup Socker in Qatar (2022), Controversy over Appalling Migrant Worker Conditions


L’homme de l’année 2011 : L’Emir du Qatar, Hamad Ben Khalifa al Thani, le nouvel Air and Field Marshall du Monde arabe


Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani is Qatar’s Emir [image left]. He heads a despotic monarchical rogue state.


He maintains supreme power. What he says goes. Ordinary Qataris have no say.


State terror defines official policy. Qatar has one of the world’s worst human and civil rights record.


Torture and other forms of repression are commonplace. So is brutal worker exploitation. Foreign nationals suffer most.


 According to the State Department’s 2012 human rights report:


“The principal human rights problems were the inability of citizens to change their government peacefully, restriction of fundamental civil liberties, and pervasive denial of expatriate workers’ rights.”


“The monarch-appointed government prohibited organized political parties and restricted civil liberties, including freedoms of speech, press, and assembly and access to a fair trial for persons held under the Protection of Society Law and Combating Terrorism Law.”


“Other continuing human rights concerns included restrictions on the freedoms of religion and movement, as foreign laborers could not freely travel abroad.”


“Trafficking in persons, primarily in the labor and domestic worker sectors, was a problem.”


“Legal, institutional, and cultural discrimination against women limited their participation in society.”


“The noncitizen “Bidoon” (stateless persons) who resided in the country with an unresolved legal status experienced social discrimination.”



Migrants comprise the vast majority of Qatar’s two million population. London’s Guardian ran a series of articles explaining more.


The International Federation of Association Football (FIFA) chose Qatar to host the 2022 World Cup games.


FIFA president Sepp Blatter did so disgracefully. He ignored outrageous exploitation foreign construction workers face. More on that below.


Qatar is a key US regional ally. Doha hosts America’s forward CENTCOM (US Central Command) headquarters. It’s based at Al Udeid Air Base. It’s home for 5,000 US forces.


It’s a hub for US Afghanistan and Iraq operations. Qatar was instrumental in Obama’s Libya war. Its special forces armed and trained extremist Islamist militants.


 They included the CIA affiliated Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG). They’re ideologically allied with Al Qaeda.


In December 2004, the State Department designated it a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO). If doesn’t matter. America uses Al Qaeda and likeminded organizations as enemies and allies.


Qatar supports Obama’s war on Syria. It helps recruit extremist fighters. It provides funding, weapons and training. It’s part of Washington’s plan to oust Assad.


London’s Guardian headlined “Qatar: one migrant worker’s story.”


 Nepalese worker Bhupendra Malla Thakuri “borrowed money to afford a recruitment agent’s fees (for) a job as a truck driver in Qatar…”


 It pays 1,200 riyals monthly (about $ 330). In June 2011, Bhupendra was severely injured. His leg was crushed on the job. He was hospitalized for months.


“When I was discharged,” he said, “the company only paid me for the 20-odd days I had worked that month, but nothing more.”


 ”They didn’t give me my salary. They didn’t give me anything. It was a very critical situation. I was injured and my leg had become septic.”


 His company gave him a document in English to sign. It asked him to agree to return to Nepal. It declared all his benefits paid.


He refused to sign, saying:


 ”I had to return to the hospital frequently for checkups, but I didn’t have money for that. I needed money for transportation and medicine. There was no money for food.”



 His indebtedness rose to about $ 4,400. He had no way repay. He sued. He was lucky. He got significant compensation. On July 29, he went home.


 According to Amnesty International Gulf migrant researcher James Lynch:


“Bhupendra’s case illustrates both the callousness with which so many companies treat migrant workers in Qatar, but also the laborious and confusing processes which migrant workers are expected to navigate in order to get their rights.”


“It took him more than two years, and enormous stamina and courage, to get the compensation he deserved, during which time he was penniless.”



On September 25, the Guardian headlined “Revealed: Qatar’s World Cup ‘slaves.’ Exclusive: Abuse and exploitation of migrant workers preparing emirate for 2022.”


They endure outrageous human rights abuses. In recent weeks, dozens of Nepalese migrant workers died.


“(T)housands more (endure) appalling labour abuses, a Guardian investigation has found, raising serious questions about Qatar’s preparations to host the 2022 World Cup.”



During summer 2013, “Nepalese workers died at a rate of almost one a day.”


 Many were young men. Sudden heart attacks killed them. Others died from accidents. Human life in Qatar is cheap.


 Guardian investigators “found evidence to suggest that thousands of Nepalese, who make up the single largest group of labourers in Qatar, face exploitation and abuses that amount to modern-day slavery.”


From June 4 – August 8, at least 44 workers died. Heart attacks or workplace accidents took most of them.


Other damning evidence uncovered included:


  • forced labor on World Cup infrastructure;

  • withholding pay for some Nepalese workers for months; allegedly it’s to prevent them from running away;

  • confiscating worker passports; doing so reduces their status to illegal aliens; and

  • denying workers access to free drinking water in summer heat.

“About 30 Nepalese sought refuge at their embassy in Doha to escape the brutal conditions of their employment,” said the Guardian.


Rogue Qatari officials are very much involved in ruthless migrant worker exploitation.


“The overall picture is of one of the richest nations exploiting one of the poorest to get ready for the world’s most popular sporting tournament,” the Guardian added.


It shows FIFA’s complicity with brutal police state repression. It doesn’t surprise. Formula One’s governing body includes Bahrain on its calendar.


It does so despite the Gulf monarchy’s appalling human rights record.


Murder, torture, other forms of abuse, lawless arrests, kangaroo court trials, and longterm imprisonments don’t matter.


Bahrain Grand Prix races are held as scheduled. Formula One’s Bernie Ecclestone operates like FIFA’s Sepp Blatter. Money, lots of it, prestige, and self-interest alone matter.


State terror is a small price to pay. Welcome to Qatar and Bahrain. They’re two of the world’s most repressive dictatorships. They’re valued US allies. They’re complicit in America’s imperial wars.


One migrant Qatari worker told Guardian investigators:


“We’d like to leave, but the company won’t let us. I’m angry about how this company is treating us, but we’re helpless.”


“I regret coming here, but what to do? We were compelled to come just to make a living, but we’ve had no luck.”



Guardian investigators found migrant workers sleeping 12 to a room. Filthy conditions made many sick.


Some were forced to work without pay. They were left begging for food and clean water. Ran Kuman Mahara said:


“We were working on an empty stomach for 24 hours; 12 hours’ work and then no food all night.”


“When I complained, my manager assaulted me, kicked me out of the labour camp I lived in and refused to pay me anything. I had to beg for food from other workers.”



Nearly all Nepalese migrant workers have huge debts. They accrued them to pay recruitment agents for their jobs.


They’re obligated to repay. They have no way to do so. They had no idea how brutally they’d be exploited.


They held against their will in forced bondage. They’re treated callously. Dozens are worked to death.


Nepalese ambassador to Qatar, Maya Kumari Sharma, called the emirate an “open jail” for foreign workers. It’s that and much more.


According to Anti-Slavery International director Aidan McQuade:


 ”The evidence uncovered by the Guardian is clear proof of the use of systematic forced labour in Qatar.”


 ”In fact, these working conditions and the astonishing number of deaths of vulnerable workers go beyond forced labour to the slavery of old where human beings were treated as objects.”


“There is no longer a risk that the World Cup might be built on forced labour. It is already happening.”


Qatar has the world’s highest ratio of migrant workers to domestic population. Over 90% of its workforce are aliens. From now until 2022, another 1.5 million will be recruited.


Based on current conditions, they’ll be held in forced bondage. They’ll be brutalized against their will.


They’ll be lawlessly held to build stadiums, roads, ports, and hotels, as well as other infrastructure and facilities in time for FIFA’s 2022 World Cup games.


Nepal supplies about 40% of Qatar’s migrant workers. In 2012, over 100,000 were recruited. They had no idea how brutally they’d be treated.


 On the one hand, FIFA officials insist on acceptable labor standards conditions and practices. On the other, they turn a blind eye to appalling abuses.


It bears repeating. Money, lots of it, prestige, and self-interest alone matter. It doesn’t surprise. Olympism operates the same way.


 It’s more about profiteering, exploitation, and cynicism than sport. In modern times, it’s always been that way.


 It’s dark side excludes good will and fair play. Scandalous wheeling, dealing, collusion, and bribery turns sport into a commercial grab bag free-for-all.


Marginalized populations are exploited. Thousands are evicted and displaced. Disadvantaged residents are left high and dry.


Cozy relationships among government officials, corporate sponsors, universities, and IOC bosses facilitate exploiting communities, people, and athletes unfairly. It’s standard practice.


FIFA operates the same way. Denial of fundamental rights and freedoms is ignored. Readying venues for scheduled events come first.


Repression and worker abuses don’t matter. High-minded hyperbole conceals what demands condemnation.


CH2M Hill is a leading consulting, engineering, construction, program management firm. It “was recently appointed the official programme management consultant to the supreme committee,” said the Guardian.


It claims a “zero tolerance policy for the use of forced labour and other human trafficking practices.”


According to its engineering subsidiary Halcrow:


“Our supervision role of specific construction packages ensures adherence to site contract regulation for health, safety and environment.”


 ”The terms of employment of a contractor’s labour force is not under our direct purview.”



Nepalese worker explain otherwise. They’re virtual slaves. They want to leave but can’t. According to one unnamed migrant:


“We’d like to leave, but the company won’t let us. If we run away, we become illegal and that makes it hard to find another job.”



Qatar’s labor ministry lied claiming it enforces strict standards and practices. According to the Guardian:


“The workers’ plight makes a mockery of concerns for the 2022 footballers.”



General Federation of Nepalese Trade Unions head Umesh Upadhyaya said:


“Everyone is talking about the effect of Qatar’s extreme heat on a few hundred footballers.”


“But they are ignoring the hardships, blood and sweat of thousands of migrant workers, who will be building the World Cup stadiums in shifts that can last eight times the length of a football match.”



They turn a blind eye to the appalling human rights abuses they endure. They’re held in forced bondage for Qatari/FIFA profits, self-interest and prestige.


Doing so makes a mockery of sport. Illusion substitutes for reality. Dark side truth explains best.


Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago. He can be reached at [email protected]


His new book is titled “Banker Occupation: Waging Financial War on Humanity.”


http://www.claritypress.com/LendmanII.html


Visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com.


Listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network.


It airs Fridays at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy listening.


http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour


http://www.dailycensored.com/appalling-migrant-worker-conditions-qatar/




Global Research



The World Cup Socker in Qatar (2022), Controversy over Appalling Migrant Worker Conditions

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Contract worker behind Navy Yard shooting rampage







Three women embrace near Nationals Park where family members waited to greet loved ones that were at the Washington Navy Yard, Monday Sept. 16, 2013, in Washington. At least one gunman launched an attack inside the Washington Navy Yard, spraying gunfire on office workers in the cafeteria and in the hallways at the heavily secured military installation in the heart of the nation’s capital, authorities said. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)





Three women embrace near Nationals Park where family members waited to greet loved ones that were at the Washington Navy Yard, Monday Sept. 16, 2013, in Washington. At least one gunman launched an attack inside the Washington Navy Yard, spraying gunfire on office workers in the cafeteria and in the hallways at the heavily secured military installation in the heart of the nation’s capital, authorities said. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)





This undated photo provided by the Fort Worth Police Department shows a booking mug of Aaron Alexis, arrested in September, 2010, on suspicion of discharging a firearm in the city limits. Alexis is suspected to be the shooter at the Washington D,C. Navy Yard Monday, September 16, 2013. (AP Photo/ Fort Worth Police Department via The Fort Worth Star-Telegram)





Essential personnel are allowed into a closed Washington Navy Yard in Washington, on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2013, the day after a gunman launched an attack inside the Washington Navy Yard on Monday, spraying gunfire on office workers in the cafeteria and in the hallways at the heavily secured military installation in the heart of the nation’s capital. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)





A police boat patrols near the scene of a shooting at the Washington Navy Yard on Monday, Sept. 16, 2013, in Washington. At least one gunman opened fire inside a building at the Washington Navy Yard on Monday morning. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)





These images released by the FBI show photos of Aaron Alexis, who police believe was a gunman at the Washington Navy Yard shooting in Washington, Monday morning, Sept. 16, 2013, and who was killed after he fired on a police officer. At least one gunman launched an attack inside the Washington Navy Yard, spraying gunfire on office workers in the cafeteria and in the hallways at the heavily secured military installation in the heart of the nation’s capital, authorities said. The photo at left is from 2011. (AP Photo/FBI)













Buy AP Photo Reprints







(AP) — The deadly attack at the Washington Navy Yard was carried out by one of the military’s own: a defense contract employee and former Navy reservist who used a valid pass to get onto the installation and started firing inside a building, killing 12 people before he was slain in a gun battle with police.


The motive for the mass shooting — the deadliest on a military installation in the U.S. since the tragedy at Fort Hood, Texas, in 2009 — was a mystery, investigators said. But a profile of the lone gunman, a 34-year-old Aaron Alexis, was coming into focus. He was described as a Buddhist who had also had flares of rage, complained about the Navy and being a victim of discrimination and had several run-ins with law enforcement, including two shootings.


U.S. law enforcement officials told The Associated Press that Alexis had been suffering a host of serious mental issues, including paranoia and a sleep disorder. He also had been hearing voices in his head, the officials said. Alexis had been treated since August by the Veterans Administration for his mental problems, the officials said. They spoke on condition of anonymity because the criminal investigation in the case was continuing.


The Navy had not declared him mentally unfit, which would have rescinded a security clearance Alexis had from his earlier time in the Navy Reserves.


Family members told investigators Alexis was being treated for his mental issues.


The officials also said there has been no connection to international or domestic terrorism and investigators have found no manifesto or other writings suggesting a political or religious motivation for the shooting.


Monday’s onslaught at a single building at the highly secure Navy Yard unfolded about 8:20 a.m. in the heart of the nation’s capital, less than four miles from the White House and two miles from the Capitol.


It put all of Washington on edge. Mayor Vincent Gray said there was no indication it was a terrorist attack, but he added that the possibility had not been ruled out.


“This is a horrific tragedy,” Gray said.


Alexis carried three weapons: an AR-15 assault rifle, a shotgun, and a handgun that he took from a police officer at the scene, according to two federal law enforcement officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the investigation. The AR-15 is the same type of rifle used in last year’s mass shooting at a Newtown, Conn., elementary school that killed 20 students and six women. The weapon was also used in the shooting at a Colorado movie theater that killed 12 and wounded 70.


For much of the day, authorities said they were looking for a possible second attacker who may have been disguised in an olive-drab military-style uniform. But by late Monday night, they said they were convinced the shooting was the work of a lone gunman, and the lockdown around the area was eased.


“We do now feel comfortable that we have the single and sole person responsible for the loss of life inside the base today,” Washington police Chief Cathy Lanier said.


President Barack Obama lamented yet another mass shooting in the U.S. that he said took the lives of American “patriots.” He promised to make sure “whoever carried out this cowardly act is held responsible.”


The FBI took charge of the investigation.


The attack came four years after Army psychiatrist Maj. Nidal Hasan killed 13 people at Fort Hood in what he said was an effort to save the lives of Muslims overseas. He was convicted last month and sentenced to death.


In addition to those killed at the Navy Yard, eight people were hurt, including three who were shot and wounded, according to the mayor. Those three were a police officer and two female civilians, authorities said. They were all expected to survive.


The dead ranged in age from 46 to 73, according to the mayor. A number of the victims were civilian employees and contractors, rather than active-duty military personnel, the police chief said.


At the time of the rampage, Alexis was an employee with The Experts, a company that was a Defense Department subcontractor on a Navy-Marine Corps computer project, authorities said.


Valerie Parlave, head of the FBI’s field office in Washington, said Alexis had access to the Navy Yard as a defense contractor and used a valid pass.


Alexis had been a full-time Navy reservist from 2007 to early 2011, leaving as a petty officer third class, the Navy said. It did not say why he left. He had been an aviation electrician’s mate with a unit in Fort Worth.


A convert to Buddhism who grew up in New York City, Alexis had had run-ins with the law over shooting incidents in 2004 and 2010 in Fort Worth and Seattle and was portrayed in police reports as seething with anger.


The Washington Navy Yard is a sprawling, 41-acre labyrinth of buildings and streets protected by armed guards and metal detectors, and employees have to show their IDs at doors and gates. More than 18,000 people work there.


The rampage took place at Building 197, the headquarters for Naval Sea Systems Command, which buys, builds and maintains ships and submarines. About 3,000 people work at headquarters, many of them civilians.


Witnesses on Monday described a gunman opening fire from a fourth-floor overlook, aiming down on people on the main floor, which includes a glass-walled cafeteria. Others said a gunman fired at them in a third-floor hallway.


Patricia Ward, a logistics-management specialist, said she was in the cafeteria getting breakfast.


“It was three gunshots straight in a row — pop, pop, pop. Three seconds later, it was pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, so it was like about a total of seven gunshots, and we just started running,” Ward said.


Todd Brundidge, an executive assistant with Navy Sea Systems Command, said he and co-workers encountered a gunman in a long hallway on the third floor. The gunman was wearing all blue, he said.


“He just turned and started firing,” Brundidge said.


Terrie Durham, an executive assistant with the same agency, said the gunman fired toward her and Brundidge.


“He aimed high and missed,” she said. “He said nothing. As soon as I realized he was shooting, we just said, ‘Get out of the building.’”


Officials announced early Tuesday that streets around the Navy Yard that were closed after the shooting were re-opened for the morning commute.


As emergency vehicles and law enforcement officers flooded the streets Monday, a helicopter hovered, nearby schools were locked down and airplanes at Reagan National Airport were grounded so they would not interfere with law-enforcement choppers.


In the confusion, police said around midday that they were searching for two accomplices who may have taken part in the attack — one carrying a handgun and wearing a tan Navy-style uniform and a beret, the other armed with a long gun and wearing an olive-green uniform. Police said it was unclear if the men were members of the military.


But as the day wore, police dropped one person and then the other as suspects. As tensions eased, Navy Yard employees were gradually released from the complex, and children were let out of their locked-down schools.


Adm. Jonathan Greenert, chief of naval operations, was at the base at the time the shooting began but was moved unharmed to a nearby military installation.


Anxious relatives and friends of those who work at the complex waited to hear from loved ones.


___


Associated Press writers Matt Apuzzo, Adam Goldman, Jesse Holland, Stacy A. Anderson, Brian Witte and Ben Nuckols in Washington contributed to this report.


Associated Press




U.S. Headlines



Contract worker behind Navy Yard shooting rampage

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Morgue Worker Notices Crash Victim Is Still Alive


(Newser) – A 72-year-old car crash victim had been in a German morgue for several hours Monday when a worker there noticed something odd: She was still breathing. The woman was injured when her 18-year-old grandson veered into oncoming traffic on a highway about 35 miles north of Hamburg. The resulting crash killed the woman’s daughter, who had been in the back with her four sons, the youngest of whom also died; paramedics believed the grandmother had suffered the same fate. Unable to find any signs of life, they assumed she’d died of head trauma, the Local reports.


“What exactly happened next, no one knows,” says a hospital spokesperson. When the morgue worker realized they were wrong, the woman was rushed to the hospital, where she was operated on for four hours. She is currently in a coma. (This is, of course, not the first time this has happened. See here, here, and here.)




Health from Newser



Morgue Worker Notices Crash Victim Is Still Alive

Monday, September 2, 2013

The Scared Worker


WASHINGTON — On this Labor Day, American workers face a buyers’ market. Employers have the upper hand and, given today’s languid pace of hiring, the advantage shows few signs of ending. What looms, at best, is a sluggish descent from high unemployment (7.4 percent in July) and a prolonged period of stagnant or slow-growing wages. Since 2007, there has been no gain in average inflation-adjusted wages and total compensation, including fringes, notes the Economic Policy Institute, a liberal think tank.


The weak job market has a semi-permanence unlike anything seen since World War II, and the effects on public opinion extend beyond the unemployed. “People’s expectations have been really ratcheted down for what they can expect for themselves and their children,” says EPI economist Lawrence Mishel. There’s a sense “that the economy just doesn’t produce good jobs anymore.” Possible job loss becomes more threatening because finding a new job is harder. Says Paul Taylor of the Pew Research Center: “Security is valued more than money because it’s so fragile.”


What’s occurring is the final breakdown of the post-World War II job compact, with its promises of career jobs and something close to “full employment.” The dissolution of these expectations compounds stress and uncertainty.


Over the past century, we’ve had three broad labor regimes. The first, in the early 1900s, featured “unfettered labor markets,” as economic historian Price Fishback of the University of Arizona puts it. Competition set wages and working conditions. There was no federal unemployment insurance or union protection. Workers were fired if they offended bosses or the economy slumped; they quit if they thought they could do better. Turnover was high. Less than a third of manufacturing workers in 1913 had been at their current jobs for more than five years.


After World War II, labor relations became more regulated and administered — the second regime. The Wagner Act of 1935 gave workers the right to organize; decisions of the National War Labor Board also favored unions. By 1945, unions represented about a third of private workers, up from 10 percent in 1929. Health insurance, pensions and job protections proliferated. Factory workers laid off during recessions could expect to be recalled when the economy recovered. Job security improved. By 1973, half of manufacturing workers had been at the same job for more than five years.


To avoid unionization and retain skilled workers, large non-union companies emulated these practices. Career jobs were often the norm. If you went to work for IBM at 25, you could expect to retire from IBM at 65. Fringe benefits expanded. Corporate America, unionized or not, created a private welfare state to protect millions from job and income loss.


But in some ways, the guarantees were too rigid and costly. They started to unravel with the harsh 1981-82 recession (peak monthly unemployment: 10.8 percent). As time passed, companies faced increasing competition from imports and new technologies. Pressure mounted from Wall Street for higher profits. In some industries, labor became uncompetitive. Career jobs slowly vanished as a norm; managers fired workers to cut costs. Unions provided diminishing protection. In 2012, they represented only 6.6 percent of private workers. Old organized sectors (steel, autos) have shrunk. New sectors, from high tech to fast food, have proved hard to organize. Companies have ferociously resisted.


Now comes the third labor regime: a confusing mix of old and new. The private safety net is shredding, though the public safety net (unemployment insurance, Social Security, anti-poverty programs, anti-discrimination laws) remains. Economist Fishback suggests we may be drifting back toward “unfettered labor markets” with greater personal instability, insecurity — and responsibility. Workers are often referred to as “free agents.” An article in the Harvard Business Review argues that lifetime employment at one company is dead and proposes the following compact: Companies invest in workers’ skills to make them more employable when they inevitably leave; workers reciprocate by devoting those skills to improving corporate profitability.


“The new compact isn’t about being nice,” the article says. “It’s based on an understanding that a company is its talent, that low performers will be cut, and that the way to attract talent is to offer appealing opportunities.”
Workers can’t be too picky, because their power has eroded. Another indicator: After years of stability, labor’s share — in wages and fringes — of non-farm business income slipped from 63 percent in 2000 to 57 percent in 2013, reports the White House Council of Economic Advisers. But an even greater decline in 22 other advanced countries, albeit over a longer period, suggests worldwide pressures on workers. Take your pick: globalization; new labor-saving technologies; sluggish economies. Workers do best when strong growth and tight markets raise real wages. On Labor Day 2013, this prospect is nowhere in sight. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



The Scared Worker

Friday, August 9, 2013

Aid worker dies after armed attack in South Sudan




  • A staff member of Doctors Without Borders died this week, the group says

  • The car he and another worker were traveling in came under attack

  • The other staff member remains seriously wounded

  • Doctors Without Borders calls for an investigation into the “brutal attack”



(CNN) — A staff member of the aid organization Doctors Without Borders has died after an attack on a vehicle near the capital of South Sudan, the group said Friday.


The aid worker, Joseph Philip Sebit, died two days after the attack, which took place Monday on a main road outside the capital, Juba, according to Doctors Without Borders.


A second employee for the organization remains seriously wounded, the group said.


Doctors Without Borders, also known as Medecins Sans Frontieres, said that the “exact circumstances” of the attack aren’t yet clear, but the car in which its two staff members were traveling was “clearly marked as belonging to Medecins Sans Frontieres.”


The organization has requested that South Sudanese authorities “investigate the brutal attack that resulted in the killing of our colleague,” said Marcel Langenbach, director of operations for the group.


“We want to emphasize the need to respect international humanitarian law and on the obligation to ensure the protection of humanitarian workers, their property and health facilities,” he said.


Doctors Without Borders said it had been working in the region for more than 30 years.


South Sudan officially gained its statehood in July 2011 after separating from Sudan.




CNN.com Recently Published/Updated



Aid worker dies after armed attack in South Sudan

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Report: NSA contract worker is surveillance source



(AP) — A 29-year-old American who works as contract employee at the National Security Agency is the source of The Guardian’s disclosures about the U.S. government’s secret surveillance programs, the London newspaper reported Sunday.


The leaks have reopened the post-Sept. 11 debate about privacy concerns versus heightened measure to protect against terrorist attacks, and led the NSA to ask the Justice Department to conduct a criminal investigation.


The Guardian said it was publishing the identity of Edward Snowden, a former technical assistant for the CIA and current employee of defense contractor Booz Allen Hamilton, at his own request.


“I have no intention of hiding who I am because I know I have done nothing wrong,” he was quoted as saying.


The director of national intelligence, James Clapper, has decried the revelation of the intelligence-gathering programs as reckless, and in the past days has taken the rare step of declassifying some details about them to respond to media reports about counterterrorism techniques employed by the government.


An Internet scouring program, code-named PRISM, allows the NSA and FBI to tap directly into the servers of major U.S. Internet companies such as Google, Apple, Microsoft, Facebook and AOL, scooping out emails, video chats, instant messages and more to track foreign nationals who are suspected of terrorism or espionage.


The NSA also is collecting the telephone records of millions of American customers, but not actual conversations.


President Barack Obama, Clapper and others have said the programs are authorized by Congress and subject to strict supervision of a secret court.


Snowden is quoted as saying that his “sole motive is to inform the public as to that which is done in their name and that which is done against them.”


The Guardian reported that Snowden was working in an NSA office in Hawaii when he copied the last of the documents he planned to disclose and told supervisors that he needed to be away for a few weeks to receive treatment for epilepsy.


He left for Hong Kong on May 20 and has remained there since, according to the newspaper. Snowden is quoted as saying he chose that city because “they have a spirited commitment to free speech and the right of political dissent”, and because he believed it was among the spots on the globes that could and would resist the dictates of the U.S. government.


Snowden is quoted as saying he hopes the publicity the leaks have cause will provide him some protection and that he sees asylum, perhaps in Iceland, as a possibility.


“I feel satisfied that this was all worth it. I have no regrets,” Snowden told the newspaper.


He was said to have worked on IT security for the CIA and by 2007, was stationed with diplomatic cover in Geneva, responsible for maintaining computer network security. That gave him clearance to a range of classified documents, according to the report.


“Much of what I saw in Geneva really disillusioned me about how my government functions and what its impact is in the world,” he says. “I realized that I was part of something that was doing far more harm than good.”


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Report: NSA contract worker is surveillance source

Sunday, May 5, 2013

"Mrs. Clinton Can Have Her Factories": A Haitian Sweatshop Worker Speaks


Marjorie Valcelat ran an embroidery machine in a factory from 2005 to 2008. She says the experience made her so sick and weak that she’s not felt able to work since then.


I had three children I had to take care of; their father had left. And since I hadn’t had enough schooling, I didn’t have the skills to do much. So I said to myself, “I’m going to work at a factory.” When I got there, they showed me how to run the machines to embroider slips and nightshirts. I spent a month training, but during that time they didn’t pay me; I had to pay them for the training.


If I had met the quota, every two weeks I would have made 1,250 gourdes [US$ 30.00]. Yep, that’s it. But I couldn’t meet the quota, because embroidery wasn’t my specialty. I did what I could. Sometimes they paid me 500 gourdes [US$ 12.50], sometimes 400 gourdes [US $ 9.50], every two weeks. I needed to support my family and I couldn’t survive.


Then when the machine broke and I called the mechanics to fix the machine – you put a red cloth on the machine so they’d know it’s broken – they wouldn’t come because I was so scrawny. The big women, the ones with the fat bottoms that they can feel up, the mechanics would go fix their machines. I had been in good shape, big, but the machine and those lights were sucking me dry. So I could never get the machine fixed [so I could keep embroidering] and that put me even more under quota.


It was such misery. And then, I had to travel from far away. There were times when I had to get on the road at 4:00 in the morning, but there’d be traffic jams and I still couldn’t arrive on time. At 6:00, they would close the entrance gates. That would mean that I got all the way there, but then I had to turn around and break my back to return home, and they never paid me. And I’d still have to pay the two bus fares, 20 gourdes [47 cents], and where was I supposed to get that money? Sometimes I had to borrow money just to get to work. 


You didn’t even have time to eat. They’d let you out at 11:00, and then they’d ring the bell before 11:30. You had to return. There were people who’d throw out the rest of their food because they didn’t have enough time to eat. Sometimes the vendors near the plant would run out of food, and you’d have to spend a lot of time trying to find food [further away]. If you got back after 11:30 to find the gates closed, you lost the whole day.


And then oftentimes, because you had to move so fast, the needle would break inside your finger. One person I knew, the needle sewed through her finger and to this day, she still can’t use it.


I thought I would do better over time, but I got worse because my muscles got too weak. The last time I was paid, I got 190 gourdes [US$ 4.52] for two weeks. I had just gone [to the factory] so the children could go to school and their life could be better than mine. I said to myself, “Well, I don’t need to come here any more. I’d best quit this.”


When I left the factory, I was so angry that when I passed the woman who’d cooked the food I had bought for lunch, I just gave her all the money and went on my way.


Me, if I had a message I could send to the higher-ups: there will always be factories, because they’ve always existed, crushing the poor. I don’t speak for other people, and some people will still go work in the factories. But Mrs. Bill Clinton will never see me working there. [As Secretary of State, she promoted the expansion of the export assembly industry.] I will never go to whatever factory Mrs. Clinton opened.


We need another model, we do. I could understand if [the US government] came to Haiti and wanted to build schools, because so many schools were destroyed and a lot of children are in the streets. If [they] worked alongside people like this, reconstructing schools, building some health centers, well, that would be better than a factory. 


Mrs. Clinton can have her factories. Me and my children, we’ll take the health centers.



Many thanks to Lynn Selby for translating Marjorie Valcelat’s interview.




Truthout Stories



"Mrs. Clinton Can Have Her Factories": A Haitian Sweatshop Worker Speaks