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Miami Tuesday - A tale of two strugglesNicolas, Vendredi, Novembre 21, 2003 - 23:00
Dave Bleakney
It has been an interesting two days in Miami. In spite of the massive repression forums and meetings continue to take place. Farmers, workers, greens, indigenous people and the poor are all part of this delicious millieu of resistance and power preparing to take to the streets on Thursday. But there are differences of style. On Tuesday the AFL-CIO and the Organizacion Regional Interamericana de Trabajadores (ORIT) held a workers forum at the beautiful Gusman theatre. Delegates to the FTAA had been told not to wear suits lest they be identified in the streets and face the music for their crimes. Ironically, or perhaps not, the ORIT offical appeared in a nice suit and spoke to to a small audience of 50 people in a theatre designed to hold hundreds. I had come to hear about our hemispheric struggle as workers fighting for justice. I knew something was up when I was asked to open my bag before entering. For the first time in my life I was asked to reveal the contents of my bag at a meeting of workers. This is something one expects full well from a repressive police state and its agents. It was a shock to see such a practice employed at meeting of the working class. The ORIT offical, Victor Baez, complained that the leaders "won't let us in" to their meetings. He pined over the fact that even ministers of labour have been "relegated from the negotiation process". He said that there was "no place for workers" and that "in spite of a very active movement they (the political establishment) have read some of our papers but they have never allowed us to negotiate with them". Mobilization wasn't even mentioned. After presentations from a panel the audience were "allowed" to ask five questions. No debate. No ideas. No dialogue. No resistance. Just a mere petitioning of the king, and a plea for more crumbs. Disturbing and revealing was the notion presented by Baez that "these agreeements lack legitimacy" because workers "have not been consulted." Is "legitimacy" the name of the game for the FTAA ministers and ORIT? My first morning in Miami left me feeling a little depressed. Is this it? Has our struggle been reduced to polite petitions to legitimize a corrupt order? Is there a strategy for resistance or is our lot to press our faces against the windows of the feast? Can we really hope to join up and legitimize them? Do we merely want to be thankful that we all are not forced to sleep in the street, be beaten up by cops or be deported on a whim? Indeed, reducing things to requests for unenforcable labour standards, (a frequent mantra from some quarters of the labour movement) not only adds an air of legitmacy to the illegitamizable FTAA process but dismisses the 500 year struggle for indigenous rights in this hemisphere relegating it to a mere footnote in history. It suggests that the aim is to maintain a corrupt system rather than smash it. Beg for a piece of the pie without questioning the nature of it. Besides, even IF you believe in this ruse called capitalism, any good negotiator knows that negotiating from a positon of weakness is a recipe for failure. Needing a break I headed to the street. My photo of cops on bicycles pedaling around like armed boy scouts in short pants was met with yelling and screaming from members of the killing machine known as the Miami-Dade police. Unphased and bemused I headed back to the forum only to be asked, once again, to reveal the contents of my bag. I was hoping to find the convergence space (no one seemed to know where it was at the workers forum). It was suggested by one organizer that I "ask the police." Not a chance. All this contrasted sharply with a visit to the convergence "welcome" centre. There was an entirely different vibe there alogether. People were creating, talking, sharing, painting, cooking, preparing and training to take on a system that has no future. Those without institutional support had much greater numbers than the worker-subsidized 50 or so at the Gusman theatre. This was not a place of pleas or buy-offs. This was a place of resistance and hope. A space to plot rebellion and agency. And it only got better... The United Steelworkers of America have put on a fantastic show here. They have mobilized in the thousands and are a real formidable presence in the street. All of us in organized labour could learn from them. This was a dignified march of resistance, celebration and power. These were farmworkers and the most exploited. They were black, brown and hispanic. The working poor who put food on our tables were not taking no for an answer. This contrasted sharply with the fear of the state. Riot cops, helicopters with powerful spotlights, and hidden cameras were in abundance. Armoured personel carriers remained parked on sidestreets ready to pounce in an instant. Yet no one appeared intimidated. The power and dignity of this crowd constrasting sharply with my morning experience. There was no begging and petitioning here. This is resistance and I had found it. Now that's a struggle I am hungry to join. Dave Bleakney, postal worker |
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