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ProSense

(116,464 posts)
100. Great tributes to labor:
Fri Aug 16, 2013, 03:02 PM
Aug 2013
A Labor Day tribute to work and workers

by Denise Oliver Velez



Each year on Labor Day, I have a soundtrack in my head. Songs about working people, and labor, and unions. Many of the images that accompany that soundtrack are from WPA Federal Art Project murals that fascinated me as a child. I grew up listening to a lot of folk music, and songs that celebrated struggle. The man whose voice I can still hear is Paul Robeson. So I'll open with his version of Joe Hill.

I hear echoes of Joe Hill's music in John Lennon's Working Class Hero.



Though for many, labor day weekend means the last gasp of summer, or a time to cash in on sales, for me it will always be about work—whether in the fields, or factories, on chain gangs or in cafeterias and offices.

So join me today in celebrating work and workers, and feel free to post your favorite songs that epitomize this day for you.

Alert: This post will be very video heavy. Most will be below the fold.

- more -

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/09/03/1126694/-A-Labor-Day-tribute-to-work-and-workers


Presidential Proclamation -- 100th Anniversary of the United States Department of Labor

BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

A PROCLAMATION

On March 4, 1913, President William Howard Taft signed a bill establishing the United States Department of Labor -- an agency charged with promoting the welfare of American workers and ensuring their efforts are rewarded with fair wages and real protections. After decades of struggle by labor leaders and ordinary citizens, the Department took up the cause of justice in the workplace and lifted it to the highest halls of government.

Over the course of a century, the Department of Labor has fought to secure strong safeguards for workers and their families. It helped lay the cornerstones of middle class security, from the 40-hour work week and the minimum wage to family leave and pensions. As the agency once led by our Nation's first female Cabinet Secretary, the Department has broken down barriers to equal opportunity in the workplace. And for decades, it has improved worker safety and health and aggressively combated child labor at home and abroad.

Today, the Department of Labor is working to restore the basic bargain that built our country: that no matter what you look like or where you come from, if you work hard and meet your responsibilities, you can get ahead. It is forging new ladders of opportunity so a generation of workers can get the 21st century skills and training they need. And to preserve a century's progress in labor rights, the Department will continue to ensure hardworking Americans always have a voice in government and on the job.

On this centennial, we recognize the dedicated public servants at the Department of Labor who have helped move our country forward, and we reaffirm our commitment to giving America's workers the chance to build a brighter future for themselves and their families.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim March 4, 2013, as the 100th Anniversary of the United States Department of Labor. I call upon all Americans to observe this day with appropriate programs, ceremonies, and activities that recognize the United States Department of Labor for upholding dignity in our workplaces and our way of life. 

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this first day of March, in the year of our Lord two thousand thirteen, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-seventh.

BARACK OBAMA

http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/03/02/100th-anniversary-united-states-department-labor


U.S. Department of Labor Celebrates 100 Years of Helping American Workers



Today, the U.S. Department of Labor is celebrating its centennial anniversary. For the past 100 years, the Department of Labor has worked to promote and advance the interests of families, workers, job seekers and retirees of the United States. While protecting the dignity of American workers, the Department has ensured workers have received safety protections and fair wages for their work. The Department of Labor is proud of its many important achievements, from providing the framework for the 40-hour work week to allowing parents to take leave for family emergencies. American workers have always been the backbone of our country and as another century stretches ahead, the Department remains committed to ensuring workers have more opportunities to build a better future.

<...>

http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2013/03/04/us-department-labors-centennial-celebration

The U.S. Department of Labor Historical Timeline
http://www.dol.gov/100/timeline/

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

human beings have a natural sense of when they are being treated badly. They can try and erase the liberal_at_heart Aug 2013 #1
It's coming theHandpuppet Aug 2013 #7
What saddens me... awoke_in_2003 Aug 2013 #58
Thom Hartmann has been saying this for years.... Wounded Bear Aug 2013 #2
The Battle of Blair Mountain theHandpuppet Aug 2013 #5
I am furious that I only heard of Blair Mountain . . . Brigid Aug 2013 #19
Part of the reason for that... theHandpuppet Aug 2013 #24
..... TransitJohn Aug 2013 #50
A great program at Berkeley. Wish more people were going into the labor field. nt SunSeeker Aug 2013 #69
I took my then 8 year old niece............. mrmpa Aug 2013 #60
Good on ya! theHandpuppet Aug 2013 #77
Molly Maguires IWW, UMW, Knights of Labor? Anyone, anyone. BlueManFan Aug 2013 #39
along with the era when government used to bust monopolies instead of enable them... Blue_Tires Aug 2013 #82
Yep. We need a modern-day TR. Brigid Aug 2013 #88
We definitely need to return to the monopoly busting practice. eom Blanks Aug 2013 #107
There are many sordid chapters in the history of the USA robbob Aug 2013 #106
Labor itself does not know it's own history nadinbrzezinski Aug 2013 #3
Our firm represents dozens of Unions nationally, yet I find many of the rank and file vote Dustlawyer Aug 2013 #84
Thanks for this post. theHandpuppet Aug 2013 #4
I hear that Newest Reality Aug 2013 #6
Well, maybe that's a good thing. napoleon_in_rags Aug 2013 #8
Ha ha SalviaBlue Aug 2013 #44
People lost their lives... awoke_in_2003 Aug 2013 #59
Maybe This Time We Won't Settle for "Better Treatment" and Continue to Cede Ownership ... HumansAndResources Aug 2013 #64
+1000 Fantastic Anarchist Aug 2013 #72
Thanks - just read your DU Profile HumansAndResources Aug 2013 #109
Thanks! Commenting to check later. Fantastic Anarchist Aug 2013 #110
We need to go after the "History Liars" with everything we have. BlueJazz Aug 2013 #9
I agree. nm rhett o rick Aug 2013 #63
Host a Labor Day movie fest theHandpuppet Aug 2013 #10
You forgot Matewan... navarth Aug 2013 #22
Didn't forget theHandpuppet Aug 2013 #28
Ah! I grok. navarth Aug 2013 #32
+1 for the Heinlein reference. n/t xocet Aug 2013 #91
Post it anyway. It's important enough. jtuck004 Aug 2013 #49
I thought families could do it in their own homes theHandpuppet Aug 2013 #52
A LOT of people won't have access to them, people who need to be aware of them. jtuck004 Aug 2013 #53
Hmmm.... theHandpuppet Aug 2013 #78
When the free speech fights were going on, and in other places, the Wobblies used jtuck004 Aug 2013 #96
Just watched Matewan Maynar Aug 2013 #65
The Inheritance (1964). The grand master documentary. Eleanors38 Aug 2013 #36
Umm, what do you expect when Textbooks are now mostly being made by Big Corporations? AZ Progressive Aug 2013 #11
I wonder how many parents... theHandpuppet Aug 2013 #13
You might find this family interesting. They took over Texas and Texas all but Egalitarian Thug Aug 2013 #15
Sorry I didn't mean to step on your post. Texas is ground zero for the problem!!!!! BlueManFan Aug 2013 #40
You stepped on nothing. You might have replied to the wrong reply? Egalitarian Thug Aug 2013 #48
You had already pointed out that Texas has national implications for textbooks BlueManFan Aug 2013 #55
Wow, how very super kind of you. Well, it's still no problem and any opportubity to both Egalitarian Thug Aug 2013 #62
That is why . . . Brigid Aug 2013 #12
DURec leftstreet Aug 2013 #14
There was never much there to begin with. When the labor movement was linked with communism, and LuckyLib Aug 2013 #16
even if they erase it warrprayer Aug 2013 #17
There will be another Blair Mountain. Brigid Aug 2013 #21
K&R Starry Messenger Aug 2013 #18
My uncle was a union organizer. Lugnut Aug 2013 #20
Good education sulphurdunn Aug 2013 #23
Yes this is so true Generic Other Aug 2013 #61
They don't send us to school to learn how to think Hydra Aug 2013 #25
What do you expect? .. with all the textbooks being published in Texas, of all places? eom 99th_Monkey Aug 2013 #26
I remember learning about the new deal and labor movement in civics class sometime in the late 90's PrestonLocke Aug 2013 #27
K&R G_j Aug 2013 #29
Message auto-removed Name removed Aug 2013 #30
One film: The Inheritance. Google it. Watch it. nt Eleanors38 Aug 2013 #31
Are you talking about the 42-min. documentary from 1964? nt SunSeeker Aug 2013 #41
That's the one. Eleanors38 Aug 2013 #57
It's not just labor that's been erased starroute Aug 2013 #33
There are a lot of free socialist, anarchist, and ... Fantastic Anarchist Aug 2013 #73
How many of them are historical? starroute Aug 2013 #79
I put up info on the IWW. Fantastic Anarchist Aug 2013 #83
Also, if you are referring to Audio Books Fantastic Anarchist Aug 2013 #86
So true. wtmusic Aug 2013 #34
According to Eric Cantor's Labor Day tweet: Jacoby365 Aug 2013 #46
Never let your schooling get in the way of your education. . . Journeyman Aug 2013 #35
In a culture where schooling has largely replaced education...mostly to keep us docile jtuck004 Aug 2013 #47
I Like to think of this as the Texas effect. Since Texas is such a huge textbook market BlueManFan Aug 2013 #37
K&R! Omaha Steve Aug 2013 #38
The winners write the history. Crow73 Aug 2013 #42
As a parent, you have to take care of things things yourself PowerToThePeople Aug 2013 #43
I swear all they teach is from the Pilgrims to the Civil War. Every damn year. femmocrat Aug 2013 #45
"They WILL have to fight these same battles all over again." Don't think so. jtuck004 Aug 2013 #51
While I agree with much of what you say, bvar22 Aug 2013 #98
I'll work toward it, and be pleasantly surprised if it happens. jtuck004 Aug 2013 #101
If I may humbly chime in DonCoquixote Aug 2013 #105
I did not know the history until early 2011 CatholicEdHead Aug 2013 #54
Better buy it before the Boys do formercia Aug 2013 #93
Many benefits which are being enjoyed by workers is the result of unions fighting to make work place Thinkingabout Aug 2013 #56
K&R idwiyo Aug 2013 #66
Someday, maybe in about 30 to 50 years... nikto Aug 2013 #67
Psst... Spitfire of ATJ Aug 2013 #68
High School came along to sop up a lot of the children and teens out of WCGreen Aug 2013 #70
Neoliberalism/@ home in the DLC. blkmusclmachine Aug 2013 #71
K&R B Calm Aug 2013 #74
Nothing new- I grew up in Gastonia, in the shadow of the Loray Mill Lee-Lee Aug 2013 #75
Whoa. Never heard of this one. Brigid Aug 2013 #87
Yeah Lee-Lee Aug 2013 #102
Whaddaya expect from the publishers who zbdent Aug 2013 #76
Wayne State University Octafish Aug 2013 #80
Texas controls what is in our public-school textbooks. All about its purchasing power. WinkyDink Aug 2013 #81
I made sure to cover it when I subbed in history for a couple of days. knitter4democracy Aug 2013 #85
Hope you didn't put it in a quiz... malthaussen Aug 2013 #89
No, but the history teacher teased me about it later. knitter4democracy Aug 2013 #108
USA has been "purifying" it's history for over a century. ConcernedCanuk Aug 2013 #90
We're Number One. Jakes Progress Aug 2013 #92
I think SOME of the move toward homeschooling was really about this duhneece Aug 2013 #94
k and r--that is appalling--but not surprising. niyad Aug 2013 #95
Lost History of the Labor Movement Stainless Aug 2013 #97
Not only do they not have a clue about the History and the Heroes, bvar22 Aug 2013 #103
Just wanted to say how much I've enjoyed and appreciated this thread. theHandpuppet Aug 2013 #99
Great tributes to labor: ProSense Aug 2013 #100
Things have changed for the worst in the past 20 years. Dawson Leery Aug 2013 #104
kick woo me with science Aug 2013 #111
kick woo me with science Aug 2013 #112
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