Archives for category: Unions

Jenny Shanker, the wonderful daughter of legendary labor leader Al Shanker, alerted me to a very important protest planned for Monday in Philadelphia.

The Gates Foundation and their showcase Mastery Charter, plan to meet at the Union League Club, the symbol of elitism in Philadelphia. How appropriate.

Read the link and do your part.

I wrote to Jennie and said, “We live in a mad time, where billionaires are treated as royalty, teachers are disdained, and unions are scapegoats.

This is a democracy. Do your part

Earlier this week, I was interviewed on NPR’s “On Point.” In the second part of the hour, the show brought on some young woman whose name I can’t remember. They said she used to work for Michelle Rhee and that she worked (or used to work) for Rhee’s TNTP (the New Teacher Project). I recall that her big complaint was that I failed to find common ground with corporate reformers. She said she had interviewed 50 leading thinkers inside the Beltway, and they think there is too much testing. She seemed to believe this was far more decisive than, say, the injurious effects of No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top, or even the copious graphs in the appendix of my new book, which show that test scores and graduation rates in the U.S. are at a historic high point and the dropout rate is at a historic low point.

She then published a piece on Huffington Post, again making her case for “the middle of the road,” which is where she thinks “reformers” like Michelle Rhee are to be found.

Arthur Goldstein responded to her post with this hilarious and biting analysis. He begins by quoting my fellow Texan Jim Hightower, who famously said that “yellow stripes and dead armadillos are the only things you’ll find in the middle of the road.”

The author of the post (sorry but her name eludes me) on Huffington describes me, apparently, as “simplistic.” Goldstein disagrees.

Goldstein responds:

So let’s understand this. The corporate reformers oppose vouchers, but won’t say they do. The important thing is to move the kids from so-called failing schools. Whether or not they address the underlying issues that cause low test scores, like poverty, learning disabilities, or lack of English, is of no consequence. Note also that Levin says nothing whatsoever to suggest these “moderates” oppose privatization or for-profit schools in any way whatsoever. Yet she has the audacity to refer to Ravitch as “simplistic.” Simplistic is a word I’d use for anyone uncritically viewing Levin’s piece.Levin further contends that reformy folk does not overemphasize testing. I’m not sure which astral plane Ms. Levin resides in, but in this one high-stakes tests determine whether or not schools stay open, and whether or not teachers remain employed. Levin praises Race to the Top, which enables this. She seems blissfully unaware there is no evidence whatsoever to suggest that there is any validity whatsoever to value-added ratings. Even as Teach for America inductees actively steal the jobs of laid-off Chicago teachers, Levin musters the audacity to suggest that it does not endorse any radical agenda, and implies that Ravitch is delusional to suggest anything of the sort.  Doubtless if scab labor took Levin’s job, or jobs or her friends and family, she’d beam with approval.

What really amazes me about this column is the complete and utter ignorance of the role of unions. Levin characterizes them as obstructionist, but I’ve watched as my union embraced mayoral control, and then supported it again after it was fairly well-established as an anti-democratic disaster. UFT had a hand in writing the state evaluation law and boasted that “objective” measures only made up 40% of a teacher rating. They must have forgotten that any teacher failing that 40% must be rated ineffective overall. UFT supported charters, and even co-located to start one. UFT supported a failed merit pay program. Of course, that’s not all that unique, since all such programs have failed. And UFT supports Common Core, which adds yet another layer of testing to the tangled web that appears to have eluded Ms. Levin.

If this is the best they can muster against Diane Ravitch, they’d better hope that absolutely no one reads her new book.

As you may know, Michelle Rhee is holding three “teacher town halls” in which she and Steve Perry and George Parker talk to an audience who are allowed to submit questions.

George Parker was previously the head of the D.C. teachers union; he now works for Rhee.

Steve Perry, once a commentator for CNN, runs a magnet school in Hartford. Earlier this year in Minnesota, he spoke at a public forum and called unions “roaches” and accused teachers of being responsible for the “literal death” of children.

The first was held in Los Angeles, the second in Birmingham, and the third will be held in Philadelphia on September 16. (Ironically, I will be speaking in Philadelphia on the next night at the Free Library.)

G.F. Brandenburg, retired D.C. math teacher, explains here how the “teacher town halls” work.

Philadelphia is a great place to have a genuine conversation with teachers.

The governor cut the state education budget by $1 billion.

Thousands of teachers and other school staff were laid off last spring.

Many schools are opening without guidance counselors, social workers, teachers of the arts, basic supplies.

Teachers should try to attend Rhee’s “teacher town hall” and see what solutions the panel offers.

Eduardo Andere is an education researcher and lawyer in
Mexico who has published widely about international trends in
education. After reading
articles
about teachers demonstrating in the streets, I
asked Andere if he would explain what is happening in Mexico. He
sent the following post:   What is real and
what is rhetoric in the Mexico’s 2013 Education
Reform?
Eduardo Andere
For you to get a clearer view
of the polemical Education Reform in Mexico you ought to have some
facts about education and education policy in the
country.
Education
policy and education curricula from kindergarten to 18 is ruled,
directed or ordered by the national federal government. By
constitutional law education in Mexico is a federal matter. States
or local authorities implement the national policy; they are local
CIOs as compared to the national CEOs, so to speak.

Under Mexican law, education
is compulsory from K to 12. Kindergarten or preschool education
runs from age three to five and children start a six-year long
elementary school at six. Middle school or lower secondary school
runs from grade 7 to 9; and upper secondary school from grade 10 to
12, although there are two-year long high school
programs.

Student-wise, the size of the whole student population
from K to university is around 40 million; all of them under the
national law, and a national authority called the Secretary of
Public Education (SEP). In this sense SEP is much more powerful
than the U.S. Department of Education. Mexico is probably the most
centralized OECD educational system. It is probably as centralized
as the Singapore’s high performing country, but in sheer numbers
Singapore is a small city-state-nation of 5 million people compared
to 118 million people in México.

Nobody knows for certain the
real number of teachers hired by SEP or other sub-systems of
education; and nobody knows for certain how many of the hired
teachers are really sitting for class or doing “commissioned-type”
work for special, some times no-transparent activities, for both
the government or the union. Many constituencies have complained
about this situation. They say that for starters this is a proof of
corruption between the governments and the union. Official
statistics number around 2 million teachers in the whole system of
which 1.2 millions are teaching at basic education (K to
9).
There are
several unions of teachers in Mexico, but by law, the union with
the highest registered number of teachers is the one with the right
to negotiate annual contractual agreements with the government.
Union membership is mandatory in Mexico. Teachers have no way to
opt out and the government retains a compulsory union’s fee from
their salary pay. This fee is transferred to the unions.

The largest teacher union in
Mexico is the SNTE (Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la
Educación or Workers of Education National Union). Of course, over
the years there have been some democratization efforts that have
given rise to dissenters within the national union. One of these
attempts gave rise to a “separatist” group that operates de facto
rather than de jure called CNTE (Coordinadora Nacional de
Trabajadores de la Educación; or Workers of Education National
Coordination Group). This group has been the one making all
the street noise against the education reform.

What about the much more
powerful in terms of members SNTE? Most of the teachers are SNTE’s
main track teachers, and most of them are quiet. Dissenters are the
minority. But here as well there are some contextual facts that you
need to know before I continue the story behind the education
reform.
The SNTE
was born in 1943. Over the years as education became massive the
education union grew in members and power. By the 1980s the union
leader became very powerful and by government and media accounts
very corrupt and anti-governmental. In 1989, and under the
government of President Salinas, (influenced by a public sector
modernization movement from around the world, sometimes called New
Public Administration) many public policy reforms were launched.
Well, in the late 1980s the Salinas’ government tried to pave its
way for the new reforms by removing a couple of very powerful, and
again, perceived, very corrupt union leaders. One of those leaders
was the SNTE leader. A teacher, who later became known as “La
Maestra” (“The woman teacher”), replaced him. For years she was
wooed and lured by the national government to implement
modernization projects or keep teachers in the classrooms and
peaceful. The government and the union developed a close
corporativist relationship that lasted until late 2012. One of
those projects was the 1992-1993’s education reform. Since then, La
Maestra and her union became very powerful, not only in union
matters but also in policy and political matters.

Under the former President of
Mexico, Felipe Calderón’s regime, La Maestra became very
influential. She was even able to place her son-in-law as assistant
secretary of basic education at SEP, the second most important and
influential position in national school education in Mexico. But
not only that, for decades she managed to get annual real salary
increases for teachers who for decades earned very low salaries.
But most importantly, her union became co-signer in all relevant
national new policies of education. She was so powerful that some
people would call her the de facto vice president of Mexico.
Presidents came and went under her tenure but her power and
influence in politics and policy became uncomfortable to policy
makers and politicians. Since she was no shy at all in
showing off her political muscle she became very unpopular. Her low
charisma and extravagant way of life didn’t help either. She was
shrewd but not smart enough to foresee her demise.

The same day that President
Peña’s constitutional education reform was officially published she
was arrested (at the writing of this post, September
8th, 2013 she is still in jail). The news
became national level immediately, and the President’s popularity
skyrocketed among the media and the public opinion. Ever since the
SNTE’s leaders and most of teachers have been very quiet and
accommodating to the education reform. That is not the case with
the dissenters.

After the constitutional approval some secondary laws had
to be passed by the national or Union Congress. During the last two
weeks three new laws were passed pending only the presidential
approval (promulgation) and the publication by the federal
registrar.
What
are some of the main issues with the education reform?

1) Evaluation and
assessment of school education becomes a national state policy. A
new national body of evaluation called the Instituto Nacional para
la Evaluación de la Educación (National Institute for the
Evaluation of Education) has been established with federal state
powers. This is an agency with a governing body of five prestigious
former academic professors or researchers, La Junta, which will be
able to set national assessment policies, practices and criteria
that will influence national education policies as well. This Junta
has the power to overrule or nullify any evaluation attempt or
exercise against the federal wishes. This Institute (INEE) will set
up binding policies for federal and local authorities of education
and even set the rules for the assessment of teachers and students.
La Junta will also be able to set the minimum criteria to become a,
or remain as teacher from K to 12 grades. Indeed, a very powerful
mandate.
2) A new civil career
program for teachers is established with very precise rules and
regulations. All teachers will have to be examined by law: if they
fail to pass three rounds they will be ousted from the classroom.
If failing teachers have tenure they will be given non-teaching
jobs, positions or activities; no-tenure teachers will be fired.
This is one of the outcries from dissenters and no-dissenters
alike. Historically teachers’ unions, with the acquaintance or
acceptance of governments, were able to name, handle or manage the
hiring and promotion of teachers, principals and supervisors. Some
arrangements between the unions and governments even allowed the
sale and inheritance of “plazas” or teachers’ jobs. This was part
of the explicit or implicit corporativist arrangement between the
government and the unions. For years some academic experts and
media observers regarded this practice as corrupt. Some local
authorities on their own initiated changes in favor of some sort of
open competition for assignments or promotions of plazas or jobs,
but some kept the old system intact. Teachers who benefited from
this “rare” arrangement of course don’t like changes and bitterly
oppose to the new rules. What the new authorities see as corrupt
practices the union leaders and some teachers see it as a
class-obtained gain after many years of work and negotiation. You
have to know that historically teachers’ salaries have been very
low specially compared to the salary of the secretary and assistant
secretaries of education. I once did research about the topic and
the difference in the salary between an elementary school teacher
and the high-ranking officers of national education amounted to
around 40 times without fringe and PR benefits for the latter. So,
some dissenters and some main track teachers don’t see these
practices as necessarily corrupt but as a “well-deserved benefit”
for teachers and their families after years of struggle. After all,
the argument goes, many politicians and businesspeople have
obtained law or governmental protections or benefits, sometimes
monopoly-based, that have earned them much sizable assets to sell
or inherent to their children. Changing the rules of the game in
the middle of the game has made the big noise, and the problem does
not have a clear-cut solution. Of course, no one wants a system of
selling and inheriting jobs, but even as bad as it sounds, the full
story has to be laid out.
3)
Teachers, as deficient as they could be in their learning and
teaching, have been selected, trained and placed by the
government for decades. The national or state governments control
the training of basic education teachers in Mexico. Universities
are not allowed to train teachers for public or private basic
school education, although many schools, especially private, have a
way of gaming the system. There is no competition for training;
there is a national curriculum set up and controlled by the
national government; the newest curriculum dates from 1997; the
national curriculum for basic education students dates from 2011.
Quality is low. So, “what is the purpose of assessing teachers
whose average cognitive quality is low and we know it already
without tests?” Some say, this is a way of putting pressure on
teachers. If the new assessment policy is criterial (i.e., what
they should know) most of them will flank; if it is normal-based
(i.e., what they really know) most of them will pass. This is a
dilemma: If most of them fail, where from are we going to
find the new teachers? If most of them pass, we will keep the same
low level of quality in teaching. The new laws-to-be have loopholes
that could allow teachers to fence-off from the consequences of
high stake assessments, however, they also grant authorities enough
lee-way to apply strict measures of assessments and accountability
to teachers, principals, supervisors and students.

4) There are some miscellaneous
provisions like autonomy to schools, bans to junk food in schools
and full-day schools that follow popular perceptions rather than
academic recommendations.

Apparently, most of the teachers in the streets come from
the poorer states of Oaxaca, Michoacán and Guerrero. They face one
more strategic challenge: the more education policy is centralized
the less bargaining power they have in education and labor matters.
With decentralization they would negotiate at a local level, where
they maximize their negotiating power; with centralization a group
of local teachers, from one federal entity among 32 federal
entities, has to negotiate with the national government.

At the end it is not clear
how everything will change, my own perception is that the new
government bought the wrong diagnosis of the causes of the low
quality of education in Mexico. The new government fell into the
spell of the corporations’ view of education reform: more testing,
more accountability, more pressure on teachers, more
standardization, and less unionization. Little is said about the
real causes of education failure: poverty, segregation, inequality,
low quality in selection, training and placement of teachers, and
lack of family, school and community learning environments. Does
this sound similar to the U.S. education reform pushed by big
business and private donors?

Paul Horton, who teaches history at the University of Chicago Lab School, wrote the following essay for this blog:

“Democracy and Education: Waiting for Gatopia?

“John Dewey arrived at the University of Chicago in the middle of the Pullman strike. He wrote his wife, still in Ann Arbor, that he had met a young man on the train who supported the strike very passionately: “I only talked with him for 10 or 15 minutes but when I got through my nerves were more thrilled than they had been for years; I felt as if I had better resign my job teaching and follow him around until I got a life. One lost all sense of the right or wrong of things in admiration of the absolute, almost fanatic, sincerity and earnestness, and in admiration of the magnificent combination that was going on. Simply as an aesthetic matter, I don’t believe the world has seen but a few times such a spectacle of magnificent, widespread union of men about a common interest as this strike business.” (quoted in Westbrook, 87). This sense of “magnificent, widespread union” represented the definition of Democracy to Dewey; it was the very core of his writing, work, and public advocacy.

“Later, after he had moved to Columbia University in New York, he had a major disagreement with a very articulate student, Randolph Bourne, about the media pressure to get involved in WWI. Bourne argued then and later in an unfinished essay entitled, “War is the Health of the State” that states thrived on war because war consolidated the state’s power and allowed it to repress any kind of dissent. Dewey was an outspoken advocate of American entry into World War I, but began to question his support after seeing several of his colleagues at Columbia fired for their outspoken opposition to the War. These serious doubts turned into deep regret when he saw that the Espionage Act was used to repress freedoms of speech and press. Respectable citizens, including many thoughtful journalists and political leaders like Eugene V. Debs were routinely thrown into jail. His serious doubts began to trouble him more deeply as he witnessed the Federal response to the postwar Red Scare of 1919, when many American citizens were deported without constitutional due process. He was so disturbed by all of this that he helped found the American Civil Liberties Union that sought to protect due process and other constitutional rights. (Ryan, 154-99)

“From the early 1920’s forward, Dewey became a vocal and articulate public spokes person for Democracy in all American institutions. He founded and led an AFT local at Columbia and often spoke at labor and AFT functions. He believed with every cell of his body that American Schools had to be the incubator of American Democracy. As the shadow of fascism descended over Europe, he became a fellow traveller with the United Front to defend the world from an ideology that had nothing but for contempt for Democracy or any notion of an open society. For Dewey, education that allowed the organic evolution of free speech and the discussion and respect for all points of view in the classroom inoculated American students from the threat of fascism.

“If he were alive today, Professor Dewey would be shocked by what he would see. In part, Dewey’s whole philosophy of Education was developed to countervail the corrosive influence of capitalism on communities and the gross economic power of giant corporations. He sought to defend individual growth and creativity and nurture the sense of public responsibility that was under assault from the pulverizing individualism of the dominant ideology of big business backed Social Darwinism.

“Dewey’s vision is now a major target of major foundations that are funding the push to privatize American Education. Major Wall Street investors and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Eli Broad Foundation, the Walton Foundation, and the Joyce Foundation, among others, are working together with the Obama Administration to destroy what is left of public education in this great country. Combined, these corporations control approximately 50 billion dollars in assests.

“I will not take the time here to unpack the strategic plan coordinated by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and three people within the Department of Education who have turn their strategic plan into a public policy called “The Race to the Top.” You should read Diane Ravitch’s new book to get a clear picture of how this has all been done very legally with the help of the best lawyers that money can buy, millions of dollars thrown at the Harvard Education Department, and with tens of millions of dollars to hire the best Madison Ave. Advertising and PR firms and the best web designers (go to “PARCC” or “Common Core” online). What you need to know is that none of the people behind this plan have any respect for public schools or public school teachers.

“Like Anthony Cody, I have been insulted several times by Secretary Duncan’s Press Secretary and friends of our president who are not open to any imput from experienced teachers. Indeed, I was the subject of a veiled threat from Mr. Duncan’s Press Secretary that I describe here: http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/living-in-dialogue/2013/04/paul_horton_of_common_core_con.html.

“In another case, a good friend of the President told me when I protested the Chicago School closings: “who do you think you are kidding, only 7 or 8 percent of those kids have a chance anyway.” Several weeks later when I raised the same subject again, he gave me the Democrats for Education Reform standard line that inner city schools failed because teachers have failed. He was not interested in hearing about poverty and resource starving of schools. I called him on this. The first quote sounded eerily like what Mr. Emanuel communicated to Chicago Teacher’s Union President, Karen Lewis, in a famously closed door, expletive filled meeting.

“What all friends of public teachers and public Education need to understand is that Mr. Duncan and the Obama administration listen to no one on this issue. What Republicans and Tea Party activists need to understand is that this is not about Government corruption, it is about the fact that when it comes to Education issues, we do not have a government. Governments must read and respond to petitions: our Education Department does not seek to communicate with any citizens except by tweeting inane idiocies about gadgets and enterprise. What we have is the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation sponsoring the overthrow of the public school system to bulldoze a path to sell billions of dollars of product. Other companies like Pearson Education, McGraw-Hill and Company, and Achieve, Inc. are just coming in behind the bulldozers.

“We must teach the rest of our society that democracy still matters in schools and everywhere else. The time for talking is over! We need to get into the streets and get arrested if necessary. Most importantly every one of us needs to call the same senator or congressman every day until NCLB and RTTT are dead, Arne Duncan does not have control over a penny, and all stimulus money that has yet to be distributed, is given by the Senate Appropriations Committee to the districts around the country that are the most underserved to rehire teachers and support staff. Not a penny should go to charter school construction, IT, administration, or hiring consultants from the Eli Broad Foundation, the Gates Foundation, or McKinsey. Not a penny should go to Pearson Education, McGraw-Hill or any form of standardized testing. All state superintendents who took trips from any Education vendor should resign, and no state should hire an administrator or superintendent at any level who does not have proper accredited certification and ten years of exemplary classroom teaching.

“Now is the time to preserve the legacy of John Dewey and teach the rest of the country about Democracy in Education or wait like sheep for Gatopia to numb us all!”

Hannah Nguyen reports what happened at the “teacher town hall” in Los Angeles that featured Michelle Rhee, George Parker, and Steve Perry.

The event was tightly controlled and scripted, and most of the discussion among the panel consisted of complaints about unions.

Yet this student managed to be heard. There is a link to the video embedded in her story.

What a brave and articulate young woman!

Randi, Dennis, I have a B.S. in Biology from UCLA and have
a M.S. from Texas A&M University. I decided to go into
public school teaching to share my love of science with children .
However, ever since I entered the public schhols in NYS, I have
been placed in the most economically challenged school districts
(South Bronx and now Newburgh NY). My evaluations based upon
observations have been, so far, glowing over the fifteen years I
have been teaching Chemistry and Living Environment, but my
students performance is dismal (especially in Chemistry) because
they either simply don’t care or they were placed in a course that
was above their academic ability. I also feel that my
administrators are giving me the most behaviorally difficult and
academically challenged students and with the new evaluation taking
effect, my tenure will be threatened. At the same time, my district
is giving the honors students to novice teachers straight out of
college or those with the inside connections despite seniority. As
a result, I am very frightened that in two years, I will be deemed
ineffective and my employment threatened. I am 55 years old with
virtually no further prospects for future employment. I strongly
feel that this is all by design to defame high salary teachers and
dismiss them. I told my colleagues when this all was mandated that
we have lost the protection that tenure was supposed to protect,
namely, the firing of teachers that aren’t part of the “good old
boys club” which is patently obvious in my district-those teachers
who went through the district or are married into it (or are lower
in the salary scale) are given the best students and those that are
not of the former are given the worst students. Is there any
recourse I have? I am convinced that the local, state and national
unions will only afford one a token gesture of support to teachers
in my plight for the sake of politics. Can you help a teacher put
out to pasture too soon?

“Which Side Are You On?” is one of the most popular union
songs. According to Alan Lomax, who collected folk songs for the
Archive of American Folk Songs at the Library of Congress, this song was
written by Florence Reece, th
e 12-year-old daughter of a
miner who was on strike in Harlan County, Kentucky. Lomax wrote
that she sang it to him in front of the family hearth of a log
cabin in 1937. This version
is sung by Pete Seege
r, one of the most popular folk
singers of the 20th century. This is a version
with allusions to contemporary corporations and
politicians.

Economist Robert Samuelson describes the relationship between labor and business as three eras.

He says that over the past century, there were 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: Fewer than a third of manufacturing workers in 1913 had been at their current jobs for more than five years.” (Sound familiar?)

Then:

“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 nonunion 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.”

After the recession of the early 1980s, after President Reagan broke the air traffic controllers’ strike, things changed.

“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.”

Surely ALEC, funded by major corporations, deserves some credit here for rolling back state laws that protect collective bargaining.

David Sirota calls us away from our picnics and barbecue to remember why Labor Day was created.

He reminds us that there are corporations today that fight to keep unions out, to pay their workers the bare minimum, to deny sick days, and yet pay their CEOs in the millions.

He writes:

“Today, from Wal-Mart to Amazon to fast food chains, the largest and most famous American brands are often the most hostile to unions. That has created a society in which it is standard operating procedure for corporations to regularly engage in the most intense union busting tactics. Meanwhile, from the Democratic president to Republican Party leaders, many of the most influential politicians proudly position themselves as opponents of the labor movement.

“To say the least, these moneyed interests, the media outlets they sponsor and the political puppets they own have no interest in venerating a labor movement that challenges plutocracy. And so just like the modern celebration of Martin Luther King Day often ignores Dr. King’s economic justice campaigns, so too does Labor Day typically circumvent a celebration of organized labor.”