this post was submitted on 27 Apr 2024
71 points (100.0% liked)

Labour

7759 readers
2 users here now

One big comm for one big union! Post union / labour related news, memes, questions, guides, etc.

Here Are Some Resources to help with organizing and direct action

:red-fist:

And More to Come!

If you want to speak to a union organizer, reach out here.

:iww: :big-bill: :sabo:

Rules:

  1. Follow The Hexbear Code of Conduct.

  2. No anti-union content, especially from the right. Critiques and discussions of different organizing strategies is fine.

  3. Donโ€™t dox yourself or others.

  4. Labour Party content goes in !electoralism@www.hexbear.net, !politics@www.hexbear.net, or a :dumpster-fire:.

When we fight we win!

founded 3 years ago
MODERATORS
 

At the beginning of the 20th century, Chilean workers had no social or labor legislation that favored or protected them. It was they themselves, through mutual benefit societies, resistance societies and mancomunales, who organized themselves to protect their associates and promote proletarian solidarity.

The Federaciรณn Obrera de Chile (FOCH) began as a grouping of railroad workers with a mutualist orientation linked to the Democratic Party. In the mid-1910s, saltpeter workers began to join and it acquired a national character. Likewise, the Democratic Party lost influence when the revolutionary ideas of the Socialist Workers Party led by Luis Emilio Recabarren, who later became the Communist Party, were imposed on the organization, and the Federation assumed an anti-capitalist and revolutionary attitude that was strongly manifested in the social mobilizations that characterized the 1920s.

However, the enactment of the social laws and the Labor Code, between 1925 and 1931, radically changed the conformation of the labor movement and workers' organizations. From then on, the unions and their federations debated whether to accept the new legislation and submit to its rules, as was the case of workers and employees in the state sector and large companies, or to continue with the classist and revolutionary discourse. The leadership of the workers' movement, which adhered to the latter line, was divided between three large organizations: the FOCH, linked to the Communist Party, the CGT (National Confederation of Workers), of anarchist inspiration, and the CNS (National Confederation of Trade Unions), of socialist origin.

In 1934, the violent repression by Arturo Alessandri's government of a national railroad strike was reacted by the unity of the different workers' organizations. Thus, the Unified Command that emerged from the strike was transformed into a Trade Union Unity Front, which organized a Trade Union Unity Congress in December 1936, giving rise to the Confederation of Chilean Workers (CTCH).

The strength acquired by the new workers' organization allowed them to form part of the political alliance that supported the candidacy of the radical Pedro Aguirre Cerda in the 1938 presidential election. The triumph of the Popular Front gave the CTCH a direct link with the new government, which, although it allowed it to grow as an organization, would later be the cause of its division and loss of prominence.

Indeed, at the end of the 1940s, the workers' movement, which was strongly linked to the Communist Party through the Confederation of Workers of Chile, was strongly repressed and weakened by the government of Gabriel Gonzalez Videla when he enacted the Law for the Defense of Democracy or "Damned Law". Consequently, the leadership of the workers' movement was taken over by employee organizations, especially in the public sector, which through the leadership of Clotario Blest managed to organize a new workers' confederation in 1953: the Central Unitaria de Trabajadores (CUT).

1872-1995: Anarchism in Chile

Chile: anarchism, the IWW and the workers movement

Megathreads and spaces to hang out:

reminders:

  • ๐Ÿ’š You nerds can join specific comms to see posts about all sorts of topics
  • ๐Ÿ’™ Hexbearโ€™s algorithm prioritizes comments over upbears
  • ๐Ÿ’œ Sorting by new you nerd
  • ๐ŸŒˆ If you ever want to make your own megathread, you can reserve a spot here nerd
  • ๐Ÿถ Join the unofficial Hexbear-adjacent Mastodon instance toots.matapacos.dog

Links To Resources (Aid and Theory):

Aid:

Theory:

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[โ€“] ashinadash@hexbear.net 4 points 7 months ago

Yeah it absolutely does, the self awareness is painful. However I'm always always doing my best to pretend not to care, and sometimes actually sincerely not caring - my run of liveblog posts about Famous Bestselling Webnovel Unjust Depths was probably my most unburdened speech on this entire website. Of course, I got my metpahorical shit kicked in for that when I spoke a little too freely about a specific character I did not like, and the outcome was awful, huge damage to my confidence, whatever. Not a one time thing, it's pretty common for people to decide I'm a shit disturber and get super pissed at me. When I'm talkin happily about something cool I like, it doesn't really occur to me that someone could crawl out of the woodwork and declare me the great satan, so I don't have the werewithal to fight these people, why would I.

I can't read minds and that's actually a massive problem, there is nothing worse than talking at length about something I really like in-depth, and being met with crickets. If I did something wrong, what did I do? Did I say anything good or bad? Holy shit how do you delete spoken words? I cannot for the life of me read tone or social cues well so I could very easily be putting my foot in my mouth and not realise until someone screams at me.

I have a huge amount of social anxiety but sadly it's completelty warranted, if I sense that something I'm gonna say might cause problems I will swaddle it in a bunch of "In my opinion..." and "for me" and "it's my view" because I've been tone policed so much I'm just exhausted of it. That's fascinating about cashiers though, I have enough light masking skills that I can seem quasi normal to cashiers or cab drivers. It's when I'm allowed to speak at length that problems arise.

Yeah well Hexbear has been the antidote for that, like I've been trying to engage anybody about Orange Book for about five years to no avail, but when I went off about it in the Trans Mega, the resulting conversation was extremely pleasant. Couple times I've deleted posts because I got literally no response, but the main problem is that my posting is too good: I jump out of the bushes with a corkboard thread chart about some shit you have never once heard of in your life. I have faith in my posting, it's better the less self conscious I am, it's like blogging if blogs were good. Only trouble ever is getting judged and harangued for it, which makes me nervous about ever doing it.

P.s. Can you imagine be jumping out of the literal irl bushes and verbally attacking somebody with random bullshit? There's not enough air in my lungs to do this in person without making it a seminar, even if I could find anyone remotely interested. It's not any worse than IRL for feedback since with my autism there isn't any either way, mostly a keyboard gives me the space to say things without being limited by real-life sentence lengths and shit. I speak in paragraphs, I will never use ten words where one hundred would go. If I get upbears (or like, reacts on discord idk) I at least know people enjoyed whatever I said, which is unironically better than IRL. Internet also triggers my physical fight or flight response much less...