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 Federación 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).
Chile: anarchism, the IWW and the workers movement
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a coworker I liked well enough despite being a chud said some really abhorrent shit today, I guess no surprise there though
he literally said all Palestinians are terrorists and shit people and that's why 'everybody hates them' including 'all the arabs' and some other awful shit. I got the feeling he was trying to piss me off though because I kept talking about China Good and shit like that but idk. man.
I liked him well enough because we could at least both talk about how shitty the CIA and Democrats are, and he gave me a little flag from the East German Republic (I think he collects historical stuff, today he was telling me about a belt buckle from the Civilian Conservation Corps that he got) and he's always cheerful and helping me out with shit. But man, the hitler particles I was exposed to today might have been at a lethal level
I didn't even think to point out to him that a majority of people in Gaza are literal children because I was so taken aback by the manifestation of
Man, a couple of my friends were just talking about their Zionist coworkers and I’m so glad I apparently picked a field where that isn’t a big issue. The acceptable range of political opinion for biologists seems to be anywhere between “Elizabeth Warren wouldn’t have let this happen” and “Let the streets run red with the blood of the imperialists and capitalists,” and the few conservatives that are around know well enough to shut their fucking mouths.