For the Americans wondering, yes we can do that in Sweden.
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I mean we can do that in America too. We'll just get oppressed and murdered by our government and their sponsored thugs. I just hope within my lifetime the masses here will become fed up enough that those threats aren't enough to keep us subservient anymore.
I'm not wondering that, I'm cheering you on. I'm wondering why we don't do his ourselves. Safety in numbers, use the collective empathy to motivate that which has no empathy. I love it.
It's illegal for you to sympathy strike and you don't have sector bargaining. The fact that I've never talked to an American who knows this and that a hundred year old law is what's stopping most of your progress is always sad to me. :/
We donβt do this ourselves because, even at fairly high income levels, weβre all living a lot closer to paycheck-to-paycheck than weβd all like, and our ability to get healthcare and afford food and housing is tied quite directly to our jobs, and we have nearly no real social safety nets or real worker protections to speak of compared to Europe.
Arbeit macht frei: The American Dream.
My respect for the Swedish working class is increasing day by day
and strike pay 130% of normal pay.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
But in Sweden, the electric vehicle maker is facing its first formal labor action over its anti-union stance, with potential ripple effects for the company globally.
About 90% of the entire Swedish workforce belong to trade unions and they are covered by contracts with their employers, which standardize pay rates, insurance and pensions, among other work conditions, in each sector.
They see the American EV maker's efforts to circumvent collective bargaining as an affront to the entire Swedish labor system, where trade unions are part of the fabric of the economy.
Tommy Wreeth, chairman of the transport workers' union, said the Swedish labor system is based on collective bargaining agreements, which Tesla, led by the staunchly anti-union Elon Musk, is reluctant to embrace.
A Tesla mechanic in Gothenburg, who requested anonymity due to concern about retaliation by the company, said he thinks a union agreement would provide a financial safety net that "allows us as employees to be able to have security."
Atle Hoie, general secretary of IndustriALL Global Union which represents industrial workers around the world, said large-scale strikes like this one are rare in Sweden.
The original article contains 921 words, the summary contains 187 words. Saved 80%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!