<p><span class="inline inline-left"><img src="http://toronto.nooneisillegal.org/sites/default/files/images/indestructible.img_assist_custom.jpg" alt="" title="" class="image image-img_assist_custom " width="251" height="167" /></span>No One Is Illegal – Toronto responds to the May 2013 changes to the Parent and Grandparent Program for Sponsorship</p>
EWN spoke to Patrick, a teacher and EWN rep who was victimised by the management and lost
his job after years as a popular and committed teacher. ---- EW:Tell us how the situation
started? ---- Patrick:The first few months when I started there were relatively peaceful.
Iâd had experience before of organising in the workplace including organising strikes.
<div class='node-body'><p><img alt="" border="0" class="image-full" src="/sites/commondreams.org/files/imce-images/tased_arrow.jpg" style="width: 540px; height: 340px;" />Video from Monday's <a href="http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2013/05/20-6">protest outside the Department of Justice</a> by struggling homeowners and anti-foreclosure activists shows DC Capitol Police officers using tase
<div class='node-body'><p>"We’re going to continue our acts of civil disobedience because the General Assembly has made a cruel attack on the most vulnerable people in this state,” declared Rev. William J. Barber II, president of the North Carolina chapter of the NAACP.</p>
May 1968 profoundly shook the French elite. All the highlights of working insubordination
remind the fragility of their dominant position. --- To cope, they constantly adjust their
control techniques. --- So the school in 1968 with order is threatened.
Mai 1968 a profondément ébranlé les élites françaises. Tous les grands moments
d’insubordination ouvrière rappellent aux dominants la fragilité de leur position. ---
Pour y faire face, ils ajustent sans cesse leurs techniques de contrôle. --- Ainsi l’ordre
scolaire avec 1968 est menacé.
And if you went the speech are mostly bosses, "political" and the media on the issue of
work? In rich as our (rich that produce Workers) countries, the issue is not so much the
number of jobs than its share. Share the wealth and not poverty. Recover and that the
bourgeoisie aside, especially in tax havens.
Et si on sortait du discours que portent majoritairement les patrons, les « politiques »
et les médias sur la question du travail ? Dans un pays riche comme le notre (riche de ce
que produisent les travailleuses et les travailleurs), la question n’est pas tant celle du
nombre d’emploi que celle de son partage. Partageons les richesses et non la misère.
Les syndicats en Belgique ressemblent à un immense colosse endormi : 3,5 millions
d’adhérents et d’adhérentes, soit un taux de syndicalisation de 52%. Pourtant, ils peinent
à mobiliser contre les cures d’austérité. Mais les communistes libertaires continuent à y
militer, conscients de l’outil qu’ils constituent.
Unions in Belgium resemble a sleeping giant huge: 3.5 million members and adherent, a
unionization rate of 52%. Yet they struggle to mobilize against the austerity cures. But
the libertarian communists continue to advocate it, recognizing them as a tool.