The television film was Turks & Caicos, the second in a brilliant three-part spy thriller about the political takedown of a morally bankrupt and financially incentivized British prime minister clearly based on Tony Blair and his deference to the indefensible Bush administration post 9/11 policies.
The resonance of Turks & Caicos on the moral and political corruption of neoliberal economic policy carried over to this morning and an article in The Guardian. Written by a cook in the US Senate, Bertrand Olotara, the personal commentary describes the plight of a single father who had to go on food stamps to ensure that his children receive adequate nutrition:
I'm a single father and I only make $12 an
hour; I had to take a second job at a grocery store to make ends meet.
But even though I work seven days a week – putting in 70 hours between
my two jobs – I can't manage to pay the rent, buy school supplies for my
kids or even put food on the table. I hate to admit it, but I have to
use food stamps so that my kids don't go to bed hungry.
I've done everything that politicians say
you need to do to get ahead and stay ahead: I work hard and play by the
rules; I even graduated from college and worked as a substitute teacher
for 5 years. But I got laid-off and I now I'm stuck trying to make ends
meet with dead-end service jobs.
Olotara describes himself as a "Bible-believing Christian," and wonders how politicians who claim the mantle of Christianity show so little compassion to individuals such as him and his children. After all, he's a cook for the very US senators who pass the federal laws regarding minimum wage and requirements for federal contractors that could include a livable wage provision.
One of the ironies is that in the global economy heralded by neoliberal financial advocates, Olotara's employer - remember that he works in the US Senate - is a UK international food service and contracted services company:
My employer, Compass Group, is renewing
its contract with the US government today – but none of the senators or
government officials to whom we serve food asked me or my co-workers
whether this multinational corporation, headquartered in the United
Kingdom, is treating American workers right. No-one bothered to check if
the company that makes billions in profits is paying workers a living
wage and offering decent benefits so we don't have to use public aid
programs to meet our basic needs. We the workers sure have an opinion
when it comes to federal contract renewals – but no one cared enough to
ask us.
Olotara was joining other contracted Senate works and federal employees in a one-day strike on April 23. Roll Call describes the job protest:
Contract workers in the U.S. Senate will
walk off their jobs Wednesday to join contractors from across the
District of Columbia in a strike calling for preference to be given to
contractors who offer better wages, benefits and collective bargaining
rights.
The Senate janitors and food service
workers will join workers from the Capitol Visitor Center, the Pentagon,
Union Station, the National Zoo and Smithsonian Institution at the
rally on the West Front of the Capitol Wednesday morning.
In November, workers from the Capitol Visitor Center joined the protest,
marking the first time contract workers in the Capitol walked off their
jobs as part of the movement. Wednesday is the first time
Senate workers will join the strike.
from here with links
Solidarity to workers, whoever and wherever they are, struggling to improve their conditions of work. Within the capitalist system it is a necessary and ongoing struggle, however I will repeat once again what we in the World Socialist Movement seem to be repeating endlessly which is that this is what the capitalist system is all about, what it is founded upon - profit above everything else. Therefore wages must be kept at low as possible, any benefits and pensions are liable to be cut and contracts will always favour the employer. Workers are just pawns in the game, the first to be sacrificed.
We urge all workers to look at their future prospects, taking into account all that they can see is wrong with their past and current situation and recognise that the only way out of this stalemate is to work together to abolish the system of wage slavery once and for all in favour of socialism, a system of common ownership and proper democratic control of our common wealth. Together we can achieve it.
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