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LaborNews: Information about most of us
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This podcast is the result of many years of listening news broadcasts, commercial or otherwise, that seem to be addressed to a country of multimillionaires, living of the proceeds of properties as well as the earnings from an unlimited source of stocks that Wall Street pours on our coffers.
The fact is, over 100 millon full time salaried workers make, in average, just $643 a week. On top of that, nowadays workers have to pay higher health care costs, higher fees for education, higher gasoline prices, plus looking at ever diminishing retirement funds.
Why isn't there a single program on radio or TV, or a single regular column on a major newspaper regularly addressing the interests and concerns of regular people, salaried workers struggling hard to make ends meet? Countless conspiracy theories could be developed, many of them very likely to be true. Suffice to say that the American ideal is no longer an honest and hardworking man or woman, but a clever home-day-trader, or a outrageously paid CEO. If the rest of us can't make it into one of those two categories, it's only our fault, and we deserve what we get.
What to do, then? Put our little grain of sand on this endless beach of ideas called the Internet, and provide those who want to hear and learn, with the information scattered but never organized in a recognizable shape that could be of interest to... most of us.
Enjoy, contribute, suggest, and pass the word. Peace.
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News Business Politics and Government
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| Date Added |
01-Apr-2006 |
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189 |
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2.00 |
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LaborNews Episodes - | Top best jobs | "People were really looking for more flexibility and less stress," he said. "That just got pounded into our heads." The top three complaints of stress were too much work at 28 percent, no room for advancement at 20 percent and deadlines, also at 20 percent. | Get at Short URL | Download Top best jobs | Play in Popup.
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| Killer Cola | A recent independent investigation into the alleged human rights abuses at Coke's bottling plants in Colombia, led by New York City Councilman Hiram Monserrate, verified 179 separate human rights abuses at Coke bottling plants in Colombia. | Get at Short URL | Download Killer Cola | Play in Popup.
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| Why Kansas votes republican | Americans with annual incomes of $1 million or more reaped 43 percent of all the savings on investment taxes in 2003. The savings for these taxpayers averaged about $41,400 each. The newspaper's tax cut analysis showed that more than 70 percent of the tax savings on investment income went to the top 2 percent of the population, about 2.6 million taxpayers; that is, the same number of Kansas residents, as reported by the U.S. Sensus Bureau in 2000. | Get at Short URL | Download Why Kansas votes republican | Play in Popup.
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| Some good news for workers | There's also good news for the janitors at the University of Miami. After three weeks of protests over low pay wages, janitors will get a raise of 25%, announced the Univeristy president Donna Shalala. The new policy will apply to about 900 workers.
The current hourly base pay is $6.40. The new hourly minimum will be $8 for food service workers; $8.55 for housekeepers; and $9.30 for landscapers. In addition, health care benefits will also be offered. | Get at Short URL | Download Some good news for workers | Play in Popup.
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| Bush doesn't feel your pain | Why doesn't Mr. Bush get any economic respect? I think it's because most Americans sense, correctly, that he doesn't care about people like them. We're living in a time when many Americans are feeling economically insecure, but a tiny elite has been growing incredibly rich. And Mr. Bush's problem is that he identifies so totally with the lucky, wealthy few that in unscripted settings he can't manage even a few sentences of empathy with ordinary Americans. He doesn't feel your pain, and it shows. | Get at Short URL | Download Bush doesn't feel your pain | Play in Popup.
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| Kidding ourselves about poverty | Census data released this past August suggests that the number of Americans in poverty grew slightly in 2004 (the most recent year for which data is available) to 12.7 percent from the 12.5 percent recorded the previous year, representing about 37 million mericans.
Since 2000, the number of people living in official poverty has increased by 5.4 million. But according to experts, that number vastly underestimates the real total. Duke university sociology professor David Brady puts it this way: "Each August we Americans tell ourselves a lie. The entire episode is profoundly dishonest." | Get at Short URL | Download Kidding ourselves about poverty | Play in Popup.
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| Threatened, interrogated, or fired just for trying to organize | Packers and mechanics at the Blue Diamond plant in Sacramento, CA, say their employer has denied them respect, raises, and benefits for many years. Last summer, they began organizing to form a union with the International Longshore and Warehouse Union. But when workers stood up to exercise their rights, Blue Diamond's anti-union campain went off. | Get at Short URL | Download Threatened, interrogated, or fired just for trying to organize | Play in Popup.
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