Labor Day: Recommit to Full Employment

The labor movement is the largest and most powerful economic justice organization in the world. From its beginning, the union movement and some parts of the religious community have worked together to help bring justice to our society.  The American Federation of Labor (AFL) in 1909 recognized this connection by designating the Sunday before Labor Day as Labor Sunday, a day dedicated to the spiritual and educational dimensions of the labor movement.

Labor organizers have often drawn from the deep wells of religious imagery to lead struggles for economic justice.  As scholar and author Perry Bush points out, “They have been able to do so because a great mass of U.S. workers have held religious convictions that were not easily stripped away or transmuted into mindless obeisance to the power of the wealthy.”

Labor Day and Labor Sunday are times for the religious community and the labor movement to not only celebrate working people and their contributions to society. It also is a time to remember the struggles that workers endured to achieve the many benefits we now enjoy but take for granted.  Benefits such as the eight-hour day, workers’ compensation, overtime pay, pensions, health and safety laws, Social Security,

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The Struggle of Our Time

This Op-Ed Appeared in the September 6, 2009 edition of the Bennington Banner

For the last several weeks, media coverage of the healthcare reform debate has been dominated by images of angry disruptions of congressional town hall meetings by those opposed to reform. In Vermont, by contrast, the three town hall meetings held in August by Sen. Bernie Sanders were civil, and by all accounts, the majority of those in the audience supported reform based on the principle that healthcare is a human right.

Hundreds of people came out to these events to declare their support for the basic right to healthcare and with such a huge amount of support for fundamental change, the people opposing so-called “socialized medicine” were clearly a very small fragment of the community at these events.

For over a year, the Vermont Workers Center and a growing grassroots movement of hundreds of working and low-income Vermonters have been building the Healthcare Is a Human Right Campaign. What does it mean to say that healthcare is a “human right?” It means recognition of the equal and inalienable right of all members of the human family to the best possible physical and mental health,

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