What's in the mailbox? 📬 📦

Nothing is in the post…still.

Can-gov is only just now rumbling about forcing Cannotta-postal workers to move their asses ( yer pension-cheque is in the mail? we don’t care we’re cutting off your phone, water, heat and electricity anyway!)

I haven’t had a raise in 3-decades (NO exaggeration) so F*^%# You Canada Postal Putzes — get back to F^#%^~G WORK!
Boo.

Solidarity with Canadian postal workers. Support our brothers who fight for better wages and conditions.

I get that it sucks. But there's two players in the game here: management could easily give in to their demands and people would get back to work. Management is a significantly smaller, numerically speaking, group of folks. They could just, you know, do their jobs and figure it out. They don't because they're convinced that the other side will blink first, because that's how they always play this sort of thing.

I've been part of a strike. Ours was crushed within three weeks because our membership was *hurting* and our opposition had wrangled some seriously fucked up but technically legal shenanigans that allowed them to force a minority of our own membership's labor to break our own strike.

Our labor is our power. We wield the withholding of our labor as the one tool that we have in our arsenal that actually hurts those in charge. Without us, nothing functions. Nobody makes any money. If we do so in unison, we can force our counterparts to the bargaining table and get a voice. Otherwise, we're a million different individuals who haven't gotten a raise in three decades, while the companies we work for reap ever increasing profits from our labor at our expense.

The media is good at blaming the workers for wanting more. They call it "greedy". Well, Adam Smith...one of the godfathers of capitalism, wrote (paraphrased) that in a free market where all are allowed to follow their own self interest, that we will be led to the ideal outcomes for all as if delivered there by the hand of God himself.

Which sounds to me like a pretty flowery way to say "yeah, greed is awesome". Also, while I find the idea asinine, it causes me no small amount of rage to hear of striking workers being called "greedy". As if that was ever a thing that we *actually* discouraged in our society.

No. Fuck that noise. They don't get to treat greed as a virtue for the managerial class while using it as an epithet for the workers. Absolutely ridiculous.

And, by the way, *what*?!??! Dude, you need a raise. At the very least something to keep up with inflation. That's insane. You deserve a wage that keeps pace with the constantly increasing price of everything around us...we all do.

Which is to say: I hope to see you on the picket lines as well, brother. I also hope you take my gentle fire-breathing in good spirits.

This is a bit of a...ah...well. I care deeply about labor issues.
 
Boo.

Solidarity with Canadian postal workers. Support our brothers who fight for better wages and conditions.

I get that it sucks. But there's two players in the game here: management could easily give in to their demands and people would get back to work. Management is a significantly smaller, numerically speaking, group of folks. They could just, you know, do their jobs and figure it out. They don't because they're convinced that the other side will blink first, because that's how they always play this sort of thing.

I've been part of a strike. Ours was crushed within three weeks because our membership was *hurting* and our opposition had wrangled some seriously fucked up but technically legal shenanigans that allowed them to force a minority of our own membership's labor to break our own strike.

Our labor is our power. We wield the withholding of our labor as the one tool that we have in our arsenal that actually hurts those in charge. Without us, nothing functions. Nobody makes any money. If we do so in unison, we can force our counterparts to the bargaining table and get a voice. Otherwise, we're a million different individuals who haven't gotten a raise in three decades, while the companies we work for reap ever increasing profits from our labor at our expense.

The media is good at blaming the workers for wanting more. They call it "greedy". Well, Adam Smith...one of the godfathers of capitalism, wrote (paraphrased) that in a free market where all are allowed to follow their own self interest, that we will be led to the ideal outcomes for all as if delivered there by the hand of God himself.

Which sounds to me like a pretty flowery way to say "yeah, greed is awesome". Also, while I find the idea asinine, it causes me no small amount of rage to hear of striking workers being called "greedy". As if that was ever a thing that we *actually* discouraged in our society.

No. Fuck that noise. They don't get to treat greed as a virtue for the managerial class while using it as an epithet for the workers. Absolutely ridiculous.

And, by the way, *what*?!??! Dude, you need a raise. At the very least something to keep up with inflation. That's insane. You deserve a wage that keeps pace with the constantly increasing price of everything around us...we all do.

Which is to say: I hope to see you on the picket lines as well, brother. I also hope you take my gentle fire-breathing in good spirits.

This is a bit of a...ah...well. I care deeply about labor issues.
Thank you for this perspective;
sincerely thanks.

The mismanagement of Canada Post is legendary. Instead of restructuring or learning about modernising, they (management/bureaucrats) just cut more & more corners / services without tackling Root-problems (managerial issues such as poor management).

Anyway, I’ll re-read your post after I’ve calmed down from having gone postal in my previous post.

🙏


[edit] I didn’t say they were greedy, just that the strike is having an adverse impact on people who can little afford any impact — low income, retirees etc.

As a freelancer, it is true that what I’m offered per/word today is the same amount I made in 1997.

Again thanks for your input.
 
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Thank you for this perspective;
sincerely thanks.

The mismanagement of Canada Post is legendary. Instead of restructuring or learning about modernising, they (management/bureaucrats) just cut more & more corners / services without tackling Root-problems (managerial issues such as poor management).

Anyway, I’ll re-read your post after I’ve calmed down from having gone postal in my previous post.

🙏


[edit] I didn’t say they were greedy, just that the strike is having an adverse impact on people who can little afford any impact — low income, retirees etc.

As a freelancer, it is true that what I’m offered per/word today is the same amount I made in 1997.

Again thanks for your input.
No worries mate. I'm the kind of leftist that will speak passionately about my beliefs, but will not exclude anybody for having different beliefs.

Solidarity requires allowing people to come to your side in conversation. To attack the man or woman who holds the beliefs is counter-productive. That is, unless it's an individual with a vested interest in maintaining the death-grip stranglehold on labor that allows the managerial class to ignore the material needs of those beneath them.

I didn't mean to imply that you said they were greedy: that's exclusively a critique of our media ecosystem. It's a framing device that I find extremely cynical and yet, it's everywhere. The folks who *do* make that accusation and broadcast it to the masses are not doing so because they think greed is a bad thing, but do so with the understanding that the average person will consider greed to be a moral deficit.

Paint your enemies with your own sins. It's propoganda 101.

I do understand the pain this causes folks: if it didn't cause pain, there would be no impetus to change. Our world is built in such a way that shipping and logistics touches so many facets of our lives: the folks that do this work are absolutely necessary to the functioning of our society. When they go away, folks don't get their checks. Medications don't get delivered to hospitals. At the most extreme ends lives can, potentially, be lost.

This is a heavy, *heavy* consideration for those in this sector. It's part of the conditions that allow for the abuse of logistics workers: you don't want people to die, do you? So take whatever pittance we give you and get back to work. Oh, and he *thankful* for the opportunity to do so.

It's a kind of leverage that, when utilized in a system that so venerates greed at the highest levels, makes for some truly evil outcomes. It is akin to Sophie's choice. Management knows this, and they know that if they can shift the blame for this to the striking workers that they can weaken their cause.

Not that I mean to imply that those in management are evil: they are simply responding to incentives. If they can crush the strike, they can keep prices artificially low while continuing to reap the benefits of under compensated labor. And they can justify their actions by shifting the blame to the workers beneath them, as they do not have to live with or directly experience the worker's circumstances. It is an evil *system*, the folks that exist in it are just doing their jobs.

There exists a fundamental power imbalance between employer and employee. The employee has skills that are specialized for a job and transitioning careers is fraught with peril. Loss of income directly correlates to loss of food, shelter, all the things that we need to survive. For an employer, the attitude is always "we'll just find somebody else".

The *only* power workers have (within legal bounds) is to unite and withhold labor. What if there is no "somebody else?". They, together, face the hardships of their shared loss of income in order to harm the only thing that will make management take notice: their bottom line. Profits.

It's always a gamble to see who will blink first. There is a considerable chunk of society that subscribes to the Ayn-Randian belief that it is not the workers who make society function, but the great men. The John Galts. Those folks recoil at the damage a strike can do to this worldview and often, rather than finding common ground and working to find mutually beneficial outcomes, they will plant their feet in the mud until they have absolutely no choice but concede.

To paraphrase Mark Twain, it is virtually impossible to convince a person of a truth to which their livelihood depends on them not understanding that truth.

Believe me: I wish we lived in a world where workers could exercise their rights in such a way that there was no collateral damage to those not involved in the dispute. It would be a better world. But workers are not the only ones that exist in this system, and the other side holds *almost all* the cards.

I mean, beyond withholding labor, the only other options available to us are more direct forms of property damage. Which I won't say if I endorse or not in case the FBI is on here.

*Edit*:

And just to make sure I'm being clear, I say all this with love and acceptance of you, Crazy Cat. No malice, no judgment, no shame. Just conversation. Rock on brotha.
 
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I think it's important to note that Canada Post (the corporation) locked out the CUPW as a retaliation for issuing strike notice. I have no reason to believe they would have done anything other than rotating strikes as they usually do (like 2108) in these cases, but CP made the call to shut it all down. The CUPW are the face of the company so all the vitriol lands on them. Just my .02 beaver bucks.
 
Epiphone inspired by Gibson Custom shop‘59. This is the guitar I went after over the summer when I came home with the Firebird. They didn’t have this one. Factory burst with real mother of pearl inlays and logo, although the logo has a bit of yellowing so it looks like a silkscreen. It’s actually mother of pearl. Ipen book headstock and custom bucker (?) pickups. All in a lifton repo case.
Guitar center called me and then emailed me while we were in the hospital last week. Offered me a discount and a lot of free stuff all with the 48 mos zero percent. I said uhhh yes please. Plus, I just got that new amp and I need something to play it theough, of course. If you know me, you know I have more Les Pauls than fingers and toes, so I thought I’d roll the dice on this one. I’m pleased. I need more time with it to get a better connection with it.


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Also, got this dearmond volume pedal for dirt cheap on reverb. Bout to put something else in it after I get my Black Friday sale pcbs. Aaaand my brother picked up my old 100w Carvin x-100 head from my parents house in Kansas City and drove it out here to Chicago. This was my first tube amp. I bought it around 2004 on eBay from a guy in Omaha. I drove from KC to pick it up. Super cool dude. He was a tube amp repair guy at a guitar shop. I haven’t played this amp in 15 years. This was the amp I used to play those shows with the Gibson invader from the previous post. Even with the power attenuated down to 25w I still always pissed off soundguys… didn’t care tho IMG_1470.jpeg IMG_1468.jpeg
 
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