Onehunga Community picket and collection for Locked Out workers
1pm till 3pm
Tomorrow Saturday 16th September
Outside Foodtown Onehunga
Please Forward!
WORKERS RIGHTS ARE HUMAN RIGHTS-
SUPPORT THE SIX HUNDRED!
Community informational picket and
collection for 600 Locked Out workers
entering fourth week of lockout.
Fighting union busting and the attempt by a multinational
to starve them back to work.
More info at-
www.shelfrespect.org
1pm till 3pm
Tomorrow Saturday 16th September
Outside Foodtown Onehunga
called by Workers Charter supporters in Onehunga
ph Joe 021 186 1450
Spread the word!
THE WORKERS CHARTER-
WORKERS RIGHTS ARE HUMAN RIGHTS
(add your endorsement and support at http://workerscharter.org.nz/?page_id=5 )
Every worker is a human being who deserves the right to dignity.
For that right to be at the heart of our society, workers need economic justice and democratic control over our future.
But what motivates society today is the selfish right of a privileged few to gather wealth from the productive majority.
Workers are mere commodities, exploited and discarded like any other. Our status in society is worsened by market competition, free trade and commercialisation of public assets.
The wealth of New Zealanders on the Rich List skyrockets. Meanwhile the living standards of the majority fall, and one in three children grow up in poverty here in Aotearoa.
Wars of conquest to control global resources, like the US colonisation of Iraq, expand corporate wealth and power at the cost of mass bloodshed and suffering.
Profit-driven exploitation of the environment is fueling global warming, an oil crisis and other threats to life on our planet.
The end result is massive growth in social inequality and environmental destruction. Our humanity and our environment have been sacrificed to the god of profit. Our ability to resist is undermined by laws that ban most strikes.
As a positive alternative, the Workers Charter promotes these core democratic rights:
1. The right to a job that pays a living wage and gives us time with our families and communities.
2. The right to pay equity for women, youth and casual workers.
3. The right to free public healthcare and education, and to liveable superannuation and welfare.
4. The right to decent housing without crippling mortgages and rents.
5. The right to public control of assets vital to community well-being.
6. The right to protect our environment from corporate greed.
7. The right to express our personal identity free from discrimination.
8. The right to strike in defence of our interests.
9. The right to organise for the transfer of wealth and power from the haves to the have-nots.
10. The right to unite with workers in other lands against corporate globalisation and war.
These rights can only be secured by workers organising to extend democracy into every sphere of the economy and the state. This will involve the complete transformation of our society to serve the needs of the majority rather than the greed of the minority.
The privileged few will resist fiercely. They will use their economic and political power to try to deny workers our rights.
A mass mobilisation around the Workers Charter can give us the strength to win the battle for democracy and reclaim our human dignity.



Comments
Onehunga picket a big success
Just to let people know the picket was great. Comrades from Socialist Worker, the local Latin American Community Centre, Radical Youth and Luke from the NDU faced up to an early call of "'ll get the police on you- this is private land" and "You guys are too young to be in a fucking union" by a visibly disturbed fat, old, bald and grumpy store manager. We told him to go call them, telling him we would contact Councillor Robyn Hughes across the bridge, and have it out as to who owned the footpath.
IN the meantime we distributed over a thousand leaflets explaining what the lockout was about, with the 0900 number for donations. We collected $270 in donations in the Workers Charter bucket, giving every contributor a copy of the new paper with the No Surrender cover and the big centre spread jammed with pictures and workers voices. The cops came, but knew the manager had no leg to stand on. An imaginary line about a metre from Foodtown's entrance became the new demarcation line between public and private space, and a lot of checkout workers laughed as the manager became even more irate. We stayed on for another half hour, before going up to the picket in Favona and giving the bucket of cash into Big Joe and the welfare crew up at Progressive's gates.
The genorosity of Foodtown shoppers is amazing, and their disgust at the company is palpable. Many told us they would switch stores for the duration of the lockout. Community pickets can help win people to the boycott, spread good info about the strike and raise sorely needed funds and support for the workers. I'd recommend any crews out there to get one on as soon as possible.
Kia kaha
Joe C
Solidarity Union
www.solidarityunion.com
Re: Onehunga Community picket and collection for Locked Out work
lovely Joe, but what's so wrong with being old bald and fat?
Re: Onehunga Community picket and collection for Locked Out work
Indeed.
Joe's boss Grant is two of the dreaded above.
Re: Onehunga Community picket and collection for Locked Out work
nothing wrong with it at all. just painting a picture for you, my friend. anyways i'm no supermodel myself.
JOe C
Re: Onehunga Community picket and collection for Locked Out work
Hmmmmmmm.
Bit hard to imagine the picture coloured in if the boss had been slender, young and hirsute.
Not the main issue I know, but our agenda is with their politics, not the bodies they were issued with.
Re: Onehunga Community picket and collection for Locked Out work
we'll all be visibly disturbed, fat old bald and grumpy if we live long enough, so Joe can paint lots of pictures.
the privelliged few will resist fiercely. they will get the workers charter stuck up their arse.