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| Occupy Wall Street is gearing up for a new kind of general strike on May 1st. (photo: Jed Brandt) | 
Not Your Usual General Strike
 ast
 December, Occupy Los Angeles proposed a General Strike on May 1 "for 
migrant rights, jobs for all, a moratorium on foreclosures, and peace - 
and to recognize housing, education and health care as human rights."  
The idea has spread through the Occupy movement.  Occupy Wall Street in 
New York recently expressed solidarity with the proposal and called for 
"a day without the 99%, general strike, and more!" with "no work, no 
school, no housework, no shopping, take the streets!"  Reactions are 
ranging from enthusiastic support to outraged skepticism.  What form 
might such an action take, and what if anything might it achieve?
ast
 December, Occupy Los Angeles proposed a General Strike on May 1 "for 
migrant rights, jobs for all, a moratorium on foreclosures, and peace - 
and to recognize housing, education and health care as human rights."  
The idea has spread through the Occupy movement.  Occupy Wall Street in 
New York recently expressed solidarity with the proposal and called for 
"a day without the 99%, general strike, and more!" with "no work, no 
school, no housework, no shopping, take the streets!"  Reactions are 
ranging from enthusiastic support to outraged skepticism.  What form 
might such an action take, and what if anything might it achieve?
One thing is for sure: Such a May Day action is 
unlikely to be very much like the general strikes that have cropped up 
occasionally in US labor history in cities like Seattle, Oakland, and 
Stamford, Ct., or the ones that are a staple of political protest in 
Europe.  These are typically conducted by unions whose action is called 
for and coordinated by central labor councils or national labor 
federations.  But barely twelve percent of American workers are even 
members of unions, and American unions and their leaders risk management
 reprisals and even criminal charges for simply endorsing such a strike.
Most Occupy May Day advocates understand that a 
conventional general strike is not in the cards.  What they are 
advocating instead is a day in which members of the "99%" take whatever 
actions they can to withdraw from participation in the normal workings 
of the economic system - by not working if that is an option, but also 
by not shopping, not banking, and not engaging in other "normal" 
everyday activities, and by joining demonstrations, marches, 
disruptions, occupations, and other mass actions.
This is the pattern that was followed by the Oakland 
General Strike last November.  Those who wanted to and could - a small 
minority - didn't go to work.  There was mass participation in rallies, 
marches, educational, and artistic events and a free lunch for all.  At 
the end of the day a march, combined with some walkouts, closed the Port
 of Oakland.     The mostly peaceful "general strike," in contrast to 
later violent Oakland confrontations, won wide participation and 
support.
To understand what the significance of such an event 
might be, it helps to look at what Rosa Luxemburg called periods of 
"mass strike."  These were not single events, but rather whole periods 
of intensified class conflict in which working people began to see and 
act on their common interests through a great variety of activities, 
including strikes, general strikes, occupations, and militant 
confrontations.
Such periods of mass strike have occurred repeatedly in US labor history.  For example:
In 1877, in the midst of deep depression and a near-obliteration of trade unions, workers shut down the country's dominant industry, the railroads, shut down most factories in dozens of cities, battled police and state militias, and only were suppressed when the US Army and other armed forces killed more than a hundred participants and onlookers.
In the two years from 1884 to 1886, workers swelled the Knights of Labor ten-fold from 70,000 members to 700,000 members. In 1886, more than half-a-million workers in scores of cities joined a May 1st strike for the eight-hour day. The movement was broken by a reign of terror that followed a police attack that is usually but perversely referred to as the "Haymarket Riot." May Day became a global labor holiday in honor of the "Haymarket Martyrs" who were tried by a judge so prejudiced against them that their execution has often been referred to as "judicial murder."
In 1937, hundreds of thousands of workers occupied their factories and other workplaces in "sitdown strikes" and housewives, students, and many other people applied the same tactic to address their own grievances.
In 1970, in the midst of national upheavals around the Vietnam war, the civil rights movement, and a widespread youth revolt, postal workers, teamsters, and others took part in an unprecedented wave of wildcat strikes, while miners held a month-long political strike in West Virginia to successfully demand justice for victims of black lung disease.
Such periods of mass strike present what Rosa 
Luxemburg called "A perpetually moving and changing sea of phenomena." 
Each is unique in its events and its unfolding.  But they are all marked
 by an expanding challenge to established authority, a widening 
solidarity among different groups of working people, and a growing 
assertion by workers of control over their own activity.
In periods of mass strike working people become 
increasingly aware of themselves as a group with a common situation, 
common problems, and common opponents.  They organize themselves in a 
great variety of ways.  They become aware of their capacity to act 
collectively.  They become aware of their potential power.  And they opt
 to act collectively.
However much it may chagrin organizers and radicals, 
it is not possible to call or instigate a mass strike.  It is something 
that must gestate in workplaces and communities (now including virtual 
communities).  But it is possible to nurture and influence the emergence
 of mass strikes through discussion and above all through exemplary 
action.  Provoking discussion and showing the possibilities of 
collective action is what Occupy Wall Street has done so well.  That is 
what its May Day action can potentially do.
What Occupy May Day Could Achieve
The Occupy May Day event is first of all a great 
chance for 99% to show itself, see itself, and express itself - to 
represent itself to itself and to others.  The kinds of plans that are 
being made by OWS in New York, with a wide variety of ways in which 
people are being invited to participate, can encourage multiple levels 
of sympathy, response, connection, and mobilization among the 99%. The 
result can be a percolation of the ideas OWS has been promoting through 
workplaces, communities, and other milieus.
May Day can provide a teachable moment.  It is an 
opportunity for millions of people to contemplate the power that arises 
from collectively withdrawing cooperation and consent.  It can propagate
 the idea of self-organization, for example through general assemblies. 
 If it truly draws together a wide range of working people, ranging from
 the most impoverished to professionals, from urban to suburban to 
rural, and including African Americans, Latinos, whites, and immigrants,
 it can embody the ability of the 99% to act as a group.  It can 
demonstrate the idea of solidarity, for example by the movement as a 
whole supporting the needs of some particular groups.  And because May 
Day is a global working class holiday which will be celebrated all over 
the world, it can reveal a rarely seen vision of a global working class 
of which we are as individuals and as members of diverse groups are 
part.
Given these possibilities, what would constitute success for May Day?  Here are some examples of desirable outcomes:
Reveal that there is a 99% movement that is far wider than the subset of its members who can confront the police and sleep in downtown parks.
Encourage a large number of people who have not done so before to identify with and participate in some way with the "99% movement."
Project core issues of the 99% - like the list above from Occupy LA -into the pubic arena.
Raise issues that are crucial for the future of the 99% - notably the climate crisis and the destruction of the Earth's environment - that have not yet been recognized as part of the Occupy critique of financial institutions and corporate capitalism.
Evoke self-organization in workplaces, for example general assemblies among workmates, on the job if possible, in the parking lot or another venue if not.
Create a self-awareness of the global 99% - possible because May Day is celebrated globally.
Unions and May Day
American unions are bound by laws specifically 
designed to prevent them from taking part in strikes about issues 
outside their own workplace, such as sympathetic strikes and political 
strikes.  In most cases they are also banned from participating in 
strikes while they have a contract.  Unions that violate these 
prohibitions are subject to crushing fines and loss of bargaining 
rights.  Their leaders can be packed off to jail.  While unions have at 
times struck anyway, they are unlikely to do so for something like the 
May Day general strike until the level of class conflict has risen so 
high that workers are willing to face such consequences.
Historically, American unions have also opposed their 
members' participation in strikes union officials have not authorized 
because they wished to exercise a monopoly of authority over their 
members' collective action.  In labor movement parlance, such 
unauthorized actions were condemned as "dual unionism."  US unions have 
often disciplined and sometimes supported the firing and blacklisting of
 workers who struck without official authorization.  As a result, unions
 have often deterred their members from participating in mass strike 
actions even when the rank and file wanted to.
The Occupy movement, however, should not be seen as a 
competitor to existing unions.  It is not about relations between a 
group of workers and their employer.  It does not engage or wish to 
engage in collective bargaining.  Although it supports the right of 
workers to organize themselves, it is not a union. It focuses on broader
 social issues.  It is a class movement of the 99%, not a labor or trade
 union movement.
Unions in New York and elsewhere are eager to 
participate in coalition actions with the Occupy movement - and they are
 planning to do so on May Day.  But to ask them to instruct their 
members to strike may be to ask them to commit institutional suicide.
One approach to this dilemma may be for unions to say 
they will abide by the law and not order their members to strike, but 
that as human beings and as people living under the US Constitution 
their members are not slaves and cannot be compelled to work against 
their will.   Where union members want to participate in May Day by not 
going to work, unions can say, we did not tell them to strike, but we do
 not have the right to force anyone to work against their will.  A 
historical precedent:  When Illinois miners repeatedly went on extended 
wildcat strikes and Mineworker leader Alexander Howat was commanded to 
order them back to work, he would simply reply that since he had not 
ordered the strikers out, he could not order them back.
Organized labor has to change, and activities like 
Occupy's May Day can contribute to that change.  But they can do so at 
this point not by making impossible demands on union leaders but by 
inspiration, example, solidarity, and providing alternative experiences 
for union members.
Global Mass Strike
We are today in the midst of an unrecognized global 
mass strike - witness the mass upheavals reported in the news almost 
daily from countries around the world.  Wisconsin and Occupy Wall Street
 represent the first stirrings of American workers to join this global 
movement.  May Day 2012 will be a global event, and it presents an 
opportunity to create a new self-awareness of the global 99% and its 
ability to act collectively.
While the Occupy movement has focused on the issues of
 economic injustice, it is increasingly addressing another issue that is
 central to the well being of the 99% - indeed of all people - 
nationally and globally. In January a resolution passed by consensus at 
the Occupy Wall Street General Assembly stated, "We are at a dangerous 
tipping point in history.  The destruction of our planet and climate 
change are almost at a point of no return."
While climate denialism is still rife in the US, the 
rest of the world recognizes the existential threat of catastrophic 
climate change and the necessity of converting the world's economy to a 
climate-safe basis.  The labor movement in the rest of the world is 
committed to the economic transformation necessary to save the Earth's 
climate.  That transformation can be the core of an emerging global 
program to create a secure economic and environmental future for all by 
putting the world's people to work transforming the world's economy to a
 low-pollution, climate-friendly, sustainable basis.
May Day has been an international labor holiday for 
more than a century.  But for millennia it has been a day for the 
celebration of nature.  This May Day can be an opportunity to draw the 
two together to represent the common global interest in creating work 
for all reconstructing the global economy to protect rather than destroy
 the Earth.
 

 
 
