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Sendo
7th January 2010, 02:38
EDIT: I need title edited.

Laid-off Korean guitar makers get together...
and start a coop farm on abandoned land, head to US to make cause known at Tom Morello concert

Small in the grand scheme of things, but it's nice to see workers sticking together and making use of abandoned land. Also neat to see that Tom Morello will highlight the problem.

From the left-wing daily, Hankyoreh


http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_international/397365.html

Musicians expected to join South Korean union members’ struggle with Cor-Tek and Cort

Laid-off guitar maker workers seek international support for their reinstatement, and Tom Morello is scheduled for a performance during their visit in Annaheim, California

The same hands that once tied guitar strings now sow soybeans and peppers in the field. The same hands that once sanded down a guitar’s body, now grips hoes and pulls weeds.

Last year, laid-off workers of the guitar maker Cor-Tek spent their time making red pepper paste instead of instruments. Lee In-geun, head of the Cor-Tek Union, explained somewhat embarrassedly, “We were looking for a way to earn a livelihood.” Twenty of the company’s workers found themselves locked out by the company in 2007, and latched onto vegetable farming early in 2009 after the company continued to refuse to engage in collective bargaining or reinstate them. The workers claimed an abandoned field on a sloping road on the outskirts of Daejeon. For all of them, it was their first experience with farming. They busied themselves with irrigation planning and worried that the field might be lost in the rainy season. They worked as day laborers at a plum orchard in Yeongdong, North Chungcheong Province, and instead of taking wages received plums, squeezed out the juice and put it into pepper paste. Lee said, “Everyone said if we have no work to do, let’s farm or something, but farming has turned out to be a lot tougher than making guitars.”

When their first red pepper paste products came out in September 2009, they were happy to have something to rely on until they were reinstated. One of the former Cor-Tek workers said, “Everyone was pretty proud to hear people saying the red pepper paste was delicious.” However, their hands still yearn for guitars. The field they are cultivating is not far from the factory where they used to work. Lee explained that they all see the farm as temporary.

Workers at Cor-Tek, an internationally recognized guitar maker, and Cort Musical Instruments Co. lost their jobs when the companies issued mass layoffs in 2007 and 2008 and locked down all of their Korean factories. Although Cort Musical Instruments generated total profits of more than 80 billion Won between 1996 and 2007, it justified laying off workers due to losses in 2006 of 850 million Won. The dismissed workers received a judgment in favor of their reinstatement from the National Labor Relations Commission and a ruling from the Seoul High Court that their dismissal was inappropriate because it did not meet the conditions for “urgent administrative necessity,” but the companies refused to budge.


The laid-off workers from both companies are leaving for the U.S. on Friday. They plan to visit the annual International musical instruments stage lighting and sound technology exhibition (NAMMSHOW) taking place in Annaheim, California, and will be giving street performances as part of their campaign to inform people about the companies’ inappropriate labor practices. Bang Jong-un, head of Cort Musical Instruments Union, said, “We intend to tell the world’s buyers and consumers about the real situation regarding the dismissed workers, and to get their support for a quick resolution from the companies.” This is their third “fight overseas,” following attendance at music instrument fairs in Germany and Japan. Tom Morello, guitarist for the world-renowned rock group Rage Against the Machine, is reportedly scheduled to give a performance and statement of support during their U.S. visit.

The Vegan Marxist
7th January 2010, 03:33
Doesn't surprise me that Tom is highlighting it. He's one of my favorite communist guitarists of all time.

Sendo
8th January 2010, 04:08
Doesn't surprise me that Tom is highlighting it. He's one of my favorite communist guitarists of all time.

And that's such a large pool, too. haha. The left doesn't have too many outspoken political musicians, but compared to the right we do far better, compare: Rage, Springsteen, Neil Young, and the hip-hop genre in general (whole lotta indie/underground hip-hop like Bleu scholars and Immortal) vs. the right's Nugent, Rush and the country genre in general.

Glenn Beck
8th January 2010, 16:36
And that's such a large pool, too. haha. The left doesn't have too many outspoken political musicians, but compared to the right we do far better, compare: Rage, Springsteen, Neil Young, and the hip-hop genre in general (whole lotta indie/underground hip-hop like Bleu scholars and Immortal) vs. the right's Nugent, Rush and the country genre in general.

Not that I'm much of a country fan, but country being so explicity rightist is kind of a recent thing too. Pretty much correlated with the time it started to totally suck and become a joke to the majority of people with taste outside a certain very limited demographic.

Patchd
10th January 2010, 04:36
Sorry, title edited, I haven't been able to get online much over the last few days.

Imposter Marxist
22nd January 2010, 21:35
And that's such a large pool, too. haha. The left doesn't have too many outspoken political musicians, but compared to the right we do far better, compare: Rage, Springsteen, Neil Young, and the hip-hop genre in general (whole lotta indie/underground hip-hop like Bleu scholars and Immortal) vs. the right's Nugent, Rush and the country genre in general.

Rush a right wing band? I think not.. Neal Peart has written countless times against Religious. "Faithless", "2112", "Freewill", and I got the vibe that they supported the workers a bit from "Working Man", but I could be mistaken. Regaurdless, Rush is a great band :P

(EDIT)

Upon researching (Wikied!) I found this:

Peart has never publicly identified with any political party or organization in Canada or the United States. Even so, his political and philosophical views have often been analyzed through his work with Rush and through other sources. Peart is often categorized as an Objectivist and an admirer of Ayn Rand. Most of this is based on his work with Rush in the 1970s, particularly the song "anthem" and the album 2112, the latter specifically credited to "the genius of Ayn Rand." However, in a 1994 interview, while contending the "individual is paramount in matters of justice and liberty," Peart specifically distanced himself from a strictly Objectivist line, stating he was "no one's disciple."
Although Peart is sometimes regarded as a "conservative" and "Republican" rock star,he, in 2005, described himself as a "left-leaning libertarian,"
and is often cited as a libertarian celebrity. He also speaks of Fox News being biased towards conservatives and rebuts British accusations that he and Rush are a "right wing" rock band in his book Roadshow: Landscape with Drums: a Concert Tour by Motorcycle.In 2008 Peart described himself as a "quasi-libertarian" and stated that motorcycle laws, which are often opposed by libertarians, "are not an issue at all to me."

So he is a Libertarian Randy, but he still plays the drums like a champ :P