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The Vegan Marxist
27th April 2010, 01:08
Obama preaches reconciliation with coal bosses
By Jerry White
26 April 2010

President Obama delivered a eulogy on Sunday for the 29 coal miners killed in the April 5 explosion at the Upper Big Branch Mine in Montcoal, West Virginia. The remarks, filled with religious and patriotic rhetoric, were aimed at concealing the criminal responsibility of the mine owners and the complicity of federal and state agencies that allowed miners to work in a deathtrap.

Some two thousand peopleincluding co-workers, family members, friends and workers from other minescame to the Beckley Convention Center, about 35 miles from the scene of the disaster, to honor their fallen loved ones and comrades. Obama and the state Democratic Party establishment, however, had other motives.

Billed as a service to promote hope and healing, the event was aimed at dissipating the anger of miners and their families against Massey Energy and other mine owners. The talk was of reconciliation and forgiveness. The miners, Obama declared, died in pursuit of the American dream.

All of West Virginia is in pain and not without some anger, US Senator Jay Rockefeller said before the presidents remarks, But we will bind together as a community because that is what West Virginians do. We will find a way to go on.

This was an unmistakable appeal to bind together with the coal bosses, including Massey Energy CEO Don Blankenship who rather than being tried and sentenced for the deaths of 52 miners at his operations over the last decade sat in the audience.

In addition to Rockefeller, US Senator Robert Byrd and Governor Joe Manchin, both Democrats, were also in attendance. The West Virginia Democrats, like their Republican counterparts, have long been in the pockets of Big Coal. If the miners were to conduct a mass struggle to defend themselves, these politicians would quickly shelve their sympathy for hard-working miners and dispatch the state police to arrest them.

In his remarks, President Obama repeated the self-serving theme stated over and over by the media to justify the continued carnage in the coalfields: that mining is a dangerous occupation and disasters are a just a normal part of life in the Appalachia coalfields.

Most days, they would emerge from the dark mine, squinting at the light,
Obama said. Most days, they would emerge, sweaty, dirty, dusted with coal. Most days, they would come home. Most days, but not that day.

They knew there were risks, he said, and so did their families. They knew their kids would say a prayer at night before they left. They knew their wives would wait for a call when their shift ended saying everything was ok.

Such a presentation is designed to conceal the fact that there were real people responsible for the deadly conditions in the mines. The explosion at the Upper Big Branch minethe deadliest coal mine disaster in 40 yearswas not an Act of God, but the inevitable result of the willful disregard of the most basic safety precautions by Massey management, which was determined to extract as much coal out of the mine as possible. Moreover, federal Mine Safety and Health Administration regulators, appointed by the president himself, are also responsible because they allowed the mine to continue operating despite ample warnings of an impending disaster.

Corporations look at the death of miners as little more than collateral damage in pursuit of ever greater levels of profit. For Obama, however, the miners died while trying to realize the American Dream.

All the hard work. All the hardship. All the time spent underground. It was all for their families, Obama said. For a car in the driveway. For a roof overhead. For a chance to give their kids opportunities they never knew; and enjoy retirement with their wives. It was all in the hopes of something better. These miners livedas they diedin pursuit of the American dream.

It would be more honest to say they lived and died as part of the American nightmare. Miners in the area were forced to take their lives in their own hands in an effort to escape the poverty that prevails in West Virginia, the third poorest state in the nation, lagging only behind Mississippi and Louisiana.

In an interview with the New York Times, a foreman at the Upper Big Branch Mine described the brutal conditions workers faced in the mine, where each day methane levels were double or triple the allowable levels. Have you ever been scared for your life, when you go to work in the morningdaily. Thats what went on down there. Daily. Ive had guys come to me and cry. Grown men cried because theyre scared, he said.

Describing Massey s top management, he added, They dont care about nobody down there. I heard them make a statement that a man is like a roof bolt. You bend him till he breaks, then you get another one.

Miners and friends attending the service related similar experiences to the WSWS. (See, Miners and friends at memorial service speak on mine explosion (http://wsws.org/articles/2010/apr2010/mine-a26.shtml).)

The president made no reference to this damning evidence or the accumulated safety regulations that were ignored by Massey and not acted on by federal regulators. Knowing full well that these deadly conditions would continue not only at Massey but throughout the industry, he continued, How can a nation that relies on its miners not do everything in its power to protect them? How can we let anyone in this country put their lives at risk by simply showing up to work? By simply pursuing the American dream?

We cannot bring back the 29 men we lost, he added. They are with the Lord now. Our task, here on Earth, is to save lives from being lost in another such tragedy. To do what we must do, individually and collectively, to assure safe conditions underground. To treat our miners like they treat each other--like a family. Because we are all family and we are all Americans and we have to lean on each other.

Miners have heard such pronouncements time and again. After the 2006 disaster at the Sago Mine that killed 12 West Virginia miners, Democratic and Republican politicians swore to improve safety conditions and hold the coal operators accountable. Instead, measures were taken that provided the owners a vast loophole to escape fines and continue operating their unsafe mines. Nothing of any substance has changed in the transition from a Republican to a Democratic administration.

Obamas remarks make clear that there will be no attempt to hold accountable those responsible for the deaths of the 29 miners, including Massey Energy and its CEO Don Blankenship. The investigation launched by the federal government will merely be another whitewash.

While various politicians and the news media have attempted to present Massey as a bad apple in an otherwise safe and conscientious industry, deaths and injuries are occurring in other mines as well.

On Friday, a 28-year-old miner was killed just eight miles west of Beckley, in Eccles, West Virginia, when he was crushed between a continuous mining machine and the mine wall. The mine is owned by International Coal Group, which also owns the Sago Mine.

http://wsws.org/articles/2010/apr2010/obam-a26.shtml

The Gallant Gallstone
27th April 2010, 01:13
The PSL made up a sharp poster on Blankenship. I'd post it, but I don't know the RevLeft image etiquette for threads.

The Vegan Marxist
27th April 2010, 01:45
if it pertains on what the subject is about, then it won't go against rules.

Foldered
27th April 2010, 02:09
I can't handle stuff like: “They knew there were risks,” he said, “and so did their families. They knew their kids would say a prayer at night before they left. They knew their wives would wait for a call when their shift ended saying everything was ok.”

Yes, there are risks in mining, but the risk that caused this accident obviously could have been avoided. I know not everyone would agree with me stating that mining simply shouldn't be done anymore, but I doubt many would disagree that this was clearly the result of negligence. They're criminals.

The Vegan Marxist
27th April 2010, 02:30
I can't handle stuff like: They knew there were risks, he said, and so did their families. They knew their kids would say a prayer at night before they left. They knew their wives would wait for a call when their shift ended saying everything was ok.

Yes, there are risks in mining, but the risk that caused this accident obviously could have been avoided. I know not everyone would agree with me stating that mining simply shouldn't be done anymore, but I doubt many would disagree that this was clearly the result of negligence. They're criminals.

I definitely agree. Mining is far too dangerous to be allowed to be done anymore..at least not through human labor.

zimmerwald1915
28th April 2010, 18:51
I can't handle stuff like: They knew there were risks, he said, and so did their families. They knew their kids would say a prayer at night before they left. They knew their wives would wait for a call when their shift ended saying everything was ok.
What a slimy attempt to blame workers for their deaths. Perhaps they should have quit and starved rather than "take the risk" of selling their lives for food.

Ligeia
28th April 2010, 19:10
Today is the Workers' Memorial Day (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workers%27_Memorial_Day) . Remembering that more people die whilst at work than those fighting wars.

Jacobinist
28th April 2010, 19:33
Im not surprised. Obama always strives to be that compromising douche bag that can find a middle ground on any subject. That's why he's weak. Just look at the Health Care reform and the swindle that it really is.

Dimentio
28th April 2010, 22:02
Im not surprised. Obama always strives to be that compromising douche bag that can find a middle ground on any subject. That's why he's weak. Just look at the Health Care reform and the swindle that it really is.

Such people could be so very nauseating. I've had the misfortune of having to work together with such an individual. If a flat earther appeared and claimed the Earth was flat, that guy would say "it is slightly curved".

SocialistCatisSocialist
29th April 2010, 15:27
I can't handle stuff like: They knew there were risks, he said, and so did their families. They knew their kids would say a prayer at night before they left. They knew their wives would wait for a call when their shift ended saying everything was ok.

Yes, there are risks in mining, but the risk that caused this accident obviously could have been avoided. I know not everyone would agree with me stating that mining simply shouldn't be done anymore, but I doubt many would disagree that this was clearly the result of negligence. They're criminals.


Eh...it's just a speech. Obama was just trying to be comforting and also compliment people who were brave enough to do their job.


As for mining being illegal. . . .I DO wholeheartedly agree. But I think everyone's jumping down Obama's throat. I don't think there's any hidden meanings. They're all just euphemisms. :)


Do take into consideration that these jobs (manual labor ones) are all what these guys have. Most of them don't know what Network Virtualization or Engineering is...or better yet, something as simple as bookkeeping. They do a service and it's shame their gone. :(

Foldered
29th April 2010, 22:20
Eh...it's just a speech. Obama was just trying to be comforting and also compliment people who were brave enough to do their job.
Actually, if you look at the portion that I quoted, he's not complimenting fallen workers, he's making it seem like their death was either their fault, or just a natural result of mining (which it wasn't). Obviously that's problematic because it is shifting the blame from the company, which has been cited multiple (actually, multiple doesn't even do it justice) times for overlooking safety regulations for the sake of increased production.
In his own way, by speaking that way, Obama, and his speech writers, are defending the corporation by blaming "mining" and by blaming workers.

It's easy to see why that is disgusting, and I'm not looking too far into it.

And let's be real, it never is "just a speech."

Robocommie
29th April 2010, 23:12
Just goes to show that the mines must be owned and operated by the miners, not by corrupt bosses who use human beings as tools.

I can't believe how fucking trite Obama's speech sounds.

The Vegan Marxist
30th April 2010, 02:34
Just goes to show that the mines must be owned and operated by the miners, not by corrupt bosses who use human beings as tools.

I can't believe how fucking trite Obama's speech sounds.

How about mines not be operated through human labor? That sounds like a deal to me :thumbup1:

Bilan
30th April 2010, 03:13
Oh my god Obama is bourgeois?!

the last donut of the night
30th April 2010, 05:07
Oh my god Obama is bourgeois?!

If this is implying we didn't know that before and this is a big epiphany for us 'left capitalists', then you just sound like an asshole here, sorry to say.

We know he's bourgeois. We're just angrier because of this news -- because like most human beings, we feel empathy with other oppressed people. That's what's this thread is about: solidarity. Something some members of the 'revolutionary' left are clearly lacking.:glare:

The Gallant Gallstone
30th April 2010, 05:17
If this is implying we didn't know that before and this is a big epiphany for us 'left capitalists', then you just sound like an asshole here, sorry to say.

We know he's bourgeois. We're just angrier because of this news -- because like most human beings, we feel empathy with other oppressed people. That's what's this thread is about: solidarity. Something some members of the 'revolutionary' left are clearly lacking.:glare:

This instance is also an example we can use to teach others about the limits of Obama's commitment to the working class.

zimmerwald1915
30th April 2010, 05:56
This instance is also an example we can use to teach others about the limits of Obama's commitment to the working class.
This assumes he had any commitment to the working class in the first place. Obama's relationship with the working class, throughout his political career, has been that of a deceiver, a conciliator, a partisan of the state and the bourgeoisie. His role is to increase the power of the state and the bourgeoisie over the working class while simultaneously making that class less aware of what's happening.

Barry Lyndon
30th April 2010, 06:16
This is what liberals are very good at, preaching 'reconciliation' between oppressors and oppressed, exploited and exploiters. Whether its Israelis and Palestinians, Americans and Vietnamese/Iraqis/Afghans, women and Christian fascists who want to deny them abortion, workers and scumbag management, starving African and Asian peasants and greedy agribusiness, liberals are very quick to call for other people to control their feelings and compromise when their loved ones die due to imperialism, war, hunger, greed, and sexism. Liberalism, by proposing peace at any price with capitalism, may have even more blood on its hands then 'totalitarian ideologies'. Liberalism doesn't need concentration camps and firing squads to kill, it merely needs to allow the capitalist system to function day in and day out, and to manage the oppressed with soothing, empty words and promises so that they don't get out of hand and disrupt the system. Obama is liberalism personified. It is truly a hideous sight.

Barry Lyndon
30th April 2010, 06:30
This instance is also an example we can use to teach others about the limits of Obama's commitment to the working class.

Or rather his limitless commitment to the capitalist class.

Bilan
30th April 2010, 08:24
If this is implying we didn't know that before and this is a big epiphany for us 'left capitalists', then you just sound like an asshole here, sorry to say.

We know he's bourgeois. We're just angrier because of this news -- because like most human beings, we feel empathy with other oppressed people. That's what's this thread is about: solidarity. Something some members of the 'revolutionary' left are clearly lacking.:glare:

I was being facetious. It wasn't directed at anyone particular.

Robocommie
30th April 2010, 13:10
How about mines not be operated through human labor? That sounds like a deal to me :thumbup1:

And how exactly would you suggest we do that? Trained apes? C-3PO?

I appreciate your feelings on this and where they arise from, but it's a simple fact, we can't have industry without mining, nor can we even really have industry without accidents, but mining would have far fewer accidents if the workers were in charge of themselves and not forced to work in unsafe conditions by people who are just trying to keep costs down.

There's also the fact that if we close the mines to human labor, even ignoring the lack of alternatives, that's going to put a lot of people out of work.

zimmerwald1915
30th April 2010, 16:19
And how exactly would you suggest we do that? Trained apes? C-3PO?
Even C-3PO needs maintenance. :cool:

the last donut of the night
1st May 2010, 04:10
Even C-3PO needs maintenance. :cool:

Even better, how about we use the capitalists to work in the mines and the miners to work in the government?:thumbup1:

AK
4th May 2010, 11:39
Even better, how about we use the capitalists to work in the mines and the miners to work in the government?:thumbup1:
You mean create a new Bourgeoisie and Proletariat? Nice going.
And haha, I read that as minors.

The Red Next Door
8th May 2010, 19:43
Maybe Jesse should of cut his balls off, since he doesn't have the sense to use them.

The Vegan Marxist
9th May 2010, 02:18
And how exactly would you suggest we do that? Trained apes? C-3PO?

I appreciate your feelings on this and where they arise from, but it's a simple fact, we can't have industry without mining, nor can we even really have industry without accidents, but mining would have far fewer accidents if the workers were in charge of themselves and not forced to work in unsafe conditions by people who are just trying to keep costs down.

There's also the fact that if we close the mines to human labor, even ignoring the lack of alternatives, that's going to put a lot of people out of work.

You don't think a robotic mining is possible? It takes some effort, but hard work & no deaths sounds better than hard work & deaths.

Robocommie
9th May 2010, 23:42
You don't think a robotic mining is possible? It takes some effort, but hard work & no deaths sounds better than hard work & deaths.

I mean, it's possible, just like at one point electricity was possible, just like how at one point antibiotics was possible, but I hate basing policies on science that doesn't exist yet. To me it's more like technophilic fantasy than sound policy.

I mean listen, under socialism, the workers should be able to decide for themselves if they want to go down into the mines if the methane levels are up too high, or not. You have to understand that I'm saying this because in large part, it was mining that was largely responsible for my radicalization. I was watching a documentary on diamond mines in South Africa, and it was describing how after each shift workers have to pass through an X-ray scanner in case they're hiding any diamonds that they found in the mines on their bodies. If they are, they can be prosecuted for theft. There was something immensely perverse to me about that; the idea that these men are down there, literally risking their own lives wrestling diamonds out of the Earth in order to make some fat Boer asshole rich, but if he tries to keep any of the fruits of his labors, he's arrested? It made me realize how incredibly bankrupt the whole capitalist system was.

Frankly, every industrial job carries with it a degree of danger, and workplace accidents happen. I got some stories to tell. But most of these accidents can be prevented if people followed safety regulations - except workers are usually forced to disregard safety regulations by parasite foremen or managers who are pushing for higher profits. If the people whose asses were on the line called the shots, I guarantee we'd see a lot fewer deaths and injuries.

Foldered
17th May 2010, 20:52
Frankly, every industrial job carries with it a degree of danger, and workplace accidents happen. I got some stories to tell. But most of these accidents can be prevented if people followed safety regulations - except workers are usually forced to disregard safety regulations by parasite foremen or managers who are pushing for higher profits. If the people whose asses were on the line called the shots, I guarantee we'd see a lot fewer deaths and injuries.
This is definitely where the problem lies and it makes me sick. Profits before people.

Ocean Seal
20th May 2010, 23:31
I can't handle stuff like: They knew there were risks, he said, and so did their families. They knew their kids would say a prayer at night before they left. They knew their wives would wait for a call when their shift ended saying everything was ok.
What a slimy attempt to blame workers for their deaths. Perhaps they should have quit and starved rather than "take the risk" of selling their lives for food.
Yes I know its sad I wonder why no one blames politicians for being assassinated as they also know the risks of politics.