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Welshy
18th August 2011, 22:36
http://www.alternet.org/newsandviews/article/651873/meet_verizon%27s_newest_security_force%3A_blackwat er/


Meet Verizon's Newest Security Force: Blackwater


Wait. What? Blackwater? That private, for-profit, trigger-happy army that killed 17 civilians in Nisour Square in Baghdad in 2007? Yeah. THAT BLACKWATER.


I have just confirmed with Communications Workers of America (CWA) Local 1104 that Blackwater is indeed being contracted by Verizon for security purposes. At this moment, CWA Local 1104 was not able to say how many security contractors have been hired or where they will be working. I'm sure more information will follow.


Blackwater, now called Xe, is considered to be the world's largest and most powerful mercenary army. In 2004, they had 2,300 men actively deployed around the world and another 20,000 contractors ready to go. They claim that they have trained tens of thousands of security personnel since 1998.
In the aftermath of hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, The Nation's Jeremy Scahill reported that (http://youtu.be/nqM4tKPDlR8), “I saw Blackwater mercenaries speeding up and down the streets in unmarked cars, heavily armed with M4 machine guns, flak jackets, other weapons strapped to their legs.”


The New York Times reports: (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/business/companies/blackwater_usa/index.html)
The company and its executives and personnel have faced civil lawsuits, criminal charges and Congressional investigations surrounding accusations of murder and bribery. In April 2010, federal prosecutors announced weapons charges against five former senior Blackwater executives, including its former president, Erik D. Prince.
Nearly four years after the federal government began a string of investigations and criminal prosecutions against company personnel, some of the cases have fallen apart, burdened by legal obstacles including the difficulties of obtaining evidence in war zones, of gaining proper jurisdiction for prosecutions in American civilian courts, and of overcoming immunity deals given to defendants by American officials on the scene.But in April 25, 2011, a federal appeals court reopened the criminal case against four former American military contractors accused of manslaughter in connection with the Nisour Square shooting in 2007.
At the onset of the strike, Verizon employed the services of the NJ State Police (http://www.examiner.com/political-buzz-in-atlantic-city/meet-verizon-s-new-private-security-force-the-nj-state-police) to escort trucks and non-union workers through picket lines. Now, Verizon's hiring of a for-profit army during the strike proves two things. First that this is indeed a war on the middle class, and second, that Verizon will bear any expense to win this war.


Can you imagine a country where the billion dollar corporations have the world's largest and deadliest private, for-profit army at their disposal? What would Blackwater guards actually do on a picket line? I guess we will find out soon enough.


I already wrote about (http://www.examiner.com/political-buzz-in-atlantic-city/untrained-non-union-workers-are-costing-verizon-a-fortune-mistakes) how the un-trained, non-union replacement workers are violating Verizon safety rules and costing the company thousands by making mistakes on the job, most notably by destroying a Verizon bucket truck. In addition to that, Verizon spent $20,000 in postage to mail letters to striking union workers stating that they are terminating their health care on August 31. A union delegate for the IBEW also said that Verizon is offering contractors in Florida $75 an hour, plus hotel rooms, to come up north to work as non-union replacements, but they refuse to keep the terms of the previous union contract.



Verizon said that the concessions they are seeking on the striking union workers from the IBEW and CWA will save their company $1 billion a year.

So far, Verizon has refused to budge on these demands. I wonder how much longer Verizon can refuse to sit down at the bargaining table before their union busting activities exceeds that $1 billion mark. For a company sitting on $100 billion in revenue with net profits of $6 billion last year, $1 billion seems like chump change.

Susurrus
18th August 2011, 22:42
Now the Pinkertons have machine guns and helicopters. Great.

A Revolutionary Tool
18th August 2011, 22:49
Damn they are the new Pinkertons...

Nothing Human Is Alien
18th August 2011, 22:54
The Pinkertons are still around. http://www.securitas.com/pinkerton/en/

Iron Felix
19th August 2011, 00:17
I echo the pinkertons comments although I have no idea what a pinkerton is.

Susurrus
19th August 2011, 00:19
I echo the pinkertons comments although I have no idea what a pinkerton is.

American private detective company that hired out its men to break strikes through force in the 20s.

Tablo
19th August 2011, 00:20
I echo the pinkertons comments although I have no idea what a pinkerton is.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homestead_Strike

RadioRaheem84
19th August 2011, 01:54
Pinkerton 2000

Amazing how we are re-living history.

Nothing Human Is Alien
19th August 2011, 02:02
in the 20s.Actually they fought workers for many, many years.

Most notably with the Molly Maguires (late 19th Century) & the Homestead Strike (1892).

It didn't really stop until the late 30's.

You also had groups like Baldwin-Felts (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baldwin-Felts_Detective_Agency) perhaps most notable for their roles in the Matewan Massacre (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matewan_Massacre) and the Battle of Blair Mountain (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_blair_mountain) in the 20's.

gendoikari
19th August 2011, 02:06
This is getting very close the the first pre condition for me to start calling a revolution, privatization of LEO and other social services.

Weezer
19th August 2011, 02:10
Someone needs to give those workers some guns.

I would just love to see a capitalist justify this for any other motivation than greed.

anarcho-communist4
19th August 2011, 02:50
How many strikers are there, and where can i look up the story about why they are striking, i would like to get informed on this situation.

Nothing Human Is Alien
19th August 2011, 03:24
How many strikers are there, and where can i look up the story about why they are striking, i would like to get informed on this situation.

http://www.revleft.com/vb/verizon-workers-fight-t159742/index.html

anarcho-communist4
19th August 2011, 03:25
Thank you very much :thumbup1:

Euronymous
19th August 2011, 03:39
The article seems to be gone.

Welshy
19th August 2011, 03:41
The article seems to be gone.

Yeah I noticed that a little bit ago. I wonder why it was taken down.

anarcho-communist4
19th August 2011, 03:44
Yeah I noticed that a little bit ago. I wonder why it was taken down.

Verizon payed the website to take it down, or threatened them to take it down with blackwater? who knows.

Rafiq
19th August 2011, 03:46
The state does not try to hide the basic facts anymore. Why are we, the proletariat restricted of basic firearms but mega-bourgeois companies are given the right to hire private armies, that of which could even threaten the very state. Because the state is a tool of the bourgeois cowards, and they aren't even trying to hide it anymore. The verizon workers will realize that these same murderers are overseas in Iraq. It will tell them who their enemies are... Which side are you on?

Martin Blank
19th August 2011, 04:22
Sounds like the call for workers' self-defense in our leaflet is taking on a whole new meaning.

"In the gleam of every bayonet and the flash of every rifle the class struggle was revealed." -- E.V. Debs

black magick hustla
19th August 2011, 05:30
The Pinkertons are still around. http://www.securitas.com/pinkerton/en/

hooooooooooooooooooooooooooly shit. i am writing a short story that includes old style fedora wearing union busting detectives woaaaah

Zav
19th August 2011, 06:19
If Blackwater kills even one striker, it would mean irreparable damage to Verizon's image. They're probably just there for intimidation. They couldn't tell their mercenaries to so much as push the strikers without openly declaring war.

I've always said that the Revolution won't happen in our lifetime, but if a privatised army starts oppressing people, it's here.

Madslatter
19th August 2011, 07:38
I've always said that the Revolution won't happen in our lifetime, but if a privatised army starts oppressing people, it's here.
I wouldn't say that revolution would come, but it would drastically increase the militancy of the American working class.

Euronymous
19th August 2011, 08:20
If Blackwater kills even one striker, it would mean irreparable damage to Verizon's image. They're probably just there for intimidation. They couldn't tell their mercenaries to so much as push the strikers without openly declaring war.

I've always said that the Revolution won't happen in our lifetime, but if a privatised army starts oppressing people, it's here.

Sadly I don't think Blackwater mercenaries are into just showing off their guns. They need to show off how they work as well.

Madslatter
20th August 2011, 07:50
It seems that the original posters of this, DailyKos, was wrong. Both Verizon and Blackwater have said that they are not working together, and so the article has been taken down.