Tag Archives: labor

‘Let’s Go Someplace Darker’: Mad Men Recapped

Damn you, Matthew Weiner: Always making me work on a holiday. It’s an apt metaphor for Sunday night’s Mad Men , however. I suppose he’d greet my complaint with some paraphrase of Don’s afterhours reality check to birthday girl Peggy — “You’re 30-something years old; it’s time to get over Labor Day” — before insisting I hunker down and bring ides for the year’s seventh episode. And here I am! It worked.

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‘Let’s Go Someplace Darker’: Mad Men Recapped

Labor Day Open Thread: SEIU Exec Says Immigration Reform Could Add 8 Million Dem Voters

For general discussion and debate. Possible talking point this Labor Day: an SEIU executive vice president earlier this year said immigration reform could add 8 million Democrat voters. Thoughts?

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Labor Day Open Thread: SEIU Exec Says Immigration Reform Could Add 8 Million Dem Voters

School Named After Al Gore and Rachel ‘DDT’ Carson Built on Toxic Soil

A new school will be opening in Los Angeles next Monday that is named after Nobel Laureate Al Gore and Rachel Carson, the woman almost single-handedly responsible for DDT being banned in the ’70s. Even more delicious than the names associated with the new $75.5-million Carson-Gore Academy of Environmental Sciences is that it was built on land thought to be highly-contaminated with various chemicals which could pose a threat to students. As the Los Angeles Times reported Sunday: Critics say the campus’ location poses a long-term health risk to students and staff. School district officials insist that the Arlington Heights property is clean and safe. And they’ve pledged to check vapor monitors and groundwater wells to make sure. “Renaming this terribly contaminated school after famous environmental advocates is an affront to the great work that these individuals have done to protect the public’s health from harm,” an environmental coalition wrote in a letter to the Los Angeles Unified School District. Making sure the school is safe “would be an even better way to honor their contribution to society.” Construction crews were working at the campus up to the Labor Day weekend, replacing toxic soil with clean fill. All told, workers removed dirt from two 3,800-square-foot plots to a depth of 45 feet, space enough to hold a four-story building. The soil had contained more than a dozen underground storage tanks serving light industrial businesses. Additional contamination may have come from the underground tanks of an adjacent gas station. A barrier will stretch 45 feet down from ground level to limit future possible fuel leakage. An oil well operates across the street, but officials said they’ve found no associated risks. Like many local campuses, this school also sits above an oil field, but no oil field-related methane has been detected. Groundwater about 45 feet below the surface remains contaminated but also poses no risk, officials said. You really can’t make this stuff up. Of course, readers shouldn’t miss the irony of Carson and Gore’s names being placed on a school that could end up being hazardous to the health of attendees. After all, Carson has the blood of millions nay billions of malaria deaths on her hands as a result of her paranoid book “Silent Spring” leading to the ban of DDT many years ago. As for Gore, if he ever gets his way, and nations around the world adopt cap-and-trade programs to limit carbon dioxide emissions, millions will likely die as a result of being kept from modern forms of energy creation. As such, it’s quite fitting a school be named after these two radical environmentalists that could end up harming the very students that attend it.  On the other hand, one could make the case that if the toxic fumes don’t hurt these poor, unsuspecting young souls, the environmental nonsense they’re being taught certainly will. It’s like rain on your wedding day.

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School Named After Al Gore and Rachel ‘DDT’ Carson Built on Toxic Soil

On This Labor Day, Demand Safe Green Jobs, And Honor Those Who Work With Their Hands

There is a price to pay for cheap energy and gas for our cars that goes beyond dollars, as we saw this year with the 29 dead miners in West Virginia and the 11 on the Deepwater Horizon platform in the Gulf. American labor used to make things and fix things, and used to be proud to do it, for a decent wage. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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On This Labor Day, Demand Safe Green Jobs, And Honor Those Who Work With Their Hands

Jerry Lewis telethon 2010

According to the LA Times, Jerry Lewis still has the motivation to keep going. “Being old doesn’t mean you’ve lost your spirit,” he told the paper. “And that’s what this is about. It’s spirit and energy and the desire to do good work for people who don’t stand a chance if I don’t.” Jerry Lewis has something for you this Labor Day weekend. He may be 84, but his work in the entertainment industry is not slowing down. The 2010 Jerry Lewis Muscular Dystrophy Association Telethon will feature 21 ½

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Jerry Lewis telethon 2010

Politicizing Labor Day: DOL’s Solis Uses Holiday Address As Propaganda and Attack Vehicle

Obama administration Labor Secretary Hilda Solis (pictured at right with what I would guess is her ideal car of the future) shamelessly used Labor Day weekend as an opportunity to score political points. In a presentation that was more a political stump speech than an informative presentation, Solis recited a litany of alleged accomplishments. Many of them have no relationship to what her department does, while some are also objectively wrong. Second, she set up a host of straw men in the form of “those who woulds” and “to those who want tos” to make her department and the administration where she works appear as if they and they alone are the bulwark against rapacious employers and their political allies. The YouTube video is present at this DOL page (direct YouTube link here ). What follows are selected transcribed excerpts, with specific critiques: Excerpts: (3:10 – 4:30) You can be certain that like the president, I will not stop working until every American is back on their feet and we have fulfilled our mission to provide good and safe jobs for everyone. We’re making important inroads towards that goal. So let me tell you, briefly, what we have done so far to get there. First and foremost, we have reversed the dangerous trend of job loss in our country. Because, just over a year ago, we were losing almost 700,000 jobs per month. We were on the verge of another Great Depression. We took immediate action to stop the bleeding and create jobs. Now, instead of losing jobs, we’ve actually added them in the private sector every month. We’ve averaged about 90,000 jobs for the last seven months. But something else too, and this is important, our efforts, most notably the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, saved millions of American jobs in the auto manufacturing industry. [1] These efforts have also kept health care workers in clinics and community hospitals. They’ve kept hundreds of thousands of teachers in classrooms, and police and firefighters on the beat where they should be. (4:50 – 4:58) Now we are making it possible for American entrepreneurs to create and grow businesses that will put people to work. [2] (5:10 – 5:50) As a result of our quick and bold actions, millions of people are at work, building and rebuilding America’s roads, bridges, ports, and high-speed rail. [3] And we’re also investing in a new American foundation, and a whole new American industry and employer, and that’s clean energy. We look at that investment two ways. Advances in biofuels, wind, and solar power will reduce our dependence on foreign energy, and reenergize American manufacturing. I’ve long believed that green jobs can be great jobs, and jobs that every American can take advantage of. (6:12) I am pleased that this administration is making student loans more affordable and available. (6:40) Now, as we’ve done all that, we’ve also strengthened the safety net for American workers. We’ve expanded unemployment insurance programs in nearly 40 states so more people can receive benefits. And after decades of failing to rein in the out-of-control health care system, our reforms will control costs, improve care, minimize fraud, and provide security for millions of American families. (7:23) In the weeks and months ahead, policymakers will be debating what should come next. There are some who will suggest that, when times are tough, it’s time to get tough on working people. [4] They’ll suggest that we cut back on worker training, to cut back on worker safety, and to cut back on giving workers a voice in their workplace. I totally disagree. To those who say we can no longer afford to train, retool and educate our workforce, I say we can’t afford not to. To those who want to cut corners and disregard safety in the workplace, I say keeping workers safe matters far more than saving a few cents. And to those who want to deny workers a voice in the workplace, let me be clear: This Secretary of Labor recognizes, respects, and celebrates a worker’s right to organize and bargain collectively. As individuals and as a nation, we have very important choices to make. And each one merits careful and informed discussion. So in the weeks and months ahead, I hope we can continue this conversation. Each and every one of us has something at stake. And we simply cannot afford to make the wrong choices. Here are three obvious errors in Solis’s presentation: [1] – The “auto manufacturing industry,” even at is most broadly defined (which would include all transportation equipment, all motor vehicle and parts dealers, has only three million employees. The Labor Secretary is essentially claiming that there would be no industry without the stimulus plan. Other than to point out that Government/General Motors and Chrysler proactively killed tens of thousands of jobs at auto dealers, this claim is so utterly ridiculous as to require no further comment. [2] – Even ignoring individual initiative, it’s as if this administration is the first in recorded human history to “mak(e) it possible for American entrepreneurs to create and grow businesses that will put people to work.” She’s kidding, right? [3] – The total number of employees in “Heavy and civil engineering construction” was 888,000 in August (not seasonally adjusted). Even if you try to include a healthy percentage of the 2.1 million employed in the “Nonresidential specialty trade contractors” sector, many of whom obviously have nothing to do with infrastructure, there’s no way you get to “millions” of infrastructure workers, period, let alone “millions” who are working solely because of the administration’s “quick and bold actions.” [4] – Seriously now, who has suggested this, or any of the other conveniently created straw men that follow? Yes, Bush administration Labor Secretary Elaine Chao did give Labor Day addresses such as this one in 2002 . But if she had created something as blatant as this video, the press would have been all over her for playing politics during the entire Labor Day weekend. As it is, I doubt we’ll see much if any criticism of Solis from the establishment press. In a separate action, DOL removed the following opening paragraph from a web page on the history of Labor Day (original preserved at archive.org ; revised ) that had contained the same text for at least eight years: “Labor Day differs in every essential way from the other holidays of the year in any country,” said Samuel Gompers, founder and longtime president of the American Federation of Labor. “All other holidays are in a more or less degree connected with conflicts and battles of man’s prowess over man, of strife and discord for greed and power, of glories achieved by one nation over another. Labor Day…is devoted to no man, living or dead, to no sect, race, or nation.” More on why I believe that removal of Gompers’s statement occurred can be found here . Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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Politicizing Labor Day: DOL’s Solis Uses Holiday Address As Propaganda and Attack Vehicle

‘The American’ Wins Labor Day Box Office

The George Clooney thriller breaks away from the pack on the holiday weekend. By Mawuse Ziegbe George Clooney in “The American” Photo: Focus Features The Box-Office Top Five #1 “The American” ($12.9 million) #2 “Takers” ($11.4 million) #3 “Machete” ($11.3 million) #4 “The Last Exorcism” ($7.5 million) #5 “Going the Distance” ($6.9 million) “The American” staged a last-minute takeover of the weekend box office after sliding into second place on Friday . According to The Hollywood Reporter , George Clooney’s turn as a hitman dodging danger in Italy to carry out one last mission, raked in an estimated $12.9 million, besting “Machete” at the close of its first weekend in theaters. After landing in third place on the Friday kickoff of Labor Day weekend, last week’s #1 movie, “Takers” also toppled Robert Rodriguez’s graphic Mexploitation pic. Featuring hip-hop and Hollywood names like Chris Brown, Hayden Christensen and T.I., the action flick about a smash-and-grab job by suave crew of thieves, snatched up $11.4 million in ticket sales for second place. After barely edging past “The American” on Friday, “Machete” will wrap up its debut weekend right behind “Takers” with a third-place finish. Featuring Jessica Alba and Danny Trejo, and boasting a much-hyped appearance from Lindsay Lohan , the film pulled in $11.3 million. “The Last Exorcism” held steady in the top five with $7.5 million. The fourth-place picture, which follows a film crew charged with documenting the creepy developments at a rural exorcism, has made a total of $32.3 million since hitting theaters last week. Drew Barrymore and Justin Long’s date-night pic, “Going the Distance,” lagged behind stronger debuts like “The American” and “Machete.” The rom-com, featuring the two real-life, off-and-on lovers playing a couple working to keep a long-distance romance afloat, rang up $6.9 million in ticket sales to land in fifth place during its opening weekend. Check out everything we’ve got on “The American” and “Machete” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com. Related Videos ‘Machete’ Clips Movie Clips: The American Takers

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‘The American’ Wins Labor Day Box Office

Weekend Forecast: Can Machete Out-Hack Drew Barrymore at the Box Office?

O, Labor Day, you lazy long weekend, you musty farewell. And seriously, summer: Good riddance. The holiday frame offers up a storm-shattering tandem of films well worth your time, money and consideration after a gruesome August, as well as one stinker to help balance out the cosmos. (Or something. I don’t know why it exists, to be honest.) Grab a lawn chair, pop open a beer, and meet me after the jump to talk it over.

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Weekend Forecast: Can Machete Out-Hack Drew Barrymore at the Box Office?

TMZ’s ‘Funny Baby Face’ Contest — WINNER!

The tribe has spoken — and the sheep scared snapshot beat out the competition in our Second Annual “Funny Baby Face Contest ” — scoring our $250 prize and some great gifts from TMZ! As an homage to Labor Day — this week’s contest is TMZ’s ” Prego… Read more

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TMZ’s ‘Funny Baby Face’ Contest — WINNER!

Fried Beer Is Finally Here

This year at the Sixth Annual Big Tex Choice Awards competition in Texas someone finally hit the nail on the head. Mark Zable has trademarked the name Fried Beer. Well, it seems as though you can fry anything you eat and now drink. You may be asking yourself how in the world Mark Zable came up with this recipe. Does it taste good? “We are able to place beer inside a salty pretzel like dough, and deep fry it. When you take a bite, beer pours out of the inside pocket of dough,” Zable says on his website, friedbeer.net (we are actually salivating at the thought of making these pockets with some of our favorite brews). Zable claims that he cooks the beer snack at a temperature that allows the alcohol to keep its composition and not get “cooked off.” Unlike “fried coke” no beer flavoring is included in the dough. Currently, Zable uses Guinness but might switch to Shiner Bock or a pale ale like Sierra Nevada. Zable had faced adversity prior to this year – past frustrations led him to consult with a food scientist with little luck. After three years of research and development, 2010 brought him success as he finally figured a way to capture the entirety of the beer product through the full frying process. He will not discuss how he has solved the problem. This closely kept secret may have the potential of bringing Zable the riches of life (through his newly filed patent). Craft brewing fans can unite in looking to pair some of these snacks with their local favorites. Although we’re not sure if the treat will be massed produced anytime soon… What do you think? Do you think it’ll be a hit? Look out for our finalists as Labor Day approaches. Two lucky winners will be selected to be allowed to sell their product at the Texas state fair. Your Choice. Your Beer. Drink Up. – Beer Universe http://www.beer-universe.com/beer-education-article/2010-08-30/Fried-Beer-Is-Fin… added by: pjacobs51