Friday, December 5, 2008

The Progressive Coalition...Canada's "Obama Campaign"

For starters I'm going to strike Governor-General Michaelle Jean off my Christmas card list.

Her Excellency made a rather unexcellent decision. Steven Harper's government has been spared the axe till January. So I'll keep polishing my barbeque fork and leave the champagne on ice.

I'm no constitutional lawyer, but I can read. I'm also reasonably knowledgeable about history. The GG's stay of execution flies in the face of the precedent set in the "King-Byng" affair of 1926.

Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King's minority Liberal government was about to be defeated after a customs scandal. King went to Governor-General Byng and asked for the dissolution of the house and for another election to be called (there'd been an election in 1925).

Byng refused and called in Conservative leader Arthur Meighan to form a government. True, Meighan's government didn't last long and a few months later Canada was back into another election campaign. But nevertheless, the precedent has been set.

There is a "government in waiting", but Governor General Jean paid no attention to this and let Prime Minister Harper have his way. Our elected representatives have been defacto locked out of Parliament.

But there's a bright spot to all this believe it or not. I have an LP in my collection (yes I still have quite a bit of vinyl lying around) called "Precious Friend". It's a recording of Pete Seeger and Arlo Guthrie's concert tour back in the 1980's.

In an intro to a little rant about "the neutron bomb", (a big issue at the time), Arlo said that "You can't have a light...without a dark... to stick it in!". In other words he explained "You can't have one thing...without the other thing".

We certainly have a dark...namely the "Chicago Boy" policies of Harper's government...and the extreme vindictive nastiness of Finance Minister Jim Flaherty. To use very unparliamentary language, these dudes are a couple of pricks.

Pretty much every other government on earth has at least to some degree abandoned Friedmanite policies in the face of the crisis. But the Harper government simply saw the crisis as an opportunity to starve opposition parties of funds, beat up on public sector workers, and strip equality rights for women workers. The unemployed and the about to be unemployed were hung out to dry.

But we have a light too. A few short weeks ago, who'd have thought that the Liberals, NDP and Bloc Quebecois would have been capable of setting aside their differences to build a coalition based on activist government and expansionist economic policies.

When I first heard about it, I was knocking back margaritas with a good friend. I'd been busy and so not paying a whole lot of attention to the news. I was dismissive and didn't believe it at first.

But then I saw the announcement on the TV behind the bar. Holy Shit! It was happening! We had a government in waiting that was willing to take the country in a much more positive direction.

I'm face to face with unemployed manufacturing workers every day of the week. They're scared about what lies ahead. The coalition doesn't offer them miracles, but it at least gives them a little bit of hope. And that, as Martha Stewart would say is a good thing!

The other "light" in this situation is the social and political movement that this coalition has spawned. Within a matter of days, rallies have been organized in just about every major city in Canada.

I've lost count of the number of online campaign sites, petitions, blogs, Facebook groups, Youtube videos etc. that have been created. Everyday there seems to be a new one popping up somewhere.

Barrack Obama's presidential campaign mobilized millions of people who hadn't been mobilized before around the idea of "change" from the corruption, cronyism and warmongering of the Bush II administration.

Our election campaign seemed rather unexciting compared to what happened south of the border.

The campaign to support the "Progressive Coalition" or whatever you want to call it is our very own "Obama Campaign".

This is an historic opportunity to change the face of politics in this country. It's a chance to bring some relief to the victims of the economic crisis. It's also an historic opportunity to do something positive about the growing environmental crisis.

People around the world are increasingly coming around to seeing that these two issues are bound together...everyone except Harper and the neo-cons.

Harper must go!

So we'll see you at the meetings, rallies, on the picket line and if it's cold outside...in cyberspace!

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

CLC weighs in on the coalition with new ad!

Stick a fork in them. They're done!

This weekend, watch for Harper & Co. to unleash a barrage of propaganda ads in a last ditch effort to cling to power. Gotta do something with that leftover campaign cash!

He'll try to get the GG to prorogue Parliament till January or else plunge the country into another election. Lotsa luck Stevie!

His minions have also developed a new hobby... eavesdropping on their opponents parliamentary caucus conference calls. Who else had that hobby? Wasn't it that guy who was nicknamed "Tricky Dick"?

The right-wing talk radio dudes will be in full foaming at the mouth mode...if they're not there already.

They may even try to organize a few rallies. Honestly, who'd be crazy enough to freeze their ass off on a cold Canadian December day to stand up for...Harper!

Mind you I think that lots of folks will turn out to Steve's retirement party.

Rallies are being organized in St. John's, Halifax, Charlottetown, Moncton, Regina, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Vancouver and Ottawa on Thursday, December 4th.

There will be rallies at noon on Saturday, December 6th in both Montreal and Toronto.

If you're in this part of the world, hope to see you at Nathan Phillips Square.

You'll find full details on the "coalition rallies" here.

If you're city isn't listed, maybe you can organize your own!

By the way, Green Party leader Elizabeth Maye has also come out in favour of the coalition.

The Greens didn't win any seats last October, but if they had, they would have joined in the fun. You can read her comments on rabble.ca here.

Welcome aboard Liz!

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Don't give in to anti-Bloc paranoia!

Was listening to Rex Murphy today on the CBC's "Cross Country Checkup" and on more than one occasion he made reference to a Liberal/NDP coalition requiring the support from a party that "plans to breakup the country". He seemed to actively encourage that kind of talk from callers.

Frankly I'm sick of hearing about the separatist bogeyman.

Hello! I've got news for everyone!

Canada is not the only country in the world with a "separatist" party in its parliament.

I just so happened to be in Barcelona, Spain last March during their election campaign.

Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero's Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) government was re-elected. It's a minority government and guess who's support they rely on? THE SEPARATISTS!

Only thing is Spain doesn't just have one separatist party in the Cortes (Parliament), they have a whole bunch of separatist parties. They have Catalan separatists, Basque separatists, Galician separatists and even Canary Island separatists.

And the separatists themselves don't have just one party. The main Catalan separatist party "Convergencia i Union" (CiU) is itself a coalition of two Catalan separatist parties. (The party banners you see in this street scene photo of Barcelona are from the CiU) Then of course there's the "ERC"...the "Republican Left of Catalonia".

On top of that there are a whole bunch of separatist and regional parties that didn't manage to get anyone elected.

Yet, Spain hasn't fallen apart.

Even in the UK there are separatist and regional parties...like the Scottish Nationalist Party (SNP), Plaid Cymru (Welsh Nationalists), and from Northern Ireland, the Democratic Unionists, Ulster Unionists, Sinn Fein and the Social Democratic & Labour Party.

Life goes on! Governments implement their policies.

Even if the Parti Quebecois wins every seat in the upcoming provincial election, holds a referendum and gets a 99.9% vote in favour of sovereignty-association, Quebec is still going to be on the other side of the Ottawa River.

Hell, the federal government does so little these days that quite frankly, there isn't much to "separate from".

The reformatories are also playing the "western alienation" card.

In two of the four western provinces, the majority of folks didn't vote for Harper's party. Less than half of British Columbians voted reformatory (44.5%). Only 48.8% of Manitobans voted reformatory.

In Alberta, the 35% of the electorate who didn't vote reformatory are represented by a single NDP MP. In Saskatchewan, the 46% of the electorate who didn't vote reformatory are represented by a single Liberal MP.

So not all western Canadians are reformatories! They're simply being drowned out in the mainstream media by right-wingers.

So who's trying to "break up the country"? Harper and his minions as they desperately cling to power. But it looks like it ain't gonna work this time. Bye bye Stevie!

Harper...going...going...almost gone!

Even though the Harper government has backed down on most of the provisions in their "Economic Statement", the opposition parties are sticking to their guns...the Liberals have developed a spine...or at least a temporary one.

A new organization has emerged online called "Canadians for a Progressive Coalition". Sounds like a good idea to me!

Here's their "Youtube" video:

Friday, November 28, 2008

A Holiday Gift from the Opposition MP's?

Well, it looks like Canadian politics is about to get interesting.

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty is using his latest "economic statement" in the midst of what's looking like the biggest economic meltdown since the 1930's depression to push through some very right-wing policies.

According to the latest from the CBC, negotiations are underway between former Prime Minister Jean Chretien and former NDP leader Ed Broadbent around the possibility of defeating the government and forming a Liberal/NDP coalition with the tacit support of the Bloc Quebecois.

It's very clear that in order to avoid a major economic disaster, we need a government that's willing to bring in some expansionist "New Deal" type economic policies.

Harper and Flaherty have made it clear that a "New Deal" isn't on.

Putting Harper and Flaherty out of business would be the best gift the opposition parties could give Canadians this holiday season! Afterall, in the last election 62% of Canadians didn't vote for these folks.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Going home...to the picket line!,

This afternoon I spent some time at "home".

Only this particular time I was at home at Toronto's South Central Postal Facility with some very special "relatives"...my brothers and sisters in the Union of Postal-Communications Employees/PSAC. They held a "picket line barbeque" with lots of folks there from the labour and social movements.

It was thirty years ago that I started working there and not too long afterwards as a naive young "20-something" began my life in the labour movement.

As a young activist, I'd been on plenty of picket lines and at plenty of demonstrations. But it was at South Central where for the first time I was on my "own" picket line back in the autumn of 1980. It was a time of double digit inflation and we were being offered single digit pay increases...so we walked out. In the end, we got that double digit pay increase.

When I look back, I owe these folks alot. They may not realize it, but they taught me alot about the practicalities of pulling folks together and taking on a rather nasty employer. The art of "people politics".

I got a chance today to reminisce with my old brother Steve. We shared coffee breaks together for years and argued about all the world's problems. We disagreed on just about everything. But there was always one thing we agreed on...fighting the bosses.

When you're organizing a people's fightback the most important thing is to look for common ground... the things we agree on. Usually the things we disagree about are really not all that important.

Of course I left Canada Post and my UPCE/PSAC membership a very long time ago. But the lessons I learned often through trial and error...and probably mostly error...will be with me forever.

Today, my "homies"...my brothers and sisters of UPCE/PSAC are in a very important fight that in the end will impact all working people in this country.

On the surface, it's a fight about sick leave. But in the bigger picture, it's a fight to maintain the little financial integrity that's left in Canada's Employment Insurance (EI) system.

The EI sick benefit system is meant as a "floor" so that those who work for smaller or less wealthy employers can at least get a minimum of 15 weeks sick pay.

Large employers like the Canada Post Corporation are expected to pay for their employees sick leave benefits.

But, Canada Post wants to dump a major share of their sick leave costs onto the publicly-funded EI system. Canada Post remains a profitable company. It can well afford to pay the costs of its employees sick leave. It doesn't need corporate welfare.

Canada Post has decided to take on its smaller bargaining units first. So UPCE/PSAC is first up at bat and has decided to take a stand. Next up, is the normally "pussycat" supervisory union, the Association of Postal Officials of Canada (APOC).

Once they've crushed these unions, Canada Post will take on their largest opponent, the Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW).

If Canada Post succeeds in using the EI fund as a sick leave "piggy bank", it will be open season on every single group of workers in the country that has a sick leave plan.

In my "post Canada Post world", I've been watching the steady erosion of the EI system. I've dealt with I don't know how many thousand unemployed workers over the years who've seen their benefits slashed and burned by successive Liberal and Tory governments.

The most savage EI cuts were implemented by then Liberal Finance Minister Paul Martin back in the 1990's. A massive surplus was built up in the fund. Then, in Stephen Harper's last pre-election budget he pocketed the $50+ billion dollar surplus.

So for the last decade and a half, governments have been undermining the EI system. Now employers are trying to get their paws into the system and undermine it even further...at a time when most of the world is heading into a recession...and maybe even a depression.

On the backburner is another issue. Although Prime Minister Stephen Harper is making "Keynsian" noises these days, we all know that deep down inside he's a hard core Friedmanite". He'd like to privatize Canada Post. So, cutting down sick leave costs will help fatten up Canada Post for a potential buyer.

So to Tom, Steve, Dolores, Mary Lou, Diane and all my other "homies"...stay tough and hang in there! Your fight is a fight for everyone. The labour movement is behind you.

To Canada Post? Pay your own god damned sick leave! And by the way, you still owe me some money from the twenty+ year old equal pay complaint.


P.S. This post was "fueled" by a large mocha and a bottle of Steam Whistle Beer supplied by my wonderful friends at "The Last Drop Cafe"...Coxwell & Sammon in Toronto. Very friendly neighbourhood atmosphere, great coffee and free wifi...what more could you ask for?

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Harper signs free trade deal with murderous Colombian government

What do you do to a government that murders more trade unionists than any other country on the planet? If you're name is Stephen Harper you sign a free trade deal with this government.

That's the first major foreign policy decision of Harper's recently re-elected Conservative government. They "did the deal" while most folks weren't paying any attention.

The deal is subject to ratification in the Canadian parliament. Let's hope that the normally spineless Liberal Party...currently tied up in a leadership race, joins with the New Democratic Party and the Bloc Quebecois to block ratification.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Love digital audio and video? You'll love VLC Media Player!

I've got to admit that I absolutely cringe when I see folks play digital audio and video with bloated proprietary software like Windows Media Player, Real Player and Apple Quicktime.

It's loaded with ads trying to get you to buy various digital media content or to purchase subscriptions for online services.

Often it "phones home to Mama" reporting what file you just played even though it's just a file that's on your local hard drive. It bugs you to install updates and upgrades and often won't work until you've dealt with the latest dialogue box that's popped up on your screen.

Me, I just want to play the bloody file or audio/video stream! Leave me alone!

Thankfully, there's one programme that allows me to do just that...VLC Media Player! You can download it from http://videolan.org/vlc .

"VLC Media Player" is "free as in freedom, free as in free beer" and is licensed under the GNU General Public License.

VLC is available for just about any operating system you can think of including Microsoft Windows, MacOSX, GNU/Linux, various versions of Unix, Syllable and even a more or less obsolete operating system like BeOS.

VLC will play just about any audio or video file or stream that you might like to throw at it. You'll find a list of what's supported in the most current version (0.9) here. The only major file format that it doesn't support is Real Audio and Video...but if you're a Windows user, there's a free software solution here.

It's a small rather stripped down rather "unflashy" application that won't overload your computer. But it does the most important thing. It plays the bloody file without bugging you!

While it's not obvious, if you poke around inside the menus you'll find links to hundreds of "Shoutcast" radio, TV and podcast streams. Just go to "View", "Playlist", then in the dialogue box go to "Manage", and go to "Services Discovery". Exploring all of these Shoutcast streams will keep you busy for weeks!

If you're a bit geeky, you can even use VLC Media Player as a streaming server.

One of the other cool things about free software is that folks are free to build new software applications using software code from another application. That's exactly what's been done with the "Miro" internet TV application. It was built using the source code from VLC. But I'll leave that for a future post!

In the meantime, have fun with VLC Media Player!

Friday, November 14, 2008

Oops... AVG accidentally kills Windows

"AVG", a popular anti-virus software programme from Czech software vendor "Grisoft" kills the Microsoft Windows XP operating system after you install a recent update according to this article on "APCMag.com". According to the article, this "only" happens on the French, Dutch, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish editions.

Hmmm...according to Wikipedia there are about 322 million Spanish speakers, 177 million Portuguese speakers, 64 million French speakers, 61 million Italian speakers and 20 million Dutch speakers. Presumably some of these folks use computers.

Although the article expresses relief that the problem doesn't affect English language users, there are more speakers of these other languages than there are English speakers. So it sounds like a pretty big problem to me.

Users of Microsoft operating systems have grown "used" to the fact that viruses and assorted malware are a "normal" part of computing. They've grown used to running resource hogging security applications that require ever more powerful computers...and that's before you can actually do any work on your computer.

And, a programme that's supposed to protect your Windows operating system from "bad stuff" actually does something very bad to your computer (aside from "normal stuff" like hogging system resources).

While no computer operating system is perfect, users of non-Microsoft operating systems generally don't have these kinds of problems. They don't have to run these intrusive resource hogging security software programmes. Viruses and malware are the exception to the rule...not the rule.

Isn't it about time to end this abusive relationship with Microsoft software?

There are dozens of "free as in freedom", "free as in free beer" GNU/Linux based computer operating systems available today. Isn't it about time to take a look at the alternative?

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Thoughts on Obama

Like most of the planet, I was incredibly happy at the election of Barack Obama as president of the United States of America for a number of reasons.

As the USA's first black president, it means there's been at least some sort of conclusion to the American Civil War...although it's taken nearly a century and a half.

It's marks an end to the eight year reign of error and terror of Bush-Cheney.

It comes at a time when the global banking system is near collapse under the weight of the high risk mortgage scandal in the U.S. The thirty year rule of the economic policies of Von Hayek and Milton Friedman are thoroughly discredited in the eyes of most of the world's people. Mainstream journalists are starting to talk about Keynes again.

When the Republicans accused Barack Obama of being a "socialist", Obama was easily able to dismiss them by asking whether he was a socialist just because when he was a kid he shared his peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. I thought it was brilliant.

Of course President-elect Obama isn't a socialist. I know because I have no problem at all wearing that label. Obama definitely isn't me.

It's really easy to be cynical. I know that many on the traditional left are. This is the USA...the most socially and politically conservative of any of the advanced capitalist countries.

I don't expect miracles.

What I do hope is that it opens up some space for more progressive political ideas to flourish.

I hope that the largely internet-based movement of young people doesn't go away and keeps the heat on President-elect Obama to follow through on some of his more progressive policy announcements.

I hope that he follows through and ends the war in Iraq. I also hope that he doesn't follow through with his promise to beef up the U.S. presence in Afghanistan.

I hope that the U.S. becomes a little bit less imperialistic and starts to cooperate with other countries rather than dictate to them.

I hope that President Obama follows through and signs the Kyoto protocol.

I hope that President Obama has the courage to ignore the folks on Wall Street and implements some more "New Deal" oriented economic policies.

I hope that President Obama is a little bit friendlier to labour and starts making it easier for U.S. workers to join unions.

Reality being what it is, any major downturn in the U.S. economy is going to pull the rest of the world down with it. But if at least to some degree Obama is able to turn things around, he'll pull the rest of us up again.

Maybe this is too much to hope for...maybe it isn't. One thing is certain. The ruling elites are going to do their best to make sure that nothing much happens. The challenge for the rest of us is to keep the pressure on and make sure that things do happen.

Friday, October 10, 2008

Don't waste your vote...don't vote Liberal

Okay I haven't posted here in a while.

As everyone in this country knows, we have an election on October 14th.

It goes without saying that we need to get rid of Stephen Harper's Republican clones.

In the blogosphere, there's a pretty big "ABC" (Anything But Conservative) movement.

I've got a big problem with this movement. Anyone who thinks that the Liberal Party of Canada is somehow "progressive" is either suffering from amnesia or just plain stupid.

I've spent the last twenty odd years of my life trying to help out the unemployed in various ways, shapes and forms.

Unemployed folks need to feed their families, put a roof over their heads and maybe even retrain so that they can do new jobs.

What's the biggest obstacle that the unemployed face? The savage cuts to the "Employment Insurance" system imposed in the 1990's by guess who? The Chretien/Martin Liberal government.

A few years ago workers in the low paid hospitality sector were out of work due to the SARS crisis when Toronto's tourism industry went belly up. UNITE-HERE, the main union representing workers in that sector lobbied for special extended EI benefits for workers in that industry. Many of them were losing their homes or being evicted from their apartments.

What was the response of the Liberal government? "Nope". You have to bear in mind that at the time the Liberals held every single seat in Toronto.

What happened? A few Liberal hack politicians organized a charity Rolling Stones concert. Sure they raised a bit of money for a "rent bank". But given the devastation in the industry that money dried up very quickly.

Hundreds of thousands of manufacturing workers have lost their jobs in the last few years. But these same workers are still suffering the effects of the Liberal EI cuts. With the banking fiasco in the U.S., hundreds of thousands more will lose their jobs over the next few years. Guess what? All of these workers will be suffering the effects of Liberal EI cuts.

The Harper Republican wannabees have simply carried on with the Liberal war on the unemployed.

If you're unemployed, or about to become unemployed, the Liberals aren't your friends.

The Liberals would like folks to forget that they were in office for twelve long years. What's the legacy?

Does anyone remember the Liberal promise to introduce pharmacare? I didn't think so.

It's quite true that the Mulroney government took the feds out of the housing business. But in 1993 the Liberals promised to get the feds back into the biz. I lost track of how many times they announced money for housing. What did they deliver on? Nothing.

They promised money for childcare. It was only after the NDP put the screws to the Liberals during the short lived Martin minority government that the Liberals made any moves at all.

Liberal cuts in transfer payments to the provinces for healthcare created a legal climate where there have been court cases that threaten to undermine the entire medicare system.

Yeah the Liberals kept us out of George Bush II's war in Iraq. But they got us into Bush II's "other war" in Afghanistan. Over a hundred Canadian young people have paid for this disaster with their lives.

The Liberals signed the Kyoto protocol but did absolutely nothing to implement it's provisions.

Mulroney got us into the Canada/U.S. Free Trade Agreement. But who got us into NAFTA and signed-off on the notorious "Chapter 11"? The Liberals.

What about the Reformatory "Copyright Bill" which thankfully died on the order paper due to the election call. If you do anything of consequence on the internet, you've really only got one friend...namely the NDP...well maybe the Greens...but realistically they've only got a shot at maybe two seats. The Bloc Quebecois is actually worse than the Reformatories on this issue and at best the Liberals were being cagey...because they introduced a somewhat similar bill when they were in office.

The Harper Reformatories have brought in billions of dollars in corporate tax cuts. John Deere is axing 800 jobs in Welland, Ontario but is being rewarded with a tax cut. Guess who's supporting Harper on this one? Stephane Dionne and the Liberals.

The simple act of cancelling a scheduled corporate tax cut...not even "raising" corporate taxes is dismissed by Dionne as "socialism".

Not only that but Stephanne Dionne and the Liberals let Harper push through most of his right-wing agenda by not showing up in Parliament to vote against Harper.

Then of course there are all the useless drones who have occupied the Liberal backbenches for years if not decades. Dionne likes to talk about his "Liberal team". Alot of these folks should be sent back to the minor leagues.

There's an old expression "lead, follow or get out of the way". It's time for the Liberals to get out of the way.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

US media conglomerates get the red carpet...Canada's manufacturing workers...the back of the hand

Different strokes for different folks as they say.

If you live in this country it's impossible not to know of the thousands of auto workers in Oshawa, Ontario who will be losing their jobs as General Motors closes its truck plant next year. Thousands more in auto parts plants and various support industries will also lose their jobs.

Over 200,000 manufacturing workers mainly in Ontario and Quebec have joined the ranks of the unemployed over the last five years.

This past week Air Canada announced they were giving two thousand more workers "the axe".

There's talk of the economy of Ontario, for over a century Canada's economic "engine" tanking so much that in a few short years the province will qualify for "equalization payments".

You would think that the government of Canada would view this as a "crisis" that needs to be dealt with.

But oh no, Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government has decided to do...ummmm...errr...nothing.

Okay, they did do something.

In the 1990's then Liberal Finance Minister Paul Martin implemented massive cuts to the unemployment insurance system. Workers benefits were cut, qualifying periods were lengthened, and the amount of time the unemployed could collect EI benefits was shortened. They made it much harder for unemployed workers to access job training programmes.

They even renamed the programme "Employment Insurance" and so "UI" became "EI".

Because the programme wasn't paying out benefits, but workers and employers were still paying into the EI fund, a massive surplus was built up...to the tune of over $50 billion!

Everyone condemned what the Chretien/Martin government was doing.

Those on the left of the political spectrum i.e. unions, community and social action groups, the NDP and the Bloc Quebecois all argued that benefits for the unemployed should be improved given the massive surplus that was building up in the EI fund.

Those on the right of the political spectrum argued that nothing more should be done for the unemployed, but rather EI premiums for employers and employees should be cut.

When Stephen Harper's minority Conservative government came to power in 2006 at first they continued following previous Liberal policy.

However in this year's budget, they finally did something about the EI surplus. They pocketed it. Harper's government legalized the theft of the EI fund.

Recently, under pressure from the US Ambassador, California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, and all of the fat cat US media conglomerates who control Hollywood and the recording industry, Harper's government introduced Bill C-61, "An Act to Amend the Copyright Act".

This bill is the US media mogul's wet dream come true. It's a Canadian copy of the U.S. Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA)...only worse.

This bill criminalizes just about everything that the average person might do with digital media, opens the door to ISP "snooping" on your online activities and will result in massive numbers of lawsuits against internet users.

Over 28,000 law suits have been filed in the U.S., mostly against teenage kids for file sharing. Think our courts are clogged now?

The Conservative government is engaged in spin right now trying to say that citizen's "fair dealing" rights have been protected in this bill. Don't believe a word of it.

As soon as a corporation puts a "digital lock" on some media, your rights to fair dealing go out the window. Corporate digital locks are given legal priority over your fair dealing rights...just like the U.S. DMCA.

80% of the music industry is controlled by just four corporate conglomerates. Everything will be locked. You'll have no rights at all.

In case you haven't noticed, I'm a user of the free software GNU/Linux computer operating system. The movie industry does not supply software that will permit me to watch a legally purchased (but encrypted) DVD movie on my computer.

Right now, I can legally download software that allows me to "break" the lock so that I can watch the movie I just paid good money for on my computer.

Under this new law, viewing a legally purchased DVD movie on my computer will be illegal. Distributing the software that allows me to view an encrypted DVD movie on my computer will also be illegal.

Just about every other kind of "format shifting" will become illegal. If you want to open up your mobile phone so that you can use it with a different mobile phone provider that will become illegal. Want to move music that you've legally downloaded from a music service from one device to another? Illegal.

Parliament is in recess over the summer. They'll resume business on September 15th. Over the summer, contact your Member of Parliament. You can do so easily via the "Copyright for Canadians" website (click here).


The NDP is taking a strong position against Bill C-61 with MP Charlie Angus (Timmins-James Bay) leading a heroic effort worthy of Jimmy Stewart in "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington".

Liberal and Bloc Quebecois MP's in particular need to be leaned on. The Conservatives only need the support of one of these parties to push this monstrosity through the House.

And if you need more information, by all means visit the Copyright for Canadians website at http://www.copyrightforcanadians.ca

Save Our Net!

A new coalition has formed to deal with the ongoing bandwidth "throttling" by the major internet service providers in Canada called Save Our Net. (click on the link).

The Canadian Radio & Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) will apparently be holding hearings on net neutrality this coming September.

"Save Our Net" will be holding a number of events over the course of the summer.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Gotcha!

For months Canadian federal Industry Minister Jim Prentice has been trying to introduce a U.S.-style "Digital Millenium Copyright Act" under pressure from big U.S. media conglomerates, their puppets in Canada and the U.S. Ambassador.

Unfortunately for Prentice, (and fortunately for Canadians!) he's been up against some very active, informed and smart "netizens".

Chief among those smart netizens is Professor Michael Geist, Canada Chair of Internet and E-commerce law at the University of Ottawa.

This week Professor Geist exposed that Industry Canada computers have been used to edit Wikipedia entries concerning Minister Prentice's proposed "copyright reforms".

Public property is being used for partisan purposes.

It also shows that Prentice and/or his surrogates at Industry Canada are completely clueless when it comes to internet technology. Figuring out who owns the IP address of someone who has edited a Wikipedia entry isn't exactly rocket science.

And it is these same clueless individuals who will make decisions about both copyright reform and net neutrality. These decisions will affect how every Canadian is able to use the internet.

See Michael Geist's Blog

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Microsoft ... Loves'm and leaves'm

The head honchos at the British Library must feel like they've been ship wrecked on love beach.

About three years ago, the British Library and Microsoft partnered up and announced plans to digitize 100,000 old out of copyright books. Wasn't Microsoft a wonderful corporate citizen?

The British Library acted as a so-called "independent" ally of Microsoft in their heavy-handed bid to get ISO (International Standards Organization) approval for their brand spanking new 6,000 page "Office Open XML" file formats.

(An even more broken version of this broken file format is used in Microsoft Office 2007).

Microsoft's committee stacking and general political interference in the ISO process worked and they got their broken file formats approved in February, helping them to perpetuate their Microsoft Office monopoly for a few more years.

The ISO's credibility in the tech community is now very close to zero.

Move the calendar forward to this month.

Microsoft has just announced that they are abandoning their digitization project at the British Library.

Microsoft just wants to be friends.

See:
Goodbye, British Library
Microsoft "Live Search" Blog
Alex Brown, the British Library and OOXML

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

The "virtual" union leader

The Globe & Mail had another interesting story today... this time by mining reporter Andy Hoffman.

Napoleon Gomez Urrutta, General Secretary of Mexico's National Miner's and Metalworker's Union lead a strike of 20,000 Mexican workers yesterday...from exile in Vancouver, British Columbia!

Napoleon Gomez Urrutia has been leading the National Miners' and Metalworkers' Union of Mexico while in exile on Canada's west coast for more than two years now, with help from modern technology.

"I keep running the union from here through video conferences, e-mails, phone calls and frequent visits from my colleagues," Mr. Gomez said in an interview yesterday.

The 62-year-old hasn't been able to return to Mexico because he is likely to face arrest on government charges of corruption and embezzlement, allegations he denies.

Across Mexico yesterday, union workers from steel mills to gold mines halted work.

The workers are protesting the government's failure to recognize the re-election earlier this month of Mr. Gomez as the union's general secretary.

The strike slowed or ceased production at several mining and steel-making operations, according to wire reports from Mexico.

See "Mexico's striking miners heed the call from B.C."

With our increasingly globalized economy, workers and unions need to find ways to make use of new communications technologies to defend their rights.

This is an excellent example.

A nation of retail clerks?

Globe & Mail Economics reporter Heather Scoffield reports today that with the decline in the manufacturing sector, Canada is rapidly becoming a nation of retail clerks.

Along with this shift from making things to selling things, Canadian workers are taking a serious hit in the wallet.

"On average, hourly wages for a typical manufacturing worker were $21.66, according to Statistics Canada. That's 46 per cent higher than the average hourly wage in the retail sector, where workers are typically paid $14.87 an hour. And retail employees are often part-timers, and work far fewer hours in any given week than factory workers. So the contrast in weekly wages in the two sectors is even starker.

In February, 2008, the average weekly earnings, including overtime, for factory workers was $950.84 a week, almost double the average weekly pay of $488.58 for retail employees."

And much like factory workers, North American workers on this new retail assembly line have to stand all day for half the pay!

Friday, May 16, 2008

The Giant Sucking Sound

Every year the business magazine “Fortune” ranks the top 500 corporations in the US by revenue (and in a later issue the top 500 non-U.S. corporations). You might think that looking at a bunch of numbers would only be of interest to accountants, but I find it interesting too. It reminds you of a few things.

On top of the list this year again...is the retail giant Walmart.

Walmart is of course famous for busting unions, treating workers like crap, charges of predatory pricing, squeezing suppliers, and extracting all kinds of planning and tax concessions from municipal governments so they can build big box stores on the outskirts of town while putting everyone on "Main Street" out of business.

On revenues of $378 billion, they earned $12.7 billion in profits.

Exxon Mobile (they named an oil spill after them!) came in second with just under $373 billion in revenue, but a whopping $40.6 billion in profits.

Number three spot went to another oil company...Chevron (the company that briefly named an oil tanker named after the current U.S. Secretary of State). They had revenues of over $210 billion and made $18.7 billion in profits.

Poor old fourth place General Motors lost $38.7 billion on revenues of $182 billion.

Way down the list at number 44 is a once little known company based in Redmond, Washington. They had revenues of "only" $51.1 billion. But, they made nearly $14.1 billion in profits! I'm talking about the company that Bill Gates built..Microsoft.

Aside from Exxon Mobile and Chevron, only General Electric ($22.2 billion), JP Morgan-Chase ($15.4 billion) and the Bank of America ($15 billion) made more dough than the boys from Redmond last year.

I'm not a mathematician and thankfully not an economist either. But I do know how to use a calculator. So I had a little fun with figures.

For every single dollar you spent on a Microsoft product, they cleared 28 cents in pure gravy!

On the other hand, "Union Buster's 'R Us" Walmart made a little over three cents on every dollar you spent there. (They didn't make it on me. I NEVER shop there).

Oil spillin' catastophe lovin' Exxon Mobile, made about eleven cents on every dollar you spent "putting a tiger in your tank". (Okay...I'm dating myself).

Chevron made about nine cents on the dollar and Conoco-Phillips made about seven cents profit on the dollar. Even that "into everything" company...General Electric made only thirteen cents on the dollar.

What's the secret recipe for being a global vaccuum cleaner that sucks up masses of cash instead of dust bunnies?

Go down to your nearest big box store and try to buy a PC without Microsoft's resource hogging Windows Vista operating system on it. Go ahead and try!

The license to use Microsoft's Windows operating system adds anywhere from $50-100 to the cost of your PC. It's a defacto "private tax" whenever you buy a PC.

If you poke around on line, you might be able to find some large computer manufacturers still selling machines with Microsoft's older Windows XP operating system on them. If you really really look hard, you'll find a few brave manufacturers selling machines with a free software GNU/Linux operating system pre-installed. But you'll need to be a real web sleuth to find them. (Here and here).

Recently, GNU/Linux operating systems have gained a bit of a toehold in a new class of portable computers. The micro notebook "UMPC" or "ULPC" class machines...like the One Laptop Per Child Project's "XO" computer.

Some of the "Intel Classmate" machines also run a GNU/Linux operating system.

The "Asus EeePC" (see my previous blogpost) has taken the world by storm. HP and others will soon be offering GNU/Linux based UMPC/ULPC class machines.

Even though this is only a tiny toehold for the community built operating system, Microsoft has decided to crush this movement before it gets out of hand.

Just this past week they've announced that they'll be making their almost obsolete "Windows XP Home" operating system available to manufacturers of UMPC/ULPC machines for about $30 a pop. The plan was to shelve this operating system next month, but for this class of machines they've put it back on life support.

They're even trying to dictate to hardware manufacturers what kind of machines they are "allowed" to put this discounted Windows XP Home on.

The OLPC project used to be really cool. The plan was to sell tens of thousands of these neat little GNU/Linux powered "XO" machines to education ministries in the developing world. The aim was to try to get the price down to around $100 per unit. So far they've managed to get it down to about $180.

But this week, Microsoft announced that it's officially got its paws into the XO project.

So the XO project will no longer be introducing techno-savvy kids in the developing world to software that they have the freedom to change and adapt to their needs. Instead they'll be stuck with an operating system that is "licensed and not sold"...that they are not free to change.

And so these bright geeky kids will never have the chance to develop software that's appropriate to local conditions. They'll grow up addicted to the Microsoft drug. It's electronic colonialism.

A few months back, Mandrivasoft, a small French company that distributes its own GNU/Linux operating system made a deal with the Nigerian education ministry to supply some Intel Classmate machines with Mandriva Linux pre-installed. Mandriva was going to supply the tech support for the machines.

But Microsoft went in through the back door and tried to derail the deal.

Microsoft will stop at nothing to preserve it's tax on computing.

Then there's Microsoft's second cash cow..."Microsoft Office". Microsoft has convinced hundreds of millions of computer users that they "need" this software.

They've even gone so far as to bully the International Standards Organization (ISO) into accepting it's broken file formats as "a standard" for the exchange of electronic documents. Two years previously the ISO had accepted without controversy the totally open and vendor neutral "Open Document Format" (ODF) as "the" standard for electronic documents.

Rather than deal with the technical merits of Microsoft's file formats (what they're supposed to do), they simply caved in to heavy-handed lobbying.

I feel totally confident in saying that 90% of computer users do not need Microsoft Office. If you say you "need it", you'll need to have a very good argument to convince me.

Instead you should be using the free as in freedom, free as in free beer "Openoffice.org" office suite. It's available for the Windows, MacOSX, GNU/Linux and Solaris operating systems.

Download it today and start using it. Kiss Microsoft Office goodbye forever and get off the treadmill of spending money on upgrades every time Microsoft introduces a new file format.

And if anyone sends you a ".docx" file, send it back!

If we can't turn off this cash sucking vaccuum cleaner, maybe we can at least put it on a lower setting.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

The EeePC ...a tool for labour and social activists!




A few months ago, I joined the "UMPC" (Ultramobile Portable Computer) revolution.

What's a UMPC? It's an ultra small portable notebook computer.

In the case of the "Asus EeePC" UMPC it weighs just under a kilo which means you can easily carry it anywhere. It fits very easily into a small handbag.

That opens up some incredible opportunities for labour and social activists. Labourstart's Eric Lee posted an article entitled "Ultra-portable laptops and the unions: A revolution in the making".

The Asus EeePC comes with three USB ports, an SD/MMC port (for camera cards), audio in and audio out jacks, a VGA out port for connecting the machine to a computer projector or external monitor, ethernet port (for wired network connections) and a built-in Wi-fi card for wireless networking.

The "onboard" storage is not that much (a four gigabyte flash drive), but honestly you don't really need any more then that for mobile use. If you do, CDN$10 buys you a one gigabyte USB thumb drive.

The model I have cost me CDN$350. But for an extra $50 there is a model that comes with a built-in web cam.

You will not find Microsoft's bloated "Windows" computer operating system on the Asus EeePC. Instead, you'll find a customized version of the "free as in freedom" GNU/Linux operating system.

GNU/Linux combined with the use of a flash drive, makes the Asus EeePC the fastest booting notebook computer I have ever seen in my life!

As for user software, you'll find just about everything you'll need for mobile computing, most of it free software as well.

Need to do write a quick report, do a spreadsheet or a presentation? You'll find "Open Office" pre-installed on the machine. An office suite is something that you typically don't find pre-installed on most Microsoft Windows machines. That costs extra.

If you're wanting to surf the net, the world's best web browser is already there...Mozilla Firefox.

For e-mail, you'll find Mozilla Thunderbird...which also by the way handles RSS feeds. If you use webmail services like Gmail and Yahoo mail, you'll find shortcuts to get you there very quickly!

Are you a user of instant messaging services? You'll find "Pidgin" at your disposal. The difference is that Pidgin handles about half a dozen instant messaging services in a single software programme! It's not necessary to have a different instant messaging programme for each service that you use.

For viewing photographs you'll find "Gwenview", for listening to music and streaming audio you'll find "AmaroK"...which blows "iTunes" out of the water! If you need to do a quick interview, just plug in a cheap computer microphone and use the onboard audio recording software.

Configuring wired or wireless networking connections is a couple of mouse clicks away with the built-in software.

While most of the installed user software comes from the "free software" world, a few programmes don't. "Skype", the best known "voice over IP" software comes pre-installed. So where ever you are, you can always keep in touch as long as you've got an internet connection.

We unfortunately also live in a world where most of the streaming audio and video formats used on the web are proprietary. Support for these formats is pre-installed on the Asus EeePC. You'll also find support for proprietary plug-ins like "flash" and "java".

Other computer manufacturer's like HP are in the process of releasing similar types of UMPC's.

How does this help labour and social activists?

Let's say you're at a union rally and you want to send some photos off to other activists. You just pop the memory card out of your digital camera, insert it into your Asus EeePC's card slot, and providing you've got some kind of internet connection you can attach the photo to an e-mail message and send it on it's merry way anywhere in the world!

The beauty of it is that you can send full-sized photos...not the little wee photos you typically see on "camera phones".

Our struggles are increasingly global in nature. Imagine being at a rally and being able to view photos from a similar event in another city within minutes!

Voice-over-IP services like Skype can also handle video conferencing. Someone from another part of the world can speak to your event from another continent!

Unions that have enough money to equip their staff with notebook computers often "ration" them. For the price of a "standard" Windows-powered notebook, a union can equip several staff with EeePC's. And that does not include the cost of user software like Microsoft Office, security software or IT staff to maintain the machines.

Instead of having IT staff constantly "fixing" things that are broken, they can be more creative and do things that help strengthen the union's technological capabilities.

The EeePC has attracted so much attention that a global online community has developed around it. Just go to eeeuser.com

The GNU/Linux computer operating system (which makes UMPC's possible) along with the many community built user programmes are a product of the social activism of free software pioneer Richard Stallman. In 1991 Stallman authored the "GNU General Public License" which created the environment where free software could flourish.

While Stallman's original concern back in the 1980's was about creating social solidarity amongst computer users, most of us are concerned about building solidarity between workers and the community at large over a wide range of issues.

So Stallman's "free software activism" can help fuel everyone else's activism. And we've now got the little machines to help us do it!

Monday, April 21, 2008

More Bell Canada misinformation on net neutrality

Bell Canada, is in classic corporate spin master mode now that their so-called "traffic shaping" practices have been exposed for all the world to see.

Rule number one of corporate spin...confuse people!

Writing on his blog on IT World Canada, Mirko Bibic does an excellent job disecting Bell's corporate speak here. The comments from posters are also very informative.

He even goes so far as to suggest that a new nationalized company (what we in Canada call a "crown corporation") be setup to manage the telephone line infrastructure.

"We can give Bell a simple choice.

One option would be for this last mile infrastructure to be spun off into a separate company that would then become a crown corporation. Bell can even be given a contract to manage the services of this company for a 10 year period, after which it would be open to competition or to employees of this new crown corporation. With a separate corporate structure, Bell Canada would clearly no longer be able to allege that they “own” this infrastructure, or claim they can manage it any way they see fit.

Another option would be to allow Bell to retain ownership of this infrastructure, as long as they paid a rental fee at a fair price for the right of way, as well as returning any government subsidies — including interest over the last 50 years. We would be fair and only backdate this for 50 years, even though they have received privileges for far longer. It would be clarified that the Crown Corporation would still be created, and while historical right-of-way would be grandfathered, it would be this new Crown Corporation that would own any new last-mile infrastructure."


In the Canadian federal election campaign of 1972, New Democratic Party leader David Lewis ran a populist campaign against "The Corporate Welfare Bums". With all of the special rights of way that Bell Canada has obtained over the last century to lay it's cables, poles and other equipment, I think that Bell is the sort of corporation that David Lewis was referring to!

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Rambling thoughts on receiving an e-mail hoax

E-mail has been around for about thirty years. E-mail hoaxes and "urban legends" have been zipping around the internet for almost as long.

If you've been using e-mail for the past decade or so, you can easily spot them. They're the messages that tell you to forward them to "everyone you know".

In the past they were usually about computer viruses for which there was "no known cure". Mind you it's been a few years since I've seen one of these.

There are 70,000 "real" items of malware circulating in the wild for the Microsoft Windows operating system. For the free software GNU/Linux and even the non-free MacOSX operating system, there are but a handful. It seems there might be a solution there.

I've seen e-mail hoaxes about supposed missing children. Again there are "real" missing children. Sometimes they are drafted as "child soldiers" in various civil wars around the world or they're sold into prostitution. Millions more die of starvation, disease and malnutrition. These children are all very real.

The most recent e-mail "hoax" that I received was about supposed HIV infected syringes being placed on the inside of gas station (filling station if you're in the UK!) pump handles.

Again, my "handy dandy bs-o-meter" was reading full scale.

So, upon receipt of this message, I quickly entered this info along with the word "hoax" into my search terms in Google Search. Naturally I found out that this was another in a long line of urban legends. In fact this one has been circulating around the net for seven or eight years. I wonder why it took so long for me to receive this particular hoax?

But again there is a very real HIV/AIDS problem in the world. In Africa HIV/AIDS has reached pandemic proportions and whole generations of people in villages, towns and cities are being wiped out. Millions are dying and those with the power to take action have done very little to stop the pandemic.

Stephen Lewis, former leader of the Ontario New Democratic Party, former Canadian Ambassador to the United Nations, most recently held the post of UN Special Envoy on HIV/AIDS in Africa.

When you hear Lewis speak, you can't help but notice the absolute sense of frustration and moral outrage at how little has been done in response to the crisis.

So the next time you receive a message that asks you to "send it to everyone you know"... don't. Do a quick "Google" to see if it's "real" or a "hoax".

More importantly, take a few minutes and give some thought to the "big picture" and what might be done about it.

Upon reflection, you might want to compose a message about these very real problems and send it to all of your friends. That would be very worthwhile.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Stop The Throttler!


The campaign against Bell Canada and Rogers attempts to control how Canadians access the internet is picking up steam!

You can sign the online petitions to the CRTC and House of Commons at "Campaign for Democratic Media".

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Brazil: 430,000 voting terminals to run GNU/Linux!

There will be no "dimpled chads" or other voting irregularities in this year's election in Brazil.

Brazil's Tribunal Superior Eleitoral (Brazilian Election Supreme Court) will be moving all 430,00 of their voting terminals to the GNU/Linux operating system and the machines will run free and open source software (FOSS). Currently Brazil's election computers run a mix of "Microsoft Windows CE" and "VirtuOS".

You can read about it here.

While I personally prefer the good old-fashioned "paper ballots" system we use here in Canada, if you're going to use computers it's best to use "free software".

Why free software?

It's because with free software you always have access to the source code or "recipe" used to create the software. You also have the freedom to change the software to make it do what you want it to do.

With proprietary software the source code is a corporate trade secret and you never know exactly what it's doing. And changing or altering the software in any way is forbidden.

That opens the door to the kind of electoral fraud we saw in the so-called "election" of George Bush II.

Since the election of Workers' Party candidate Inacio "Lula" da Silva as president in 2003, the Brazilian government has been a world leader in the adoption of free software in government. They see it as a means to both strengthen democracy and develop the national economy.

You can read more about it here.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Labour takes on "Net Neutrality"

I'm very pleased to see that the labour movement in Canada is beginning to take on the very important issue of "Net Neutrality".

Recently, James Clancy, president of the 340,000 member National Union of Provincial Government Employees (NUPGE) issued an open letter to the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) demanding an investigation into the so-called "traffic shaping" practices of Bell Canada and Rogers Communications.

What's "Net Neutrality"?

It's the very simple principle that no matter who you are or what your content is that your internet stuff travels through the vast network of cables and switches at the same speed as everyone elses.

Whether you are Google, Microsoft, Apple or "Joe & Mary's Blog About Their Pet Poodle", you are treated equally. That's supposed to be how the internet works. But in Canada it hasn't worked that way for quite some time.

First it was the cable internet service providers like Rogers that began so-called "traffic shaping" i.e. slowing down file sharing protocols like "bittorrent". They were very cagey about releasing info on these practices. It had to be pried out of them by bloggers and net activists.

Now Bell Canada has gotten in on the act, slowing down bittorrent traffic during so-called "peak periods". What makes it worse in Bell's case, is that they are not only throttling down their own customer's traffic, but also traffic on lines that are leased by third parties. So if you want to dump Bell Sympatico and go to an alternative DSL provider that doesn't throttle traffic, you're out of luck!

There's nothing particularly dastardly about using bittorrent. I use it myself for downloading copies of versions of the free software GNU/Linux computer operating system. It's the most efficient way to move large files around the internet.

Recently the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) began distributing an historical documentary television series on Canadian prime ministers using bittorrent.

So, our taxpayer-funded public broadcaster pushes out a television series on the net, but the internet service providers (ISP's) slow down your ability to grab the files. Nice how that works eh?

It's also important that the labour movement take this issue on because it was union members who were the very first victims of outright censorship by an ISP. In the summer of 2005, Telus blocked all of its customers access to a couple of websites operated by the Telecommunications Workers Union (TWU) during a labour dispute.

Of course in their ham handed stupidity, Telus not only blocked access to the union sites, they also blocked access to hundreds of other websites.

In the United States, where activists are miles ahead of Canada on this issue, Telus' net censorship was used as an example of what can happen without net neutrality legislation.

So how about dashing off an e-mail to your MP?

Or, given that our current government is only a non-confidence motion away from defeat, making it an election issue.

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Sit Down! Sit Down! Sit Down for Your Rights!

Okay first my apologies to Bob Marley or at least his spirit.

I've just returned from five weeks in Europe having spent time in Spain, France, Italy and the UK. It's nice to be returning at a time when winter is over and that meter high pile of snow in front of the house has pretty much melted away.

My hosts in the wonderful city of Bologna, Italy (more on that later!) were my old friends Judy and Larry Haiven and their son Omri. Inevitably, we ended up in the supermarket at the local shopping mall around the corner from their residence.

In Toronto, I work across the street from a "Great Canadian Superstore", one of those supermarkets that sells not only groceries, but also kitchenware, furniture, clothing, household items, has a pharmacy and an electronics store. So consequently I spend alot of time there. Also they're unionized by the United Food and Commercial Workers Union (UFCW) which allows me to shop there with a clear conscience.

In Bologna, the supermarket was of a similar size and carried pretty much the same types of items. It's also unionized.

But, there were two big differences! First of all, the supermarket in Bologna is a cooperative and I understand part of a chain of cooperative supermarkets that operates throughout northern Italy.

Secondly, unlike the folks who work across the street from me here in Toronto, the folks working the checkout counter in Bologna were all sitting down instead of standing. Their work stations were especially designed so that they could do their jobs seated and facing the customer. No standing, twisting and turning required as is the practice in this part of the world.

So is this "seated" checkout counter staff just a leftwing nuts and berries thing?

Not at all.

Later I spent a couple of weeks in London, England with my good friend Eric Lee, editor of the "Labourstart" global labour rights web portal.

We made quite a few visits to the local "Tesco" supermarket chain. Tesco is also unionized, but I understand is just as combative an employer as Walmart is here in North America. But again, the folks working the checkout counters were seated instead of having to stand. And my understanding is that this is the practice throughout Europe. Cashiers sit down on the job.

I'm sure some bean counting time and motion study person will come up with some bizarre rationale about why cashiers in North America have to stand. I'm also sure that the display on my handy-dandy "bs-o-meter" will be showing full scale! (By the way my "bs-o-meter" runs on free software!).

In any case Judy was much quicker on the draw and you'll find her blogpost on this issue here

Cashiers of the world unite! You have nothing to lose but your sore feet, legs and aching backs!