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DESCRIPTION:Bread & Roses Labor History Story Telling with Retired Union Members\nCome 
 to share an inspiring labor event or leader in your life. It could be in 
 San Francisco or elsewhere in the U.S.A. or the world. Photos, news 
 clippings, prose, and poems are welcome. This will be an open regular 
 meeting of FORUM (Federation of Retired Union Members), an organization of 
 retirees affiliated with the San Francisco Labor Council. Retirees come 
 from a broad range of unions with members and workers in San Francisco. 
 FORUM supports alliances between working people and retired people to 
 preserve and improve health care, social security, and pension benefits.   
 Refreshments will be served.\n\nLaborfest began in 1993 to commemorate the 
 1934 general strike that made San Francisco a union town, and together with 
 the 1934 General Strikes in Minneapolis and Toledo, made possible in 1935, 
 the passage of the Social Security and Unemployment Insurance Act, and the 
 legalizing of the right to organize labor unions with the Wagner Act. See 
 \nhttps://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/ssb/v66n1/v66n1p1.html 
 \nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Labor_Relations_Act (Wagner Act) 
 \nFrom: \nhttps://laborfest.net/welcome/\nWELCOME TO LABORFEST 2019: 
 LESSONS OF OUR HISTORY FOR TODAY\nLaborFest this year celebrates the 85th 
 anniversary of the San Francisco General Strike. The 1934 General Strike 
 transformed San Francisco and the Bay Area into a strong union center in 
 the United States. It also allowed hundreds of thousands of workers to join 
 unions because of the collective power of the working people. We remember 
 the two strike supporters Nicholas Bordoise and Howard Sperry who were 
 killed by the police during the strike. We will also look at the history of 
 the 1919 general strike in Seattle and other cities in the US. Today, for 
 the first time in decades, some union leaders, including the CWA AFA 
 president Sarah Nelson, are calling for another general strike against the 
 attacks on Federal workers and the entire working class.\n\nThis has also 
 become the year of the teacher. Working people are on the move. For the 
 first time in US history, hundreds of thousands of teachers, including in 
 Oakland and Los Angeles, have been in the streets fighting for their rights 
 and their students for a decent public education. We will have events with 
 teachers looking at the fight to defend public education and the threat of 
 privatization through billionaire-funded charters throughout San Francisco 
 and California.\n\nWorking people are also organizing in San Francisco, 
 including Anchor Steam workers, healthcare workers, and the VCA 
 veterinarian workers. The need for unions is greater than ever, and despite 
 efforts to stop workers from organizing, workers continue to join 
 unions.\n\n\nSan Francisco has become the center of the tech world with the 
 growing presence of billionaires. At the same time, workers are being 
 evicted and driven out of San Francisco, but also the entire Bay Area. 
 Working people in the gig economy are being marginalized, and their living 
 conditions are being threatened as outsourcing and privatization destroy 
 education and public service jobs. Robots, artificial intelligence, and 
 information technology is being used to eliminate potentially millions of 
 workers in our disposable society and increase the temporary workforce. 
 This dystopian world, with billionaires being created by IPO’s while 
 gridlock and homelessness grow is the stark face of San Francisco and the 
 US.\n\nLaborFest 2019 will focus on many of these issues during the month 
 of July. We will have panels on the effect of tech, like UBER and Lyft on 
 drivers and also on Taxi drivers.\n\nWe will have our annual labor maritime 
 boat trip on Bastille Day, July 14, 2019, with music, dinner and stories 
 about the history of labor in Northern California in the past and our 
 issues today. We will also commemorate the building of the Transcontinental 
 Railroad and the labor strikes of Chinese workers who were brought to the 
 US by the owners to do the work.\n\nLaborFest will have our annual 
 international film festival with lessons for union and worker struggles 
 here and throughout the world. We will have films from Japan, Norway, South 
 Africa, and South Korea. We will again have poetry and music raising our 
 voices in our struggles.\n\nWe will also look at the attack on journalists 
 and press freedom in San Francisco and around the world, and the right of 
 working people to know what is really happening as media monopolies and 
 social media companies try to censor and control information.\n\nThe vital 
 need to look at our history and link it with our present struggle for 
 survival is what LaborFest has done for 26 years.\n\nIn Solidarity,\nFrom 
 The LaborFest Organizing Committee\nSee 
 also:\nhttps://laborfest.net/event/bread-roses-labor-history-story-telling-with-retired-union-members/\nhttps://laborfest.net/\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/06/15/18823978.php
SUMMARY:Laborfest: Labor History Story Telling
LOCATION:San Francisco Labor Council, 1188 Franklin, #203, SF\nBuses: 1 (Sacramento 
 to Franklin), 2 & 3 (Sutter to Franklin), 38 Geary to Franklin, 47 and 49 
 (Van Ness to Geary).
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/06/15/18823978.php
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