This Labor Day, celebrate America's job creators as well as our workforce
.Ask Americans what Labor Day means, and they'll likely say it marks the end of summer. One last chance to wear white and go for a swim before the pool is drained.
But as its name suggests, Labor Day was established to celebrate labor –- organized labor , to be more specific.
The idea for the holiday is often attributed to Peter J. McGuire, co-founder of the American Federation of Labor – the precursor to today's AFL-CIO. McGuire proposed establishing a holiday to honor those “who from rude nature have delved and carved all the grandeur we behold.”
He has a point. So today, let's honor the people responsible for that grandeur – namely, the profit-seeking entrepreneurs and business people who make our economy hum.
Since its inception, Labor Day has steadily shifted away from the more radical side of the labor movement.
When President Grover Cleveland declared Labor Day a national holiday in 1894, it was the result of the AFL's lobbying efforts. The union spent years working to make Labor Day a more moderate and popular alternative to May Day, which had become synonymous with radicalism and riots.
This year marks the 125th anniversary of Labor Day becoming a national holiday. What better way to mark the occasion than by embracing the holiday's moderate roots – and celebrating the pursuit of profit, alongside the dignity of work?
After all, profit allows businesses to create and sustain the jobs that Labor Day celebrates.
Consider that in 2018, corporate profits rose 7.8 percent, compared to 3.2 percent in 2017. Last year, companies added about 200,000 jobs per month, up from 179,000 in 2017. This past April, average hourly earnings were 3.2 percent higher than the year before. Unemployment hit a 50-year low the following month.
Since the mid-20th century, wage growth has helped propel Americans into higher income brackets. In fact, the middle class is actually shrinking, because an increasing number of people are making too much money to be considered middle class anymore.
Despite this progress, businesses leaders are reluctant to embrace the role that profit-seeking plays in improving society.
People like Warren Buffett and Bill Gates are apologizing for their success and calling for higher taxes. Just last month, nearly 200 CEOs from the Business Roundtable resolved that companies should focus more on helping society and less on generating profits for shareholders.
Businesses can most effectively serve workers and society by making money. Profit is patriotic.
Consider the impact the Great Recessions had on workers.
Employers laid off about 1.5 million workers in 2008 as companies declared bankruptcy and shut down. Unsurprisingly, a Gallup poll conducted the next year found that 31 percent of workers were worried about getting laid off.
Close to 60 percent thought it was unlikely they would be able to find "a job as good as the one they had" if they were laid off, according to a 2010 poll.
Compare that to 2016, when the recession had ended and business was booming. Only 19 percent of workers were worried about getting laid off, according to Gallup. Over 60 percent thought it was likely that they could find a good job if they were.
Similarly, a 2017 Pew poll found that half of workers thought "there were plenty of jobs available in their community," up from just 10 percent in 2010.
American workers are better off when companies are thriving. A steady stream of profits is far more effective at delivering wage growth, job security and employee satisfaction than even the toughest union negotiator.
This Labor Day, let's celebrate the pursuit of profit alongside workers. There's plenty of room at the barbecue.
This year marks the 125th anniversary of Labor Day becoming a national holiday. What better way to mark the occasion than by embracing the holiday's moderate roots – and celebrating the pursuit of profit, alongside the dignity of work?
After all, profit allows businesses to create and sustain the jobs that Labor Day celebrates.
Consider that in 2018, corporate profits rose 7.8 percent, compared to 3.2 percent in 2017. Last year, companies added about 200,000 jobs per month, up from 179,000 in 2017. This past April, average hourly earnings were 3.2 percent higher than the year before. Unemployment hit a 50-year low the following month.
Since the mid-20th century, wage growth has helped propel Americans into higher income brackets. In fact, the middle class is actually shrinking, because an increasing number of people are making too much money to be considered middle class anymore.
Despite this progress, businesses leaders are reluctant to embrace the role that profit-seeking plays in improving society. https://thenewstalkers.com/vic-eldred/group_discuss/6877/this-labor-day-celebrate-americas-job-creators-as-well-as-our-workforce
Happy Labor Day everyone!
Can't we honor working Americans one day without corporations horning in?
Some people so slavishly fawn over corporations that they have lost all perspective. Labor Day has nothing to do with praising corporations.
because we should never honor our employers and what they do to provide us the jobs , benefits, and wage increases we have. That’s why we celebrate labor now instead of May Day, to get away from extremist, riots, and socialism and to moderate the movement and be reasonable.
Please visit HD.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.foxnews.com/opinion/andy-puzder-us-economy-is-going-strong-despite-predictions-of-doom-and-gloom.amp
Why visit HD? If you want to say something to me say it here under the coc.
Ok.
They don't need to be honored. They get everything else.
Working Americans are also share holders and small business owners work hard as do stay at home moms and all deserve recognition for their efforts.
Has Mother's Day been cancelled?
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It took me a few minutes to get this one, but once I did...
Is that what you read?
Since you are going there...Only an abortion can cancel Mother’s Day, and Birthdays as well...
Since you brought it up, the labor movement fought to eliminate child labor, which many employers were very happy to exploit. I have to wonder how sending a child into a coal mine, exposed to the dangers of collapses, explosions, and black lung, squares with pro-life sentiments.
Meant as a reply to 3.2.1
Well happy Labor Day to you too.
What a fricking joke.
Labor Day is meant to recognize organized labor, not corporations.
What are you going to want to do next, celebrate divorce lawyers on Valentines Day ?
Now John - THAT's funny - "celebrate divorce lawyers on Valentines Day ?"
Thanks.
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LABOR DAY....It's self-explanatory and has nothing to do with celebrating corporations, XX...
It's labor that is being celebrated.
The Mohawks that built Manhattan.
The Longshoreman operating the crane on the waterfront docks.
The truck driver delivering the products you need to survive.
Working the fields so you can eat.
That what it's about.
Just like this ode to the working class...https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=uxZer1rX3jA
Did those of you who saw and listened to that pro working class song know that i-tunes actually rated that song as “explicit” in order to limit who could view/listen to it? More liberal social media/internet censoring of conservatives...
Save my seat, will ya Kav? I'm going to go re-reg and up this a few more times.
These Appalling Images Exposed Child Labor in America In 1900, 18 percent of all American workers were under the age of 16.
This is why we don't celebrate corporations when we celebrate Labor Day. Because Labor Day is about protecting workers, including children, from corporations, which have a history of exploitation.
I read that 20%, at least of income inequality is a result of lack of organized labor today. Our people are largely brainwashed along the lines of some of the anti union comments we are seeing on this thread.
And yet under our great and awesome President Trump, wages are increasing and they are growing fastest by percentage increase in the bottom 20% quintile of wage earners. Thank you Mr. President! 🇺🇸 Happy 😆 Labor Day 🎉🎊America!
Unions suck and I’m glad that I work in a union free environment.
Unions=Power, that's why I like them
Power by coercion...
Power for the middle class working people who otherwise would get pushed around and taken advantage of
I’m celebrating the recent FBI raids on the corrupt UAW leadership this Labor Day.
The raids included the homes of UAW President Gary Jones and former President Dennis Williams.
Seems like unions have a very checkered past, full of corruption.
And some folks want more people to feed the coffers?
LMAO!
Not to mention their racism and ties to organized crime...
and the FBI...
What’s with your vendetta against the FBI?
🎊🎉🇺🇸
Just like Charles Keating, Jeffery Skilling, Kenneth Lay and Johnathon Rigas...Oh wait, they're CEO's that went to jail for corruption and a couple bankrupted their corporations...The employees lost everything...
You mean those crooked CEO's....
Well, isn't that a spectacular deflection and not even in the same ball park of what he stated.
The article was about including small business owners, entrepreneurs, and investors in the celebration 🍾 🎊 🎉 of Labor Day. It had nothing to do with giant multinational corporations CEO’s.
BS. It excluded no one.
But for the record, the author was 100% correct when she said this holiday was about 'organized labor'.
The rest is just opinion.
I am surprised that you seeded it given her final sentiments.......
Praise be to the former Administration...
And then, there's this gem...
Well, duh. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Not spectacular enough a deflection for some..
actually you are wrong, it’s the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth in those words.
Not to mention the shareholders. You'd think the righties would at least care about them. Collateral damage I guess.
Uh, sure. Company profits don't have any effect on wages, growth, and job security.
/s
Bingo! 🎯
Unions actually protect management because they give worker some protection when they are done wrong, so they don't decide they have to do something bad because there is no other way to handle something they feel is intolerable
On this Labor day we need to understand 2 things. The first is that we are stronger together and need to support each other. Second, if we stick together the ruling classes will realize that they need us more than we need them.
Ruling class? Who are they?
The imaginary folks who some progressive liberals feel they must bow down to?
The secular progressive left imagine themselves becoming our ruling class and making us their subjects and compelling us to bow down to them.