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Glen Thomson's avatar

Interesting read. Thank-you.

I'm going to go on for a bit. Five minute read, if you've got the time...

When I began teaching in 1988 I had to join the teachers union. At first I was baffled by all the attention given to equity, social justice, democratic processes, etc. There was a constant flow of information. Before I was a teacher unions were nothing to me.

But as I got more into it I realized that a main task of the teacher's union, beyond preserving and promoting good teaching practice, was to create a professional association that was representative of the diversity of its members. I watched the process of merging the men's arm of the public teachers union - the OPSTF - with the women's arm - FWTAO. It was a critical step in being more representative of the diversity of teachers within similar working conditions. (We're not all the way there; Catholic Teachers remain in a separate union, as do francophone teachers and Secondary School teachers.)

"Stronger together" was the idea that kept it moving forward. Nowadays, within ETFO organization, as in any union, there are committees that grapple with equity and issues surrounding various cultural or special interest sub-groups within the organization. The ETFO annual general meeting, for me, was a fascinating look into the complexity of a large professional union that was striving to represent all its members.

It was complex, it was not simple, it took a lot of work, and it was maddening to repeatedly deal with governments that would try to work against the union for political reasons. The fact that all teachers were not working in a single union made it frustrating. I've seen the Divide and Conquer strategy used against groups many times. I worked through all three parties NDP, Liberal, and PC -- in one way or another the gov't would end up looking to the teachers for concessions.

Withdrawing my labour was never anything I thought about seriously, until through my union community I saw my fellow workers in a different light. It didn't matter who they were or their background, or even their political beliefs; what mattered was we are in this together and we will stand up for our working situation - together.

Back to your article. If we can figure out how to create a bigger umbrella to represent working people from all sectors and professions, from all cultural mixes, I would say it is possible. But it will take a lot of effort! There will need to be an entirely new message and new approach, as alluded to in your article.

Where are the strong leaders who can prepare and inspire and lead the way, and where is the possibility of a political party ever wrapping its head around this challenge?

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Greg Basham's avatar

The questions posed need to drive policy proposals yet in today's climate of rage, instant judgment and rise of right wing populism, policy advocacy is taking a back seat.

However, there are groups in Canada that promote a fairer society with ideas that can form the basis for economic justice. Generation Squeeze, UBI Works, Centre for the Future of Work, Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives to name a few but other than snippets on TV, the very people who could benefit from initiatives don't get involved.

All these groups get little traction or they lead with ideas like tax the value of the home that strike fear in the hearts of homeowners who've lived in the same bungalow since the 70s in cities like Vancouver where the property values due to scarcity have massively increased with no fault of their own.

When I mention to people well off like myself that a guaranteed basic income is needed, all I hear is it will produce lazy people or more drug addicts despite studies showing its not true but it will give youth a leg up on paying for education or pursuing their life's interests and passions with the goal of reducing poverty and stopping the flow into homelessness.

A key for me is that you can never solve problems unless you understand the underlying issues and how we got to where we are in Canada where younger generations pay more in tax collectively than prior generations.

While it's true for many that hard work will stay get you to success, the reality that with housing costs relative to incomes, the young middle income earners will continue to struggle as no one foresaw the day when incomes wouldn't keep pace with housing costs.

The decline in union power globally corresponds nicely with the flatlining of real income growth combined with the freer movement of labour and capital to low cost countries.

The irony of the attacks on the federal government in Canada is that the Liberal Party policy conventions and MPs believe in a basic income but currently it'd be a tough sell right now. It will require a strong NDP to promote that.

The political discourse right now is rage and foreign interference. Ironically, foreign actors who want to disturb and disrupt western democracies can take a break now in Canada as we're doing it to ourselves.

There are appearances on TV at times with those with bold forward thinking ideas yet it's like trying to start an old gas lawn mower where it sputters but never starts. Amanda Lang on Taking Stock did a show on income levels recently yet after 30 minutes it's gone. The wrong stuff hits the news and gets legs.

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