Video of Labor Goon
Slugging Labor Organizer
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The very essence of the slave system of
agriculture was that the owner of the land upon which the crops and animals
were grown had all the power and the people who worked on the farms had
none. After a long period of
relative freedom for workers, that state of affairs has very nearly been
restored in much of the United States with the blessings of the federal
government through its H-2A foreign guest worker program.
Nowhere is the current
imbalance of power better illustrated than in a video that was surreptitiously
shot by a worker on July 9 in North Carolina and then posted on YouTube by the
Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC) of the AFL-CIO. You can watch as the landowner stands casually with his hands
in his pockets in front of a group of foreign workers as a representative of
Stan EuryÕs North Carolina Growers Association (NCGA),
who looks like the reincarnation of Simon Legree,
himself, berates the workers.
About midway through the video, the NCGA rep,
Paul Saffle, who is speaking in Spanish that is only
faintly picked up by the video, begins to read the names of workers who have
sought assistance from the FLOC.
His purpose is clearly intimidation. Saffle takes
exception to some words by the union rep, Oscar Sanchez, an older, smaller man
who is standing about 20 feet to one side.
To reinforce his demand for silence from Sanchez, Saffle
strides over and punches him in the face.
We learn from FLOCÕs July 21 update of its earlier article that Saffle lost his job as a result of the incident. The episode, including the video, has
also been reported on the left-liberal gatekeeper web site, Buzzfeed, and the web site of
Democratic Socialists of America entitled Talking Union. The mainstream press has apparently
blacked out news of the incident, however.
We could find no mention of it on any of the web sites of North
CarolinaÕs newspapers or television stations. Without any such media pressure, itÕs a
pretty good bet that Saffle will not be charged with
assault by local law enforcement officials, when his guilt is patently obvious
from the video.
Missing News
Not even the three web sites that we found who
covered the incident raised the question of the criminality of SaffleÕs actions, nor did they mention the complicity of
the landowner standing at his side in apparent approval. BuzzfeedÕs
only contribution is to elaborate a bit further on what ÒprovokedÓ Saffle to act.
Like FLOC, they note that Sanchez corrected SaffleÕs
pronunciation of a name, but they note further that Sanchez asked, ÒWhat are
you going to fix, man? What are you
going to fix?Ó It was at that point
that Saffle showed that what he was going to fix was SanchezÕs
impertinence.
The biggest omission of all in the coverage
given to the incident is the failure to give us any background information on SaffleÕs employer, the NCGA. We would never know that the head of the
organization is under federal indictment for abusing the H-2B system for
non-farm workers and that, as I detail in ÒHas Obama Gone Bulworth
on Alien Smuggling?Ó, the NCGA has been guilty
of the same thing for years.
The FLOC coverage also conceals the connection
between the NCGA abuses and the situation that led up to the incident on the
video. The foreign workers had
sought assistance from FLOC because there was insufficient work for them to
make enough money even to feed themselves.
FLOC says it is because of the weather, but, in fact, the weather in
North CarolinaÕs tobacco regions has been excellent this year. The NCGA every year brings in far more
laborers than there is work for.
That is the very first item in the list supplied to me by an informant
in North CarolinaÕs Employment Security Commission (ESC), ÒNCGA would always
submit orders for the capacity of the farmer's camp. Many former cucumber
growers would have camps with 20-40 person
capacity. The farmer would actually be requesting less than half the camp
capacity, primarily for the highly mechanized tobacco crop.Ó
Par for the Course
If the surplus of workers and the hardship they
suffer is no aberration, one can be fairly certain that the abusive behavior
exhibited by Saffle—backed up by the
landowner—is no aberration, either.
The only aberration is that it happened to be filmed. Saffle acts
like a man who is used to getting by with such things. And, in a sense, he has gotten by with
it again. We are told by NCGA and
FLOC that he has resigned, but we can be pretty sure that a man with his
demonstrated talents will be able to find work in todayÕs farm and immigration
environment, if, in fact, NCGA has not already just transferred him to Mexico.
The worst thing that the episode tells us, if
the reporters on it do not, is that the NCGA, in spite of the federal
indictment of Stan Eury and his daughter in January,
is continuing to get by with what it does.
Just this past April, the Associated Press rewarded it with what we called
an ÒInfomercial,Ó which praised the
organization as the holder of the key to solve AmericaÕs (imaginary) farm labor
problem. That widely distributed
article, like the current website coverage of the slugging incident, made no
mention of the Eury indictment. The NCGA is also continuing to get by
with abusing foreign workers as shown by the complete blackout by the
mainstream press of this recent documented assault of a union man that puts one
in mind of scenes from Matewan, Norma Rae, or
On the Waterfront.
The great continuing excuse for the abusive
program—whose biggest abuse is its contribution to the illegal alien
problem—is that the imported workers are brought here to do the jobs that
Americans wonÕt do. To be sure, they wonÕt
do them for the wages and slave-like conditions under which the imported
workers are expected to labor. In
case the bad conditions were not enough, one of the federal charges against Eury is that he instructed employers on tailoring their
worker requests so that American workers would not apply for the jobs.
As contrary to the common good as EuryÕs NCGA has proved to be, and with the federal
indictment hanging over his head, job orders approved by the ESC for NCGA this
year are at a record high, according to my ESC informants. ThatÕs something else we wonÕt learn
from the web sites covering the assault incident or from the mainstream media.
David Martin
July 29, 2014
See also ÒH-2A Kingpin Stumbles on
H-2B.Ó
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