America’s unions are gentrifying
Will that reverse their decline?
The weather in Los Angeles on December 1st was unusually dull, with rain drizzling down and a chill in the air. This perhaps helped to explain the relatively low energy of the picketers on strike at UCLA’s campus. Instead of listening to rousing speeches, graduate students milled around, chatting to one another. In the centre of the crowd organisers had set up a projector screen showing a video conference, which almost nobody was watching. And yet the strikers are clear about what they want. “People work 60-80 hours a week, you know, in total,” said Sammy Feldblum, a geography PhD student among the picketers. “And all we’re asking for is that we should be able to live in an apartment…reasonably close to the university. We’re not asking for anything crazy.”
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Picket lines and poké”
United States December 17th 2022
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- What to make of the Twitter Files?
- Why catalytic-converter theft has soared in America
- Axe-throwing may be the friendliest new sport in America
- A city experiments with paying people not to be annoying
- E-cigarette taxes may reduce teenage drink-driving deaths
- Republicans should leave Hunter Biden to his painting, and the Justice Department
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