Wednesday, April 15, 2015

It's Hardship Is It's Possibility

It is the complex issues of economics, politics, and energy in relation to union labor that makes our jobs as front line union organizers very hard. How are we to frame these conversations when many of the workers who do the work see them as a threat to their very livelihood? Are we that desperate of a people that we can stare directly into the face of mass corporate greed and welcome the disaster? Our state of Kentucky is called a Commonwealth? Who holds this Wealth in common?

Many labor leaders would not touch this conversation and the Democratic Party in Kentucky evades this conversation like the plague. Have we as a people lost control? Have we as a people allowed the industry to dictate to us the results of their profit? How Orwellian can we get with names like "Friends of Coal” “Environmental Protection Agency?” If these names are correct in their suggestion then, what is an environment? Is coal part of the environment? What are the actions that make the activists? What is a Friend?

When I speak my mind at work and with my fellow railroaders, some who have relocated their families to Louisville, Kentucky because of the coal industry, I ask these sorts of questions.

Are the streets of Corbin, KY paved in gold? What did the coal and railroad industry leave to Irvine / Ravenna? We give them a mountain and railroad tracks and they give us what? If a “friend” takes all your stuff and then leaves you with a big mess, is this “friend” an asshole? After posing questions such as those, then I strike up conversation about corporations being allowed to be considered by law... people. Is it ok, for people to poison a river? Is it ok for people to make billions of dollars while people live in poverty? These are questions that are pretty easy to approach, No?  Is there a God? Is there Globe warming?

How long are We The People going to” hang around the smokin' pole” talking like an atheist and a born again Christian in a duel of faith? Or are we going to say.. NO it's not ok to kill the river! NO it’s not ok to make billions while others suffer! NO it is not ok as people who live on a planet to accept the terms dictated to them by industry. An industry that has no exit plan, except to profit until the cows come home... and then leave, and then move on to the next disaster. Is it ok to fracture the earth and then pump millions of gallons of who knows what into it? The conversations about the “big picture” are going on and on and on and on. So far this has been the terms of the engagement.  

Personally, I believe that the left is approaching the conversation in a way that is causing some of the problem. The conversation has been framed in such a way to keep us as people divided. My very close friend Alonzo Johnson is a Peace Maker with the Presbyterian Church and we have had deep conversations in the past about people who are speaking from a place of desperation.

What are we as a people so desperate of? What do we need? I have approached this conversation with part of the equation requiring a nonviolent approach. I have also approached this conversation suggesting that until we have the power as people to offer a viable alternative to the situation, we must speak from a place that includes that reality. Be us “climate activists” or the “people in labor”. And in this conversation we as people should know that we are allowing the "industry" all the resources of government and media to make this decision for us. We as a people have lost power and have little or no control.

Personally, I do not believe in “climate change”, but I am also not a climate change denier. The words that have been selected for us to describe what we are talking about in my opinion are somewhat causing part of the problem. We as a people are being forced to frame the conversation in such a way that we might as well be building the scaffold and tying our own rope around our necks. Words are very limited in their ability to convey the seriousness of the situation. We must understand the terms of the engagement, the rules of the match. Strategy is a game and a means to an end.

I admit, I don't know what to do, and my heart aches thinking about the wars that are being fought for the oil industry. My heart sinks when I think about the fact that the Ohio River has been determined to be the dirtiest river in the USA. I am torn when I operate a train that hauls a commodity that is causing the river to be contaminated. Steel, coal, fracking chemicals and fertilizers to name a few.


It is in fear of a great hypocrisy or the possibility of one that I write and seek out big voices and great minds. I also feel somewhat responsible and do not want to be complicit. Especially if that word is taken to mean what the dictionary defined it to be, "involved with others in an illegal activity or wrongdoing."

I was tasked as Co-Chair of my organization Railroad Workers United to set the tone of our “The Future of Railroads: Safety, Workers, Community and the Environment” conference held in Richmond, California, March 14th and then again in Olympia, Washington on the 21st. We called out for endorsements from all community groups including environmental, labor, civic and elected government. I was fearful for my organization. Railroad Workers United is an organization of railroad workers from all across North America. The issues facing economic-energy policy are somewhat toxic to the normal state of union politics.



I needed serious words, so I sought out the words of Kentucky's own Wendell Berry to help set this tone. The biggest voice I know of and the voice of someone who is not afraid to tackle serious issues mindfully. Someone who is not afraid to go against the current set of rules. Someone who has gone to great lengths to stand up for controversial positions even at the risk of pissing off his own base. I got by way of his Berry Center a poem called "The Vision." What I got was a promise and somewhat of an inspiration that still moves me to tears.

I was so moved, and in labor union language that is the beginnings of resolution, but as written in Mr. Berry's poem "it's hardship is it's possibility."

As I write this article, Greenpeace activists have occupied an oil rig on its way to the arctic and another organization, The Backbone Campaign, which partnered with us to host our conference, is organizing a flotilla to join the protest. I am fearful for their safety. And in Conclusion... I am inspired, but scared and mindful of the complexity of the issues at hand.

John Paul Wright
Co-Chair
Railroad Workers United
Locomotive Engineer








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