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Is it better to skip work entirely or go and just goof off? Probably the former?
No call no show sends a stronger message if you're privileged enough to be able to do that. If not, call in sick. Or go-slow all day. Do what you can.
My European mind can't comprehend this. Strikes are a right for every single worker, even the most unprivileged ones (with very few exceptions for public safety reasons)
To elaborate on the situation in The Netherlands: You can only strike when certain conditions are met. In short, you use it as a final measurement to force your employer to change something if other less radical measurements were ineffective.
In this case, most employers have absolutely no influence over whatever ICE does, so I'd highly doubt a strike would be 'allowed' for something like this over here in The Netherlands.
It's illegal not to show up to work? I mean on the picket line maybe. But a general strike is more about not showing up than demonstrating. What are they going to send soldiers house to house and force you to go to work at the point of a bayonet?
Employees striking illegally or unauthorized can first of all have their pay withheld (which sounds obvious, but is very rare in The Netherlands). Second of all, they can be forced to pay damages to their employer. And as an extreme measure, their employment contract may be terminated without being able to collect government unemployment benefits later.
That does all seem rather plausible ways to get fucked. If the strike was really general they couldn't do that to everyone, but if it fizzled out they could. At least your government is not trying to create the fourth reich at the moment, albeit they are sucking enough that the 4th reich aligned far right can run as reform on fake populism and win, then all bets are off.
Like nurses, firefighters... but that's exactly fucking why you have multi-industry unions. So when nurses need a raise, engineers can strike on their behalf.
This is why every time deregulation in general comes up, I suggest we start with the Taft-Hartley act.
Holy shit, even overriding a presidential veto for that shit. Imagine if Congress had balls like that today.
The last time was with Trump
But even in Europe you can get backlash for it especially in a very small business. That's why it only really works when it's organised and everyone is participating.
So like... a general strike? :)
Where in Europe? General strikes are illegal in Germany
I'm from Italy. Here general strikes are common. I know that France also goes strong on strikes.
I'm surprised they're illegal in Germany. You should fight to change that.
They should have a general strike demanding the right to general strikes.
I don't see how it's enforceable, you don't have to picket, just no one shows up for work at that same time, what are they going to do?
Technically they are not illegal here - they are just not protected under the (very strong) strike protection laws.
So workers in Germany could go into general strikes but they would not be covered by strike law and therefore just absent from work. Which of course is an issue - but in case of a proper general strike, what are they gonna do, fire everyone? Especially in times when there are countless positions open?
So one would only get into trouble work wise,but not otherwise - one would not get arrested, cannot get sued (besides a very limited scope worklaw wise),etc. Only certain kind of civil servants (similar but not as common as the Pubblico Impiego in Italy) will get in trouble if they go on strike. E.g. cops, fireman, teachers, municpial clerks (but not muncipial workers and not all kind of clerks),etc.
Which I find somewhat fair as our strike protection laws are far reaching (afaik even a bit further than in Italy) and the employer is often as fucked by politics as the staff. So it's a somewhat tradeoff I personally can live with. (Seen from my time as an employee. These days I am a small employer,but as left as ever,and from a employers point of view wouldn't care to much - but the nature of my business supports it.)
People who can strike should also go to places of work that people can't and contribute to sit-ins and slowdowns.
Yeah, I’m in.
Is there no union or organization locally that you can ask? Protest isn't an individual action, it's a social organized action, so you ideally should get involved with local orgs or your work's union for this
Oh, that's an idea. Unfortunately my work has no union. Tech is full of rugged individuals.
Good moment to join a union by yourself (and/or a socialist org like the PSL) and ask or directly organize yourself together with such orgs!
Depends where you work, I suppose.