Talk - Listen - Collectivise
I want to tell you
more. The other conversations I had, the follow-ups, the mystery
chef, the Polish supervisor who felt so humiliated by her work that
she'd stopped telling her friends and family back home what she was
doing, still cleaning, still below the London Living Wage, five years
on..
More about sitting
alone in the canteen and withdrawing, feeling the silence and
isolation and being too exhausted to speak.
Falling asleep out with
friends at pub tables. Turbo coffee in the morning followed by too
much sugar....How hand cream is vital, how you can never change any
bedsheets or clean anything at home without having flashbacks of what
you've been doing over a dozen times a day and slipping into
automatic...getting thin..getting out of touch with news..unable to
read...sleeping on the tube...backache....dreaming about getting out
of this...
I know how to organise.
But it's difficult. There are some easy aspects to remember though,
for all of you reading this and wanting to change your situation at
work.
Organising is about
relationships. Organising is about building trust. Organising
requires patience and perseverance. Get used to failure. But prepare
for success. And the need for movement-building and solidarity
outside the workplace.
But above all, the
first steps are this:
Talk – You
need to talk to people. You need to break the ice, break the
isolation. There is a misguided view that we can organise through
social media. Social media is an amplifier rather than an instigator.
Most of us, as we know, are not on twitter! It's a privileged medium
for those with smartphones and the time to look at them. I know we
don't when we're rushing all over rooms, often with no reception or
wifi. To be 'plugged in' to that speed-network, you need the time and
tools to scan it, work it and benefit from it. You can strike up a
conversation at reception (carefully), in the kitchen, on break, in the smoking
area, in the locker room, in the lift. Anywhere you have time to see
each other. Share a tea. Tea is one of the greatest social lubricants
of all time! Revolutions are plotted over cuppas...
Listen – This
is the big one. The most important part of any organising. After
striking up conversations, we need to listen to what people have to
say. It's common to want to vent, to go on and fill silence, but, we
need to hear from people. We know it's rare for us to really share
our feelings and our ideas about work and whether we can change our
situation. But that process starts with hearing each other out. How
are we doing?....And remember what people tell you, remember it
because you'll hear the same issues from many different people and we
need to recognise and reflect what we've got in common.
Collectivise –
Nine times out of ten if you're feeling it, someone else is too. If
it's your problem, it's a shared problem. The same problems repeat
themselves, because they are un-addressed, because they are products
of exploitation and oppressive behaviour, and unresolved they soon become
systemic and structural and cultural. Like bullying, stress,
pressure, low pay, self-cut as well as management cut breaks, unpaid
overtime. These unfair conditions become normalised. 'That's just how it
is' we tell ourselves and the intensity of our work exhausts and
isolates us. 'It'll never change' we think.
But it can. And it does
(remember New York). Especially when we work for some of the
wealthiest, most profitable and constant companies in the world. They
need us. Remember that. We make their money. We make the operation
tick over. It's common for people to focus on their own individual
issues and problems because our dominant culture teaches us we're
alone. Mass individualism means we've lost the ability to think and
act and take decisions collectively. We need to re-learn collective
action but it is natural, co-operation is the cornerstone of society,
and contrary to Thatcher's assertion that there is no such thing as
society, only the individual, we are social. Take a problem it, share
it. Got an individual grievance? Collectivise it. See and feel that
you're in it together. Act together. Support each other. Stick
together. That's a union.
So, as I keep on
cleaning, agitating, and organising (: I want to give this space over
to other people, working for the same hotel, as well as in the same hotel chain,
in Housekeeping as well as other departments to take up their voice.
This 'aint my last
word. I'm stepping back to let my
colleagues step in. Stay with us. We're stepping it up....
Absolutley!
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DeleteYeah, don't ask me who plays this, I really don't know!
Maybe Reddit users??
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ReplyDeleteYeah, take with a pinch of salt path. Also the test isn't that reliable, don't be surprised if it ends up calling a fascist a communist!
ReplyDeleteAdorno wrote that fascist propaganda encourages identification with an authoritarian personality characterized by traits such as obedience and extreme aggression.[4]: 17
DeleteI mean, this in my mind is enough to know!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3_ECxQv-GL0
DeleteThe Solntsevskaya gang was founded in Russian SFSR in the late 1980s by Sergei Mikhailov, a former waiter who had served a prison term for fraud. Based in the Solntsevo District of Moscow, the gang recruited local unemployed, aggressive young men as foot soldiers and also made use of thief in law Dzhemal Khachidze to enhance their reputation amongst established criminals.
DeleteIn the 1990s, the Solntsevskaya dispatched Vyacheslav Ivankov to Brighton Beach, New York City, and Mikhail Odenussa to Atlanta, Georgia, to take control of the Russian mob activities there. The FBI was alerted to Ivankov's presence, however, and after a long investigation he was arrested and convicted of extortion, becoming the first thief-in-law to be convicted in the United States. While Ivankov was not as successful, his counterpart Odenussa has been controlling Russian organized crime in Atlanta for over 20 years, while avoiding prosecution. Odenussa has had a firm grip on the city, with an army of killers to back him up. Although not as large as the drug cartels of Mexico that have sent men to try and set up shop in Atlanta, Odenussa and his cohorts have out-gunned the Mexican drug cartels and the African American gangs in Atlanta.[7] The Solntsevskaya have also been active in Israel, primarily using it as a base for money laundering. But attempts to infiltrate Israeli politics were countered by vigilant law enforcement.[8]
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DeleteAccording to the US, as published during the 2010 Wikileaks scandal, the Solntsevo gang continues racketeering operations under the protection of the FSB, a Russian state security agency.[12] In September 2017, Arnold Tamm was arrested in Marbella, Spain, during the Spanish operation Oligarch (Spanish: operación Oligarca) under suspicion of tax evasion, money laundering, and involvement in the activities of the Solntsevskaya group.[13][14][15][16][17]
Deletehttps://tbcarchives.org/solntsevskaya-fbi/
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DeleteWell, nobody's perfect!
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DeleteDefector Ion Mihai Pacepa claimed that Joseph Stalin coined the term disinformation in 1923 by giving it a French sounding name in order to deceive other nations into believing it was a practice invented in France. The noun disinformation does not originate from Russia, it is a translation of the French word désinformation.[7][8]
DeleteLt. General Ion Mihai Pacepa stated that operation "SIG" ("Zionist Governments"), devised in 1972, intended to turn the whole Islamic world against Israel and the United States. KGB Chairman Yuri Andropov allegedly explained to Pacepa that
Deletea billion adversaries could inflict far greater damage on America than could a few millions. We needed to instill a Nazi-style hatred for the Jews throughout the Islamic world, and to turn this weapon of the emotions into a terrorist bloodbath against Israel and its main supporter, the United States[12]
The current Russian intelligence service, the SVR, allegedly works to undermine governments of former Soviet satellite states like Poland, the Baltic states,[18] and Georgia.[19] During the 2006 Georgian-Russian espionage controversy, several Russian GRU case officers were accused by Georgian authorities of preparations to commit sabotage and terrorist acts.[citation needed]
DeleteThe highest-ranking Soviet Bloc intelligence defector, Lt. Gen. Ion Mihai Pacepa claimed to have had a conversation with Nicolae Ceaușescu, who told him about "ten international leaders the Kremlin killed or tried to kill": László Rajk and Imre Nagy from Hungary; Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu and Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej from Romania; Rudolf Slánský and Jan Masaryk from Czechoslovakia; the Shah of Iran; Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, President of Pakistan; Palmiro Togliatti from Italy; John F. Kennedy; and Mao Zedong. Pacepa also discussed a KGB plot to kill Mao Zedong with the help of Lin Biao organized by the Soviet intelligence agencies and alleged that "among the leaders of Moscow's satellite intelligence services there was unanimous agreement that the KGB had been involved in the assassination of President Kennedy."[20]
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DeleteSorokin was born on January 23, 1991, in Domodedovo, a working-class satellite town south of Moscow, Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, in the Soviet Union.[4] Her father, Vadim, worked as a truck driver and her mother owned a small convenience store. In 2007, when Sorokin was 16, her family relocated to North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. There, her father became an executive at a transport company until the company became insolvent in 2013. He then opened an HVAC business specializing in efficient energy use. Sorokin's mother was a housewife.[5] Sorokin attended the Bischöfliche Liebfrauenschule Eschweiler (Episcopal School of Our Lady of Eschweiler), a Catholic grammar school in Eschweiler. Peers said she was quiet and struggled with the German language.[5] As a young adult, Sorokin obsessively followed Vogue, fashion blogs, and image accounts on LiveJournal and Flickr.[6]
DeleteAfter graduating from the school in June 2011, Sorokin moved to London to attend Central Saint Martins, an art school, but soon dropped out and returned to Germany.[6] In 2012, she briefly interned at a public relations company in Berlin. Sorokin then relocated to Paris, where she earned around €400 per month at an internship for Purple, a French fashion magazine.[7] Sorokin did not contact her parents often, but they subsidized her rent.[5][6][7] Around that time, Sorokin began using the name "Anna Delvey", which she said was based on her mother's maiden name. Sorokin's parents, however, said they do not recognize the surname.[7]
DeleteMao Zedong I understand because he got a LOT of people killed but that's partly for being incompetent!
DeleteIn mid-2013, Sorokin traveled to New York City to attend New York Fashion Week. Finding it easier to make friends in New York than Paris, she opted to stay, transferring to Purple's New York office for a brief time.[7
DeleteNazi policies labeled centuries-long residents in German territory who were not ethnic Germans such as Jews (understood in Nazi racial theory as a Semitic people of Levantine origins), Romani (an Indo-Aryan people originating from the Indian subcontinent, historically colloquially referred to derogatorily as "Gypsies"), along with the vast majority of Slavs (mainly ethnic Poles, Serbs, Ukrainians, Russians, Belarusians, etc.), and most non-Europeans as inferior non-Aryan subhumans (under the Nazi appropriation of the term "Aryan") in a racial hierarchy that placed the Herrenvolk ("master race") of the Volksgemeinschaft ("people's community") at the top.[1][2][3][4]
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
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