What A Day - A Historic Strike Ends At Nabisco
Episode Date: September 22, 2021In defiance of Texas’ new abortion law, one doctor in the state claimed he performed an abortion. On Monday, two men, neither of whom are in Texas, filed the first lawsuits under the law against tha...t doctor.More than 1,000 Nabisco employees across five states will begin to return to work following a weeks-long strike. It was the first strike at the company in something like 52 years. And in headlines: President Biden delivered his first address to the UN, the Biden administration continues to face backlash for its treatment of Haitian migrants on the southern border, and Instacart workers ask customers to delete the app.For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
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It's Wednesday, September 22nd. I'm Gideon Resnick.
And I'm Josie Duffy Rice. And this is What A Day, the podcast that is only a few weeks
away from successfully bearing all memories of the haunted phrase horse dewormer.
I will never think about deworming. I will never think about horses ever again. And that's
a sacrifice that I'm making for everybody else to not think about horses ever again. And that's a sacrifice that I'm making
for everybody else to not think about horses because they're nice.
On today's show, we recap President Biden's first address to the U.N.,
plus an educator in Oregon protests vaccine mandates using blackface,
and the outcome is predictably terrible.
Dear Lord. But first, let's start by giving listeners a lay of the land on threats to
reproductive rights in the U.S. So much has happened recently that could upend access to
abortion across the country, and the legal landscape is going to be really important
to watch and understand. So Josie, let's start off with some news about Texas's new anti-abortion law.
Sure. So here's a quick reminder about the law. It basically gives any person the right to sue
anyone who, quote, performs, induces, or aids and abets an abortion once a, quote,
fetal heartbeat in an embryo can be detected. That usually happens around six weeks of gestation, and in Texas, 80 to 90% of abortions
are after the six-week period.
And if their lawsuit is successful,
the defendant would have to pay the person
who brought the lawsuit at least $10,000,
though in theory it could be way more than that,
millions maybe.
This was basically a sneaky way
of the Texas legislature getting around Roe v. Wade
because the person actually getting the abortion can't be sued.
But a clinic receptionist could or the Uber driver who takes a person to that clinic or, of course, the doctor who performs the abortion.
Yeah. And so to that point in Texas, one person, a doctor, is being sued under this new law. Yeah.
The Washington Post published a piece by a man, Dr. Alan Braid, who said he
performed an abortion in Texas after the law was in effect. And on Monday, a man in Arkansas and
another one in Illinois filed the first lawsuits under the new Texas law against Dr. Braid.
Oscar Stille is the Arkansas guy who filed suit, and he is, and I'm quoting him here,
a disbarred and disgraced lawyer. He is currently
on house arrest after being convicted of tax evasion and conspiracy. But he says he's suing
because he believes people should follow the rule of law. He also said that he is not pro-life and
believes in a woman's right to choose, but he wanted the $10,000. Go scratch a lottery ticket or something instead, dude. And this part is something that really
struck you as insane, right? Look, I went to law school, so Gideon and lots of you listening
didn't have to. And I'm not going to bore you with the minutiae of legal doctrine,
but this law really contradicts one of the most fundamental parts of the American legal system, which is standing. It's like something you learn
about the third day of law school, right? It basically means that if you want to sue someone,
you have to be able to prove they harmed you specifically. So if Gideon steals money from
his brother, which he never would, would you, Gideon? No, I can't. Never. Or something,
you know, I can't come in and then sue Gideon.
He didn't harm me. So this is really basic stuff. But Texas's law throws that whole concept in the
trash. It basically lets anyone sue a random person or persons in Nowheresville, Montana,
or Maine or Missouri can sue someone in Texas under this law.
Yeah. And another concern about Texas's law
is that it could potentially be replicated elsewhere.
And that is something that you have been
especially watching for.
So where do things stand right now?
Well, it's not good.
In at least seven conservative states,
legislators have expressed interest
in passing legislation like Texas's.
And other laws that would restrict access to abortion
have been passed in around 20
states this year already. Conservative legislatures are rushing to pass these laws despite the fact
that Texas's law actually isn't popular with the public. A recent poll by Monmouth University
found that 70% of Americans disapprove of private citizens suddenly having the power to enforce the
law, and 62% of Americans actually believe that abortion should be either always legal or
legal with some minor limitations.
Unpopularity has not stopped Republicans before.
No, it really hasn't.
And looming over all of this is the Supreme Court, which is expected to take more action
as it relates to abortion rights soon.
Yeah, unfortunately, Gideon, that's right. So on Monday, the court announced that on December 1st,
they will hear a case concerning Mississippi's Gestational Age Act. This law outlaws almost
all abortion after 15 weeks gestation and has no exceptions for rape or incest, just like the Texas law. The law explicitly violates Roe v. Wade, which typically gives women the right to an abortion up to 24 weeks.
The fact that the Supreme Court has chosen to hear this case is frankly not great news.
The court is now run by a bunch of anti-choice jurists, thanks to the three, count them, three Supreme Court justices appointed by Donald Trump,
with only three liberals on the court, this means that two conservatives would have to go rogue and vote to uphold Roe v. Wade, which feels unlikely.
But on Monday, the Justice Department urged the court to reaffirm Roe v. Wade and ask
permission to present oral arguments when the hearing begins on December 1st.
In short, it's a devastating time for those who believe in
bodily autonomy and a person's right to choose. Very depressing. But let's turn now to some news
about unions. So this week, more than a thousand Nabisco employees across five states will begin
to return to work following a weeks-long strike. It was the first strike at the company in something
like 52 years. Gideon, you've been following all of this. So what were some of the big issues at play here?
Yeah, so this strike actually kicked off in Portland in early August and then eventually
spread to Colorado, Illinois, Georgia, and Virginia as well. And members who were represented
by the Bakery Confectionery Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers Union, or BCTGM for brevity, said that they were
being asked to make unfair concessions during their most recent contract negotiations. And so
among the chief concerns was that the parent company, Mondelez, was wanting to make some
eight-hour shifts into 12-hour ones without overtime. The overtime pay would only be
available by the sixth and
seventh days if the hours had all been worked throughout the week. And adding insult to injury
there were some Nabisco management teams working from home while the production line continued to
come in. The workers also pushed to restore a pension plan, which had been replaced by a 401k
program in 2018. And new hires were also reportedly being asked to pay more in health insurance.
And it's not like Mondelez was struggling. The company actually reported a gain in revenue during
parts of this year compared to the last, amounting to billions in profits. It seems the pandemic has
really turbocharged snack sales, and they were doing quite fine.
Well, you know what they say, when you have billions in profits, you should take more
away from your workers.
So how did all of this come to an end?
Yeah, so the union BCTGM announced on Saturday that employees had overwhelmingly approved
a new contract, the details of which came out in images that were posted by the news
and advocacy outlet More Perfect Union. So workers are now set to receive raises
of 2.25% in 2021 and 60 cents an hour for the next three years. All employees are set to get
a $5,000 bonus as well as a doubling of 401k matching contributions starting in 2022. And
that proposed health care plan change is no more. Great. So what's the reaction from workers themselves
about this agreement? How do they feel? They seem to feel pretty good. The contract passed
with something like 75% approval. And I spoke with Keith Bragg yesterday. He's the president of
BCTGM Local 358. And he's worked at the Nabisco plant in Richmond, Virginia for about 45 years.
Today is actually going to be his first day back
there with the strikeover. And here is some of what he had to say. The reason that we went on
strike, we gained all of those things. And we actually got some other things that were a plus
for us. So we're very happy with the outcome. So right now, we have to see that how things go. But
right now, it seems to be an effort on both sides to go back to work and that things continue as normal.
Yeah, but Josie, not everybody was thrilled.
Some workers in Portland had pushed back against the deal, saying that it still offered too many concessions to the company.
For one thing, it allowed for the creation of weekend crews that would work three 12-hour shifts without eligibility for overtime in exchange for working
fewer days a week.
I see.
So this strike also happened right around the same time as one among Frito-Lay employees,
also represented by the BCTGM union.
And that ended in a contract ratification, too.
So how conscious were the Nabisco employees of all of this kind of happening at once?
They seem to really be quite plugged in.
And Bragg described it as not only a matter of workers' rights in the U.S., but across
the globe.
And he talked about an effort to build and maintain solidarity there.
We felt that what we were fighting for here in the United States was important because
it had an impact on what happens to these other unions.
And we are now ready not only to celebrate our success,
but to join in the fight with these other brothers and sisters
and unions all over the United States.
It's not just about us,
but for the benefits of the labor movement as a whole.
Yeah, more on this and other labor movement stories
in the U.S. soon.
And one story that we are particularly watching,
a potential strike among members of the
International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees. That is the union that represents
some tens of thousands of theatrical film and television employees who work behind the scenes.
They're asking studios for things like better rest periods and improved wages. If they strike,
it would shut down TV and film productions nationwide. All due respect to
Nicole Kidman, I don't think that she could operate a camera on set. More on that soon,
but that is the latest for now.
It's Wednesday, WOD Squad, and today we're doing a segment called The Solution,
where we propose a fix to a news story that has created pretty much chaos in our world.
In Oregon, a staff member at an elementary school near Portland mounted a small protest
last Friday, which achieved the rare combined effect of being both incredibly problematic
and utterly inscrutable.
She showed up to work in blackface and dressed as Rosa Parks to communicate her opposition to, wait for it, a vaccine mandate.
We all saw where that was going.
For all public school employees in Oregon.
Rosa Parks, as we know, helped spark the Montgomery bus boycott by refusing to give up her seat for a white man.
If we're being generous,
we can find a connection in the way
that this woman is refusing to give up
her ability to develop severe COVID.
Even more confusing somehow
was the method the staffer chose to darken her skin,
which was to use the chemical iodine. Surely this is one of the most dangerous options besides direct application of car exhaust.
The employee has been put on administrative leave and the school condemned her actions,
but it seems the protest didn't occur in isolation because just a couple months ago,
a county commissioner in the same area was censured for comparing vaccine passports to Jim Crow laws. It's all very bad and a thought-provoking representation of the anti-vax
community. So for the elementary school staffer who did blackface to protest vaccine mandates,
here's the solution.
We need to turn off Facebook for a little while until we figure out exactly what is going on.
Now, this reaction might seem extreme.
And of course, we don't have any hard evidence to suggest that this woman uses Facebook or has let it overtake her critical faculty.
So her mind can no longer be distinguished from a post that is blocked by the CDC.
But all signs point to Facebook's influence. When we see someone question basic science, equate themselves with civil rights heroes,
and do creative things with dangerous chemicals on their face,
you can pretty safely say that Facebook is open on their computer.
And it's displaying a group with 10,000 members called
People Who Also Do Those Three Things I Just Mentioned Almost Every Second of Their Lives.
Now, my guess is by the time Facebook
has been off for one week, the number of people checking into Oregon hospitals for iodine face
burns and pathologically misguided acts of resistance will have dropped by 100%. If I am
wrong, we can always try turning off random websites until something clicks. Wikipedia can
be next, so I don't stay up until 2 a.m. on the personal
controversy section for Fred Rogers. That section better be no lines long.
So that was the solution. We'll be back after some ads. Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
President Biden delivered his first address to the U.N. General Assembly yesterday, and he largely focused his speech on the importance of global cooperation.
Our own success is bound up in others succeeding as well.
To deliver for our own people, we must also engage deeply with the rest of the world.
To ensure that our own future, future must work together with other partners, our partners toward a shared future.
The Biden administration is currently facing a number of global challenges, such as criticism
for the way the U.S. left Afghanistan and increased tensions with France after leaving
it out of a national security deal. However, Biden's speech
focused more on the United States leading on the world stage and working with other countries on
issues like the pandemic and climate change, especially after the Trump administration
embraced a quote, America first style of foreign policy. Biden did not mention China by name,
but he did speak about the challenges posed by Beijing, such as cyber attacks. Meanwhile, China's President
Xi Jinping told the UN that his country would stop building new coal-fired power plants abroad.
China currently emits the largest share of greenhouse gases and is by far the biggest
producer of coal in the world. Some environmental activists welcomed the announcement as a major
step to address climate change. The Biden administration is continuing to
face backlash for its treatment of Haitian migrants on the southern border. Democrats,
including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and civil rights leaders like Derek Johnson,
president of the NAACP, have criticized the administration for continuing to use a Trump
era immigration rule to expel migrants without offering them the chance to seek asylum.
Many also criticized the recent images of Border Patrol agents
appearing to use whip-like reins to threaten migrants camped along the border.
The Homeland Security Department announced yesterday that it will be launching an investigation
into those pictures and videos to see if there were any unacceptable responses by law enforcement
in those instances.
And if you saw the videos or pictures, you know,
there's really no question about it. Yeah, not a lot of context needed.
Instacart workers put out a message for the company's customers earlier this week,
asking them to delete the app. The Gig Workers Collective, a San Francisco-based nonprofit
representing around 13,000 Instacart shoppers launched its hashtag
Delete Instacart campaign on Monday. The workers are asking customers to stand in solidarity with
them as they ask the company to fulfill five of their demands, which include paying them by orders
rather than batches, reintroducing item-based commissions, ensuring that the rating system
does not punish workers for things that are out of their control,
and providing occupational death benefits while workers continue to put themselves at risk during the pandemic. The Gig Worker Collective says it has been seeing shoppers pay decline since the
start of the pandemic, which is also when Instacart brought on hundreds of thousands of new contractors
due to the demand. So for now, we recommend using the old fashioned way to get groceries while you're on your couch, aka asking extremely inconvenient favors of your one friend with
a Costco membership. Yeah, and if you're that friend, you got to do this one for freedom.
Roald Dahl may achieve his dying wish of being owned by a major media company.
Bloomberg is reporting that Netflix is close to purchasing the author's entire catalog, which has sold more than 200 million copies worldwide. Netflix already made
a licensing deal in 2018 to adopt many of the author's works into animation. Projects that
have been announced include two Charlie and the Chocolate Factory series, helmed by Taika Waititi,
plus two adaptations of Matilda and one of the BFG. The newly reported deal is far bigger and is unusual for Netflix,
since the company doesn't often make acquisitions.
If this all goes as planned, we'll be exploring the imaginative worlds of Mr.
Dahl with the Stranger Things kids for many years to come.
Yeah, those kids will be good so long as they stay away from the personal controversies page
that Raul Dahl has on Wikipedia. I'll just say that. Spoiler alert. will be good so long as they stay away from the personal controversies page that raw doll has
on wikipedia i'll just say that spoiler alert he was pretty anti-semitic um not ideal not ideal
those are the headlines
okay one more thing before we go this week on x-ray vision cody Ziegler and Alicia Alutz join host Jason Concepcion
to explore the new anime series
Star Wars Visions
and answer the question,
with so many great Star Wars TV shows,
do we still need more movies?
Provocative, my friends.
New episodes every Wednesday.
You can follow X-Ray Vision
on Apple Podcasts, Spotify,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review, turn off Facebook, and tell
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And if you are into reading and not just texts that say, yeah, I have to go to Costco this
week anyway, like I am, What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
I'm Gideon Resnick.
And don't eat the stuff in the chocolate factory, Stranger Things kids.
You'll get stuck in a tube and then some alien will come for you.
Honestly, why would the Stranger Things kids listen to us?
They're way richer.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media it's recorded and mixed by Charlotte Landis
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