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NEWS & LETTERS, April 2002   

Column: Workshop Talks by Htun Lin

Why do risky jobs?

"The capitalist mode of production produces, thus, with the extension of the working day, not only the deterioration of human labor power by robbing it of its normal moral and physical conditions of development and function. It produces also the premature exhaustion and death of this labor-power itself. It extends the laborer's time of production during a given period by shortening his actual lifetime."

-Karl Marx

Since Marx wrote those words, we workers have fought and won the battle for a normal eight-hour working day. Because we have now been made to compete with offshore production in dictatorial countries, we're fighting the same old battles and losing those gains, often with the help of union bureaucrats condoning restructuring schemes.

U.S. workers are now experiencing what Third World workers everywhere have: toiling under the despotism of an exploitative system based on layers of subcontracting. Muslim women in Malaysia, making Nike shoes in Korean-subcontracted factories, are no longer the only ones suffering from such a system.

A case in point is a U.S. worker, Mario Echazabal, who worked at Chevron's California refineries for some 20 years as a subcontractor. He applied to Chevron for a permanent position with benefits and greater job security. But Chevron turned him down once they discovered that he had a liver problem. They said further exposure to chemicals would damage his liver. Undeterred, he reapplied, but this time, Chevron not only turned him down, they went ahead and fired him as an independent subcontractor.

Chevron had absolutely no problem with this man being exposed to chemicals on the job for 20 years, until he decided to become a permanent employee. So he sued, using the Americans with Disabilities Act. The lower court sided with the worker. Chevron appealed to the Supreme Court.

During the Supreme Court hearing, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor suggested that this was a "very strange case," because "why would anyone want to do a job that might kill them or at least cause them serious harm?" This question could only be asked in a world completely imbued with the separation between mental and manual labor.

One may ask why every day workers do expose themselves to well-known harmful situations in 1001 ways. One may also ask why it is such a mystery to great "legal minds" such as O'Connor that workers don't just walk away from it all. Every concrete labor task, every job, exists under capitalism not for the benefit of the worker but only insofar as abstract-labor contributes to an ever-growing accumulation of capital.

Workers, as a category, can't "just walk away." For every worker that successfully walks away, two more fill his shoes, at perhaps half the pay and twice the speed. Even when we "walk" temporarily, as in a strike, the ultimate goal is to return to the workplace in much improved conditions.

On the other hand, a company like Chevron reserves the right to walk away from its 20-year relationship with a worker. It is not the health of Echazabal  that Chevron is concerned about. His firing is not meant to minimize this employee's health risks.

When capitalists talk about "minimizing risks," they mean financial risks. The collateral damage of this process is the worker and "the premature exhaustion and death of ... labor-power." After Chevron gets rid of this worker, having enjoyed his labor for 20 years, with absolutely no obligations for his health or welfare, the same harsh conditions of labor remain intact on the shop floor.

There human beings are treated as so much used up equipment to be discarded to make room for a whole new generation of "human capital" to be harnessed to the next generation of super fast machines. That's why workers can't just walk away.

Paid or unpaid, all labor is forced labor-every minute of it. Under capitalism, workers do not have a choice. The only real choice workers have as a class is the ongoing struggle to regain control of not only the fruits of our labor, but also the labor process itself.

The case of Mario Echazabal may seem like that of one lone worker, but it is the plight of workers everywhere. Where capital has the prerogative to move swiftly anywhere it pleases, workers are increasingly trapped. Marx foresaw the power of expanding capital to "tear down every Chinese Wall."

Some bureaucrats offer temporary nationalistic and anti-environment solutions. While they may gain a few jobs here and there, they end up isolating our struggles. But if we see our various plights concretely, it means seeing them universally, as one struggle. We have nothing to lose but our collective misery and a whole new world to gain.

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