HOW
TO FIRE YOUR BOSS
- A WORKER'S GUIDE TO DIRECT ACTION
This pamphlet was published by Bossbusters a project of the Bay Area I.W.W.
(Industrial Workers of the World). For additional copies, or for more information,
call (415)863-9627
The
indignity of working-for-a-living is well-known to anyone who ever has. Democracy,
the great principle on which American society is supposedly founded, is thrown
out the window as soon as we punch to time clock at work. With no say over what
we produce, or how that production is organized, and with only a small portion
of that product's value finding its way into our paychecks, we have every right
to be pissed off at our bosses.
Ultimately, of course, we need to create a society in which working people make
all the decisions about the production and distribution of goods and services.
Harmful or useless industries, such as arms and chemical manufacturing, or the
banking and insurance scams, would be eliminated. The real essentials, like
food, shelter, and clothing, could be produced by everyone working just a few
hours each week.
In the meantime, however, we need to develop strategies that both prefigure
this utopia AND counteract the day to day drudgery of contemporary wageslavery.
BossBusters, a project of the Bay Area Wobblies, believes that direct action
in the workplace is the key to achieving both these goals. But what do we mean
by direct action?
Direct action is any form of guerrilla warfare that cripples the boss' ability
to make a profit and makes him/her cave in to the workers' demands. The best-known
form of direct action is the strike,in which workers simply walk off their jobs
and refuse to produce profits for the boss until they get what they want. This
is the preferred tactic of the AFL-CIO ``business unions,'' but is one of the
least effective ways of confronting the boss.
The bosses, with their large financial reserves, are better able to withstand
a long drawn-out strike than the workers. In many cases, court injuctions will
freeze or confiscate the union's strike funds. And worst of all, a long walk-out
only gives the boss a chance to replace striking workers with a scab (replacement)
workforce.
Workers are far more effective when they take direct action while still on the
job. By deliberately reducing the boss' profits while continuing to collect
wages, you can cripple the boss without giving some scab the opportunity to
take your job. Direct action, by definition, means those tactics workers can
undertake themselves, without the help of government agencies, union bureaucrats,
or high-priced lawyers. Running to the National Labor Relations Board (N.L.R.B.)
for help may be appropriate in some cases, but it is NOT a form of direct action.
What follows are some of the most popular forms of direct action that workers
have used to get what they wanted. Yet nearly every one of these tactics is,
technically speaking, illegal. Every major victory won by Labor over the years
was achieved with militant direct actions that were, in their time, illegal
and subject to police repression. After all, until the 1930's, the laws surrounding
labor unions were simple -- there were none. Most courts held labor unions to
be illegal conspiracies in restraint of ``free trade,'' and strikers were routinely
beaten and shot by police, state militia, Federal troops, and private security
goons.
The legal right of workers to organize is now officially recognized in the U.S.,
yet so many restrictions exist that effective action is as difficult as ever.
For this reason, any worker contemplating direct action on the job -- bypassing
the legal system and hitting the boss where s/he is weakest -- should be fully
aware of labor law, how it is applied, and how it may be used against labor
activists. At the same time, workers must realize that the struggle between
the bosses and the workers is not a badminton match -- it is war. Under these
circumstances, workers must use what works, whether the bosses (and their courts)
like it or not.
Here, then, are the most useful forms of direct action: