Wednesday, December 12, 2012
"Right to Work": Rhetorical Misdirection
The
 misnamed "right to work" laws are based on an ideological 
sleight-of-hand. Union shop contracts are enforced not by unions but by 
employers, because it's their private ownership of the means of 
production that gives them the power (backed by the state's guns) to 
exclude people from social production. When they do so they are simply 
exercising exactly the same right as when they exclude someone -- i.e., 
decide not to hire them -- for any other reason (aside from those 
specifically excluded by law like "race" or gender). And they will do so
 whenever they've judged it's in their interests as capitalists to sign 
such contracts, just as when they exclude people on any other basis. 
Laws prohibiting such contracts don't create an actual right to work 
because they leave untouched the institution that actually stands in its
 way: capitalist private ownership of productive wealth.
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