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Thankfully, it does look like we got some union solidarity from the National Football League Players Association when it comes to Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels and his union busting with the recent passage another god awful right to work for less law in the state that is going to be hosting the Super Bowl this year.

The bad news is how difficult the struggle will be to overturn this union busting with the strength of unions being diminished with every law like this that passes, along with the flood of money pouring into our elections from the Citizens United debacle and the unfettered corporate influence and the ability of the richest among us to buy our elections.

Add that to voter disenfranchisement, on a scale we haven't seen in decades, electronic voting machines we should not be trusting to vote on and and compliant media that cares more about the horse races and conflict than telling anyone the truth, and we've got a long, long way to go to clean up the mess we're in right now and being able to put a stop to what just happened in Indiana and with the union busting across the country, whether our votes will be counted, and whether those who are voting are informed, and not just propagandized by right-wing media and misinformation which has filled our airways.

Here's more from Democracy Now, with Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzales as always, keeping up the fight on the side of the working class on the actions that are being planned for Super Bowl Sunday.

Occupy the Super Bowl: Indiana’s New Anti-Union Law Sparks Protest at Sport’s Biggest Spectacle:

JUAN GONZALEZ: We turn to Super Bowl Sunday, it’s the biggest football game and biggest television show of the year. Last year, an estimated 111 million people watched it. But this year, viewers may have something more to watch than just the game. Occupy protesters in Indianapolis are gearing up to use the prime-time media spotlight to rally for union rights.

AMY GOODMAN: Earlier this week, Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels signed a so-called "right to work" measure into law, making Indiana the 23rd state to enact similar legislation. The controversial law exempts employees at unionized companies from paying union dues or fees if they so desire. Republicans claim the bill will help Indiana attract new, needed businesses and jobs. Critics say the legislation is an organized attack against labor that will result in lower wages and diminished collective bargaining rights. Following the bill’s approval Wednesday, thousands of union workers held a protest march to Lucas Oil Stadium, where the Super Bowl will be played this Sunday. The National Football League Players Association has also opposed the legislation calling right-to-work a "Political ploy designed to destroy basic workers’ rights." DeMaurice Smith recently appeared on Dave Zirin’s radio show Edge of Sports Radio. Smith is the executive director of The National Football League Players Association.

DEMAURICE SMITH: We are in lock-step with organized labor. I’m proud to sit on the Executive Council of the AFL-CIO. Why? Because we share all of the same issues that American people share. We want decent wages, you want a fair pension, you want to be taken care of when you get hurt, you want a decent and safe working environment. So when you look at proposed legislation in a place like Indiana that wants to call it something called "Right to Work", but you realize that...

DAVE ZIRIN: A tricky phrase, "right to work".

DEMAURICE SMITH: Very tricky phrase. Let’s just put the hammer on the nail. It’s untrue. This bill has nothing to do with a right to work. If folks in Indiana and that great legislation—-and they want to pass a bill that really is something called "Right to Work", have a constitutional amendment that guarantees every citizen a right to a job. That is a right to work. What this is, instead, is a right to enforce and to ensure that ordinary working people can’t get together as a team, can’t organize, can’t stand together, and can’t fight or negotiate with management on an even playing field.

JUAN GONZALEZ: That was DeMaurice Smith, Executive Director of The National Football League Players Association. In related labor news, Arizona Republicans have just introduced legislation that would radically curb public employee’s unions in their state. A series of measures introduced this week would bar government agencies from collectively bargaining with public employees including firefighters and police. Unions would be prevented from collecting dues through automatic deductions. We go now to Indiana to speak with Tithi Bhattacharya. She is an Associate Professor of South Asian History at Purdue University. She is a leading member of Occupy Purdue and has written about Occupy in the Super bowl. Welcome to Democracy Now! Can you hear us professor? Tell us about the Occupy protests that are planned.

TITHI BHATTACHARYA: Well, the first thing to say is that the protest on Sunday actually is not a one-off. It stands on the shoulder of and in solidarity with the thousands of people who came to the State House over the last two weeks to protest this bill. It is also not, I think, the end—-or I hope it’s not the end of this series of protests. Why the Super Bowl? Lucas Oil Stadium was built with 100% union labor. Every single structure that is up in the city of Indianapolis today that has been built to beautify the city has been built with union labor. So, I think it is absolutely shameful that the legislature passed a law that condemns unions and is now using the city to kind of showcase Indianapolis while ordinary people in Indiana are completely opposed to this law. The protest on Sunday also stands in solidarity with the NFL Players Union, which has come out so strongly against the legislation. I think there has been some talk of how the Occupy movement may—-there has been some fear that the Occupy movement may disrupt a Super Bowl. As far as I know and as far as I’m concerned, the Occupy movement nationally has been a non-violent movement and absolutely is committed to being non-violent on Saturday. The question of disruption absolutely is not an issue because as I said before, we stand in solidarity with the Players Union. The only thing the Occupy movement, on Sunday, hopes to disrupt is the complacency of the 1% who think that they can get away with this.

AMY GOODMAN: While The Football Players Union has expressed solidarity with the workers in Indiana, Fox Business News spoke with NFL Hall of famer Fran Tarkenton about the Super Bowl protests.

FOX REPORTER: Fran, you have been an outspoken opponent of municipal unions. What’s their beef with Indianapolis, which is staging the Super Bowl?

FRAN TARKENTON: Because they’ve got it made. They work 20 years, they could retire at 90% of their salary for the rest of their life. There’s no accountability. They don’t have to work hard. They go up by seniority. If the NFL—-if their union was like a public Union, the NFL would be broke. But, the government kind of bails them out, but now that’s getting to be problematic. This was the first right-to-work state decision in 15 years. It looks like Mitch Daniels is going to sign that into law. They’re angry about being it being a right-to-work state when we need to generate 20 million jobs?

AMY GOODMAN: NFL Hall of famer, Fran Tarkenton went on to say the protesters are going to make fools of themselves.

FRAN TARKENTON: ...disrupts the biggest American even there is and you are right, the northeastern fans are the best football fans in the world. They’ll come in there and spend tens and hundreds of millions of dollars. It’s just such a great. It really is a positive, great event, and they’re going to make fools of themselves by going out there infringing on the rights of people who want to enjoy this great event.

AMY GOODMAN: Professor Bhattacharya, your response?

TITHI BHATTACHARYA: Nine out of the ten poorest states—-states with the poorest health and safety records—-are actually right-to-work states. But, most importantly, we need to keep in mind that this is actually an effort to kill unions in the Midwest. This is part of a concerted effort that is going on to strike at the heart of labor mobilizing and labor organizing it is coming in Wisconsin, it is coming in Indiana, and it is coming in Michigan. And I think...Hello?

AMY GOODMAN: Keep speaking, go ahead.

TITHI BHATTACHARYA: So, I think that is really what’s at the heart of it. On a broader basis, I think Right to Work is one of those legislations that is a concerted effort to pass off this recession on working people by trying to lower our wages. All due respect to the Hall of famer, but he did say that people are going to be bailed out. Well actually, the institutions that got bailed out are the banks. This is an effort to say that the recession is hurting the economy, so ordinary people need to tighten their belts. Well actually, ordinary people are not responsible for the recession, and this attack on ordinary people speaking out or fighting back—-which is really what the unions are—-is a naked display of union busting, which actually needs to stop.

AMY GOODMAN: Finally, Professor Bhattacharya, where will you be on Sunday at the Superbowl?

TITHI BHATTACHARYA: Like the rest of the occupiers from across the state, I will be at the Indiana State House. The protest has been called at the South Lawn of the Indiana State House at 12:00 noon. That’s where I hope all people who are fighting against these kind of policies of the 1% inside the legislatures, and are fighting against the display of the power of the 1% on our streets of Indianapolis with the corporate logos, will be there to join me in a non-violent protest.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, I want to thank you very much for being with us. Professor Tithi Bhattacharya, Associate Professor of South Asian History at Purdue University, a leading member of the Occupy Purdue, written about Occupy Super Bowl. Speaking to us from West Lafayette, Indiana.

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Indiana Secretary of State Charlie White was found guilty early Saturday morning on 6 counts of felony voter fraud.
http://www.wishtv.com/dpp/news/politics/secre...

http://www.indystar.com/article/20120203/NEWS...

Gov. Mitch Daniels: “I have chosen not to make a permanent appointment today out of respect for the judge’s authority to lessen the verdict to a misdemeanor and reinstate the elected office holder," Daniels said in a statement just minutes after news of the verdict. "If the felony convictions are not altered, I anticipate making a permanent appointment quickly."

bwahaha... If he ain't in jail, he can still be Secretary of State. Mitch, you are a real tool. I see why they chose you to respond to the President's SOTU speech.

No wonder the GOP is so concerned about voter fraud, they know how well it can work from personal experience. Another poster boy for "republican values".


Wall Street is just a parasite on the actual labor and investments of average Americans.
Banks play with futures, debt paper, complex financial instruments, and other peoples incomes.
Sell 'em short & help 'em crash - Tear 'em apart & sell the pieces

by the Indiana GOP. The GOoPer in charge of elections personally committed voter fraud,

BTW? How did they arrainge a fridaynight/saturdaymorning news dump?
Hold a jury, that is ready to convict, back a couple days?
Or did they close them in and say "do it tonight or you will be here all weekend"?

By Monday the media will be chasing some different bouncing rubber balls. Fetch..GOOD BOY!


Wall Street is just a parasite on the actual labor and investments of average Americans.
Banks play with futures, debt paper, complex financial instruments, and other peoples incomes.
Sell 'em short & help 'em crash - Tear 'em apart & sell the pieces

MountainMan23's picture

".. out of respect for the judge’s authority to lessen the verdict to a misdemeanor and reinstate the elected office holder.."

Not that he or his buddies have any intentions of pressuring the judge or anything like that ..


When will government of the people, by the politicians, for the corporations perish from this Earth?

Not soon enough!

ikalbertus's picture

he really said "with the expectation of the judge using his authority to lessen the verdict. . . "

daverl's picture

My political instinct says trying to occupy the super bowl is a very bad idea....

No plans to disrupt the game.


When will government of the people, by the politicians, for the corporations perish from this Earth?

Not soon enough!

miss_kitty's picture

What's going on today in the country is the macro version of what Nordstrom did to the union in 1989. Lie about the unions to the workforce, tell members they'll get better benefits because the company has been stopped by the union from giving better compensation and Hey! no more union dues, yay! Then hold a vote.

David Shuster (sitting in for Olbermann on CountDown) talks with Mike Biskar, a leader of the protests.

Occupy Super Bowl XLVI
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2cA8jKdoFGU

Quite informative.

btw .. it's "Northern Alabama" .. not "Indiana" ..


When will government of the people, by the politicians, for the corporations perish from this Earth?

Not soon enough!

flag_bible_gun's picture

Inditucky ?

had some family that called it 'West Pennsylginia" where they lived, south of Pittsburgh.


Wall Street is just a parasite on the actual labor and investments of average Americans.
Banks play with futures, debt paper, complex financial instruments, and other peoples incomes.
Sell 'em short & help 'em crash - Tear 'em apart & sell the pieces

Andy K's picture

...seeing is that's southern Indiana was populated from Kentucky in the early years- which makes Indiana an odd case, seeing that most of the interior of the US was populated along east-west lines before the assembly line created a need for more labor in the north.

fastfeat's picture

But they forgot to teach those Hoosiers how to barbeque. ;)


"Parachutes are allowed in checked or carry-on baggage, but may not be worn in flight."

---Southwest Airlines

Andy K's picture

...northern Indiana and southern Michigan, and the industrial towns and cities partially populated by African-Americans from the South during the Great Migration. If you like moderate weather AND barbeque, there's no place like the Rust Belt.

EastWest's picture

Is the Super Bowl a socialist enterprise? Yes the language is provocative but not, I believe, inappropriate. After all Indiana, the site of the next Super Bowl, is currently governed by those who insist government should play a minimal role and the word they, and their Republican counterparts around the country use to describe those who disagree is socialist.

By any definition, tomorrow's Super Bowl in Indianapolis is socialist from head to toe.

Start with the venue. Governments paid for over 80 percent of the new $750 million Lucas Oil Stadium. The Colts chipped in about 15 percent, an investment they probably recouped in inflated asset value the day the stadium opened. Governments are also covering the estimated $20 million a year in operating deficits.

But this is only the tip of the iceberg. The NFL itself is a government creation.

http://www.onthecommons.org/super-bowl-socialist

Keep up the good work Occupy, until the 99% is fully behind your heroic efforts!


The main objective should be how to stop the Rethugs from rethugging.

ikalbertus's picture

is the envy of the western world

Edwin's picture

Is it?


far left loon >.<

Andy K's picture

In Europe, only the richest teams stand a chance to bring home the silverware. Even where they do distribute the income, as in the English Premier (football/soccer) League, the top four teams get a bigger share than the lower sixteen, and those top four usually have deeper pockets in the first place. This is why you always have Liverpool, Manchester United, Chelsea and Arsenal near the top four slots (which also earns them placement in the UEFA Champions' League, which is more money for those teams).

Yeah, there are other teams challenging now- Tottenham and Manchester City (who are atop the table right now), but, again, those teams have deep pockets.

ixnay's picture

Other than the NBA, most of the world does not give a shit about the NFL, MLB, NHL, or NASCAR.


CTHULHU 2012 "Why vote for a lesser evil?"

Andy K's picture

I've got friends all over the world, via a couple of Packers' (and a few footy) pages at FB, and they all love the way that the NFL operates, with equitable revenue sharing and the inverse-order drafting.

ixnay's picture

that changes everything then.


CTHULHU 2012 "Why vote for a lesser evil?"

Andy K's picture

I've heard and read it hundreds of times listening to footy talk shows and reading stories and columns on it, too.

Teams that used to be able to challenge for the title in the old First Division- Leeds Utd. and Nottingham Forest, for example- have a hard time moving into the Premiership now because they haven't got huge stadiums and/or ownership with deep pockets. There's no equitable revenue sharing between clubs, there's no roster limit...The big teams load up on all of the talent, and the lesser teams are lucky if the big team wants to get their bench some playing time by loaning bench players.

BigD145's picture

How many players will be there to be pepper sprayed and will any of them take a head injury or will they wear helmets and be entirely avoided by the police?

all hail the hypno toad's picture

This time it looks like it failed, but their legislators are trying to pass a law to teach creation "science" in science classrooms.

http://arstechnica.com/science/news/2012/02/i...

derekthered's picture

every citizen a right to a job." now you're talking. a regular nightmare for the ruling class, possibly.........
citizens united flows from santa clara county vs. southern pacific railroad, which is the root of the problem.

Indianapolis is the home of the upcoming Super Bowl; an event that is supposed to celebrate the best of America’s game, but also the best of the host city and state. The people and workers of Indiana have come together and worked hard to prepare for this upcoming Super Bowl for a long time, but they are also bracing for the potential damage caused by a legislative game being played off the field.

The so-called Indiana “Right to Work” Bill is bad for working men and women for one simple reason: it jeopardizes the ability of workers to organize as a team to protect, preserve and promote themselves as employees in a workplace, where management can always outspend workers and target individuals. During the NFL lockout and the months leading up to it, the Players of this great game learned lessons that most older American workers learned decades ago: namely, that all of the protections that employees currently have in the workplace resulted from the ability of employees to stand together as a team, protect their rights, and demand change for the better. It is a lesson that many of us have not only forgotten but worse yet, simply never learned. The protections that millions of workers possess today, including fair pensions, workplace safety innovations, management supported health care plans, and compliance with occupational health standards, were achieved by thousands of workers standing together as ONE over decades to fight for those vital standards. An indisputable lesson of our American history is that none of those workplace protections came as a “gift” from corporations; rather, all of them resulted from the ability of workers to stand united and demand change when it would have been easy to fire or silence the voice of a single worker. The history is also clear that even when employees fought as a team, some of them paid a dear price for organizing and demanding fairness. This bill would make future efforts even harder than they are today.

As employees of football teams, we were reminded of our own history as a collective group of players during our lockout. Players are extremely fortunate to be well compensated, but the history is that it took a strike by one of our players in the 1960s to create a pension for former players, and improvements in salary, free agency, work-rules and grievance procedures, tuition reimbursement were all collectively bargained benefits by a union that was supported and constituted by Players standing together as a team in the negotiation room. More recently, as a strong union, we achieved improvements in the players’ pension, obtained a Legacy Fund that reached back to increase pensions for former players, and negotiated rules for safer practices and games. From 2009 to the present, through their union, players collectively have taken aggressive steps to change the way concussions and head trauma are dealt with at practice, during games, as well as during a player’s post-career life. We know that one single player, just like any one single employee acting alone, could never achieve what we as a Team were able to achieve.

Today, the assault on that team of employees comes disguised in proposed legislation deviously named as “right to work,” and the reason why every employee should have concern is that it simply is not what it claims to be. This “right to work” is not a state constitutional amendment guaranteeing a state citizen a job. This “right to work” does not mandate a state to improve local schools so that educated young people are ensured of employment. Rather, this “right to work” legislation is simply designed to negatively impact the ability of employees to form teams that can go “toe-to-toe” with management in the hope of having a fair negotiation over issues that matter to working people.

In this time of extremely challenging economic conditions, where there are efforts to divide all of us, we have an obligation to move beyond the rhetoric and know the issues. The legislation may have a catchy title, but that is all it provides to men and women who work for a living. If you support this bill, do so by recognizing and calling it what it is: “the elimination of the ability to negotiate strongly and fairly with your employer” legislation. Somehow, that description of the bill does not sound good for millions of people who work for a living. Get the facts at http://www.indianarighttowork.com

We oppose this bill and stand in strong support of what needs to be every employees’ right to be member of a team to protect and preserve their rights for themselves and their families.

JohnnyBravo's picture

Why did Indiana vote these morons and criminals into office...then become surprised when they do crap like this?

Other than that, this legislation is awful.


NOBODY 2012