May Day General Strike in Puerto Rico

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Puerto Rican have had to put up with a lot in recent years, and that is finally spilling over into labor unrest.
On March 19, teachers in Puerto Rico did a one-day strike against dramatic austerity measures, including closing 300 schools and completely privatizing the rest.
But almost no one noticed.
So on May Day, the unions called a general strike, and it was successful for getting a big turnout.

On Tuesday, thousands of people poured into the streets of San Juan, protesting both sweeping new cutbacks to the island’s spending and a painfully slow hurricane recovery. In a clash with riot police, protesters were met with tear gas and pepper spray. Though the demonstrations were ultimately disbanded, they could signal a deeper reckoning about the future of Puerto Rico and the limits of the ongoing austerity program....
And then there was “La Junta,” a financial oversight and management board created by Congress in 2016 to solve Puerto Rico’s debt crisis and with whom residents and local government alike are currently at odds.

It was the oversight board’s new fiscal plan for Puerto Rico that set the stage for the violent clashes. In mid-April, the board approved the regime, which is supposed to help the island get out from under billions of dollars in debt; satisfy municipal creditors; stabilize the power infrastructure; and handle the ongoing recovery from Hurricane Maria, which made landfall last September.

That plan contains a number of provisions that have proven highly controversial among Puerto Ricans. On the labor side, the board’s plan takes steps to reduce employer costs; decrease work in “informal” markets, like street vending; and push workers into formal work arrangements—namely, tourism. It would immediately slash territory-mandated employee benefits, including sick leave and vacation pay; and it would cancel the mandatory Christmas bonus that firms currently have to pay most employees

19 people were arrested. Hundreds were injured.
The ACLU had observers at the scene.

“The government’s motive, more that guaranteeing the right of the protesters to express without worry and maintaining a safe environment, was to suppress the expression,” said Josué González Ortiz, an ACLU staff attorney, in a press conference. “The government made itself enemy of the [freedom of] expression, and its mobilization was exaggerated.”

“Since the beginning, they blocked the public streets, that are the scene of protected expression, precisely to hinder expression, and that causes tension among the protesters,” he added.

A federal judge has ordered an investigation of the police riot.

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snoopydawg's picture

What threat was this woman to the cop who was in full riot gear?

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

mimi's picture

@snoopydawg
more threatening, more armed up, covering the officers faces and acting out more brutally. It's really amazing. The German police was pretty good back in the days to prevent violent crashes between left and nazi-right protesters. It's about to change now as the asylum seekers and refugees from Africa and ME have some restless moments and are supposedly violent. So the police is too. Terrible developments. And much seen on the media. So, people are aware of it.

The discussions about it though are broadcasted on German TV as well. I hate so much of what I see, but nevertheless feel better about the TV media coverage of it here in Germany than I expect it to be in the US. In the US you have to have to search for news analysis specific places online. In Germany, if you are willing to listen, you get at least a little bit of it on TV as well, though not enough. I realize, being in Germany now, that the news production of German TV's studios in the US for the German audience is way not enough to "make the Germans understand fully" what is going on in the US. So the result of it is not support for pro-American propaganda, but the lack of news producers to compete against 'the distractors' in the TV media programs.

It's actually pretty difficult to cross over with your political thoughts and analysis to an audience, when thousands of tons of other distractions is pushed into the audience eyes and hearts and minds.

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@snoopydawg call them pigs.

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Only a fool lets someone else tell him who his enemy is. Assata Shakur

Steven D's picture

was all over this story. Amirite?

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

I'm not afraid

Puerto Ricans shared videos of clouds of tear gas enveloping the streets, as adults and children ran for their lives and struggled to breathe. In the aftermath of the scary moment, a 9-year-old girl has delivered a powerful message to the police via video.

Lucía Ruiz Cedeño attended the Milla de Oro protests with her family because she wanted to take a stand against the closure of 283 public schools on the island. Lucía and her family were leaving the protest when they were sprayed. “We looked back and everybody was running, crying, screaming at us to run,” she said in a video. “Your face starts to itch, you start crying, you have to run, you can’t really breathe well… I thought the police were people that helped PuePR rto Rico, but now I see that most of them just care about money and they don’t care about children, they don’t represent us, and don’t love us.”

Though the experience is enough to traumatize the young girl, she vows to continue her activism. “I’m not letting them stop me, because I’ve had a horrible year, and I want police to know if they’re watching – You can throw pepper gas at us, but I’m going to the next protest.”

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I am pretty sure our government is trying to rid the island of the brown people so we can set up an adult disney world for the rich.

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