By: Ned Resnikoff, 11/25/2013
Last year, when Walmart workers around the country staged a nationwide strike on the biggest shopping day of the year, the bar for success was relatively low. By throwing the world’s largest employer on the defensive and sending a message, organized labor was able to claim a tactical victory.
This Friday, expectations are higher. The workers and their allies need to show that they came out of the past year stronger than before. And that could be hard to achieve. Organizers insist the campaign will deliver. On a conference call last week, OUR (Organization United for Respect) Walmart told reporters to expect as many as 1,500 individual Black Friday protests across the country, a significant step up from last year’s estimated 1,200 events across 400 different stores.
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Comments
stage your own personal protest
I simply do not go to wall mart unless I just cannot find another way to affordably purchase what I need. In the past 3 years I have only been there 2 times. I am sad for the workers and the way they are treated like cattle. It is sickening that the owner/family is so blindingly rich and yet are so Plantation Boss like with their people.