13. Bring Them Up on Charges
(updated 2-23-15)
Ryland
Grossinger was bred in Forest Hills, NY but he was raised in Los Angeles. He
was toasted when he graduated from UCLA in law but he baked too long in the
Southern California sun when he tried to butter up to his boss and was fired.
Rather than loaf around, he yearned to go back east and see what was cooking. He
became a barista for Dante’s Coffee and found his place at the table.
While Ry had no
trouble getting settled with the handsome allowance his well-to-do parents
provided him with, he wanted to make a mark in legal world on the side of the
oppressed. Being short brought His contempt for others who looked down of him.
He felt he knew what it was like to be a poor, black and to have to pump a
nickel wherever they forked-out salary. He was going to help the workers of the
world. A working class hero was something to be.
He went to the IWW
website and discovered there was a branch in New York City meeting on the Lower
Eastside in a place called ABC No Rio. One slow Sunday afternoon, he got on the
subway at Broadway-Lafayette and took the F train to Essex Street, walking over
to Rivington near the Streit’s Matzo Factory. He thought he would be late, and
hoped to be to make a grand entrance but the meeting, scheduled for 2pm so some
members could get over their Sunday morning hangovers, hadn't started yet. Only
Emerson was there to welcome Ry with Colonial Crutch from Macon, Georgia, on
the throne downstairs.
"Is this the IWW
meeting?"
"It sure is. Are
you looking for us?"
"I thought
there'd be more of you."
"Some of them are
coming late but Colonial Clutch will be right back; he's our legal
expert."
"I'm a lawyer,
too; B.A. from UCLA."
"Oh,
Californian; the sunshine state,"
"I was born in
Queens; my parents moved west when I was young."
"I didn't notice
any New York accent." Just then, Eupheus Crutch's footsteps could be heard
climbing the fragile stairs and walking back, entering the dilapidated room.
"Well, what do
we have here?"
"You must be
Crutch," said Ry without standing to greet him. Already Crutch was his
brother in law and a sibling rivalry was brewing."
Crutch sat down and
opened his satchel removing a booklet with the IWW Constitution and another
booklet called One Big Union. "Here you are; read these when you get a
chance. Y'all living in New York now?"
"Yes, I live on
East 12th near Tompkins Square Park." Ry had been living in the ground
floor studio since arriving six months earlier.
Just then, footsteps
could be heard coming up the stairs, two sets of footsteps, both heavy, like
the footstep of working men. Two male voices were talking loudly as they came
through and slammed the open door.
"Oh so
sorry," said Adonis, “I didn't realize there was anyone here."
"Oh he did that
on purpose," Mack reached out a hand. Hi, you must be that fella from
California. GHQ said you might be coming in. My name is Maynard, I'm a
carpenter. Call me May."
"Yeah, some
carpenter. He's a fuckin' boss, I tell you," shouted Adonis as he threw
his bag to the floor and roughly took a broken seat to sit on. "He still
owes me two hundred bucks."
"Now be polite,
"Adonis," said May."You'll scare Ry away. Ry it is, isn't
it?"
"It's Ryland but
my friends call me Ry, Ry Grossinger."
"You know you're
famous in New York."
"Yeah, someone
told me there was a Jewish bread company with my name."
"It's okay. The
Industrial Workers of the World have no racist tendencies."
"I'm not Jewish.
My parents are Jewish."
"Well, doesn't
that make you Jewish?" said Crutch. "I read somewhere that the
religion follows the mother's side in your culture."
"I'm losing my
religion," said Ry angrily.
Just then, another
member slinked into the room from the second door to the back, the one that led
into a little storage area and then the kitchen.
"Come in Jack;
don't be shy," said May. "Ry, this is our fifth member present."
"Y'all sit down
now, here? We have a quorum. Let's get started we're an hour and a half late
already."
"I can't stay
past 4pm; I have an important meeting with a fellow barista."
"Barista? What,
do you work in a coffee shop?"
"Dante’s,"
said Ry with distain. "We are trying to start a union there."
"That's great,
Ry," exclaimed May. "How can we help?"
"Help? You're a
fucking boss is all! You can't even help your own crew," chimed in Adonis.
Emerson saw that Ryland
was looking in disbelief at this motley crew he had just joined. H e knew he
was thinking the same thing Emerson thought when he joined his first IWW
meeting: "This is a union?"
Ry Grossinger
was on the way to becoming a working class star buck. His grind would be Dante’s
Coffee, a franchise chain that had thousands of locations across the United
States and around the world.
Colonial Eupheus
Crutch, the gentleman Wobbly who headed straight to New York City from Macon,
Georgia, was the cosmonaut Bolshevik to Ry’s Astro Boy persona; he was in a catch-up
race to the moon of Industrial Worker union stardom. All the underhanded
insults Eupheus endured from miniscule Ryland would have made him a sympathetic
cult hero down south, but there in New York, he was fair game for every yokel
joke cosmopolitan sophistication could dish out. He held his head high
throughout the confederate-baiting northerners’ rants. Did he not suggest the
Stars and Bars were to be proud of as his state flag? So what if Clutch was? Clutch
was ready to show that “tiny organizer with the big mouth” what organizing was
all about. The south would rise again in New York City.
He went
looking for workers to be organized by him. The firebrand who got him moving
was William Stacks, Willy the Glove. Willy, who bore a resemblance to Popeye,
had that California look of sun-glassed indifference to what anyone but he had
to say. He knew Ryland Grossinger’s kind; he’d dealt with them before, the
bosses from the other side. Now, in his 50’s, unmarried, getting wrinkled, a
drifter with a cowboy hat, Willy had more tricks than sleeves to hide. He wore
a right-handed gray felt construction worker’s glove with railroad stripe wrist
band like the Phantom of the Opera wore his mask; he never took it off except,
maybe, to sleep.
Willy Stacks, who
claimed to be Cesar Chavez’s gloved left hand in the struggle of the California
grape growers United Farm Workers at Delano, was raring for a fight to bring
back the glory. Colonial Crutch had his wishes fulfilled. Emerson, as the
treasurer of the New York City branch had the task of raising funds depleted by
the Dante Barista Union (as Ryland called his offshoot) and holding down the
fort for Wobblies with other pet struggles to finance. Emerson went out with
Willy and Crutch on hunches. He was Crutch’s hum-dinger; the cat’s meow. He was
the only man more macho than Crutch.
Willy the
Glove had an insider’s tip that there were some workers in a processing plant
in Long Island City that were pissed off about their low wages and heavy work
schedule. Willy himself had worked there for a while driving a refrigerated
delivery truck. The company, Farm Freshness, had a two hundred thousand
square-foot warehouse with hundreds of employees, mostly immigrant workers and
ex-cons that collected and boxed shopping lists of groceries for deliveries to
customers. They were like a supermarket on wheels.
“Hundreds of
workers who are ready to organize; I feel it in my bones. Enough shit from
their supervisors,” said Willy pointing his glove finger in the direction of
the plant, three miles uptown across the East River from the IWW meeting place
off Essex Street. “They’re ready to pop!”
“They need to
meet with us somehow without letting their supervisors see,” said Crutch, the
canon wheels turning. “We must let them, know we can steer them right; they can
trust us.” Crutch stood, arms folded across his chest, mustache drooping down
his seriously red face.
“How many
copies do you want?” questioned Emerson picking up a thread from earlier in the
meeting, before Ryland and four other baristas came to make their motion and
move on to their own meeting place. “You said they have how many workers?”
“We need
bilingual flyers; Spanish on one side, English on the other.”
“Ask Ernie in
Bushwich if he could do it.” Ernie Pancho was the Wobbly who worked with a
Latino group from the barrio there in an organization called “Allanar El
Camino,” Pave the Way.
“Let’s get, I
don’t know, two hundred printed,” said Willy, matter-of-factly.
“That many?
Okay, on thin paper. They’re going to throw them away.”
“No. They must
be top quality! Don’t let them think we’re a cheap organization.” Crutch shook
his head slowly in agreement, his eyes shut under raised brows, lips enclosing down-pointed
whiskers.
“But we are
cheap; we only have four hundred dollars left in the treasury,” said Emerson
pleadingly.
“We may need more,” said Willy, tapping the rim of his Mexican Stetson an inch
from the left uncovered hand of the arm leaning on the radiator. “Can’t tell;
the lady workers on the line have boyfriends.” Billy went on,” They need some
confidence, too. We can give it to them. You know, ex-cons need a push; they’re
a little shy about losing this job, one of the only places that’ll hire them.”
In the weeks
before, Willy and his de facto spokesman, Crutch, had unleashed their
organizing abilities on the fine workers of Farm Freshness. They’d made a
motion and had gotten three hundred dollars from the branch to reserve
breakfast in a little luncheonette outside the plant; no refund. The breakfast
would be “chin-wag,” as the Colonial called it, “a chinwag for the
scissor-bills.” Before Crutch and Willy the Glove had set their sights on the
Farm Freshness workers, he had Emerson and another Wob named Fergie visiting
junk yards in Greenpoint. The barking dogs at each job site in and around painfully
drab and weed wild corrugated metal fences were omens. On the dead end summer
streets of industrial Greenpoint, there was no sense trying to get passed the
gates, but that didn’t deter Willy the Glove or Colonial Crutch who followed
close by at Willy’s new Red Wing construction-booted heels. Emerson and Fergie
shied the other way. Beyond the crumpled gates backed into by trucks too many
times stood two or three men in short-sleeved shirts and jeans, looking outward
and scratching their heads at the four men milling around in the usually vacant
street.
Willy bravely
took a chance. The other Wobblies looked as he strutted past the gate, black
chained pit bulls barking madly, to speak with the workers awaiting him. No,
they weren’t workers. The workers, he was told, were on their break and he’d
better stay away and not bother them.
“Yes sir, just
asking,” said Willy looking skyward under his Ray-Bans, the dog pulling at its
chain.
“”They’re
supervisors,” he nonchalantly said passing the other three Wobblies out of
sight up the broken blazing street. “How was I to know?” said the veteran of
many a California grape grower strike.
“Let’s get out
of here; this is stupid,” said Emerson, stating the obvious. “Holy shit,”
chimed in Fergie. “If this wasn’t the biggest waste of time! Willy? There are no
workers here to organize!”
“I say there are!” said Willy emphatically.
“I say there are!” said Willy emphatically.
“He said there
are then there most certainly are,” added Crutch confidently. “Where y’all
going to now, Willy?”
“Back to the
Chinese warehouse in Bushwick.”
“Damn if I’m going
there I’d rather be in bed with a bitch,” said Fergie. ”I’m heading home to
Brooklyn. Where’s the ‘L’ Train?” Fergie was off and so was Emerson. They’d had
enough organizing for the day. It seemed pretty disorganized to them. Who was
this Willy the Glove, anyway? How did he show up at the IWW meeting and who let
him in?
“Let’s go see if
Ernie is at Allanar El Camino; it’s just ten minutes from here,” said Willy as
he walked down the street to his battered Land Rover with Crutch and drove off
dropping off Emerson and Fergie at the subway station a few blocks away.
“They’ll need
some Red Cards for sure, I do believe,” said Crutch.
“I want to
make a deal with you.”
“He wants to
make a deal with us.”
“Bring our
union up to date.” Eupheus Crutch had requested at the previous monthly
meeting, and over the internet, that members rendezvous with him at Ft. Green
Park, it was decided as most of the members lived in Brooklyn, on a Saturday
next, one o’clock, to hear a very important proposal he had been working on for
months, had even sent in to general headquarters for their approval, to no
avail. He felt that the weight of a New York City General Membership
endorsement would open up some eyes when it was published in the G.O.B., the
General Office Bulletin for the Industrial Workers of the World.
“I’ve been
thinking, and sure working hard. Tell me how y’all feel. I’m glad y’all come here
today. If Eugene comes it’s five, and we’ll have a quorum; we can vote on it
and make branch policy. Thank you for listening. Cigarette Emerson? Oh yes,
that’s right. You’ve quit. How’s that going, by the way? Uh-huh; didn’t mean to
tempt you. What’s that; sure Fellow Worker Fergie. You are more than welcome to
one. Well, well well. Lookie who’s comin up yonder hill, and only an hour late.
I’m sure he has a good reason; he always does. Why Fellow Worker Portobello,
you do us honor with your presence. Why sure we’ll be finished soon; I wouldn’t
want to keep you from your Dante Workers meeting. I, too, have an important
meeting in the City at five o’clock. I’m so glad you could attend. And,
congratulations; you are the fifth member here in good standing. You are in
good standing, aren’t you? Well that’s just fine and dandy.
Without
further ado, I have here in my satchel all the documentation y’all will need to
make a proper informed decision. We have a chance to make history here, fellow workers,
and sister worker Sadie. Fergie, Emerson, Pete. What you now have in your hands
is the re-worked Wheel of Industrial Organization.
Compare it, if
you would all be so kind, to Figure ‘B,’ Father Haggerty’s wheel. The good
father, bless his Wobbly soul, besides leaving the pulpit for some more
worthwhile and constructive vocation, for the welfare of all working folk,
designed this well nigh about a century ago at a time when certain industries
were still immature or hadn’t even been born yet. For example, there were no
franchise restaurants with prepared foods back then so he classified retail
workers in the food industry instead of assigning them an industrial union
number of their own; he put them with butchers and greengrocers instead of
listing them as sales clerks. What’s that Pete? Yes, I know y’all make cappuccino
and latte, but, bear with me a moment, I shall answer all your questions in due
course. That is why I.U. 640 is no longer reasonable and another number should
be assigned service workers. Now look, if you will, at the new wheel I
invented; a separate I.U. 660 has been created to identify all workers in the
fast food industry. What’s that, Emerson? Why of course. I’ll just run my mouth
a little while you find yourself a place to relieve yourself. I shall go no
further until you return. Why yes, sister worker Sarah; I would love a candy.”
Eupheus Crutch went on for another hour using
all the time allotted to him. His fellow workers were tired and wanted to go.
“I know it’s
late but I call for a vote on endorsing the new wheel of Industrial
Organization I put together. Now who seconds the motion?” No one raised their
hand. “Now come on y’all. How about you Emerson; second the motion, won’t you?”
“I don’t think
we should be wasting our time reinventing the wheel when there are more important
things to do.”
“But I have
explained the necessity there is for new industry…”
“I have to go
Crutch; another time,” said Pete as he stood up from the lawn to leave.”
“Fellow
workers: let us strike while the iron’s hot; now sit down for a moment won’t
you fellow worker?”
“Okay, I
second the motion, and vote ‘no’ for changing the wheel.”
“But we’re not
voting on changing the wheel; we’re only voting for an endorsement from our
branch for the acceptance by the general committee to bring it up for a
union-wide vote.
The other
three Wobblies all raised their hands to vote ‘no.’
“The vote is
four to one, fellow worker Eupheus. That’s that.”
“Well if y’all
are going to vote not to endorse the proposal then I retract the proposal.”
“You can’t do
that; it’s underhanded,” said sister worker Sadie.
“Call it what
you will sister worker; I retract my proposal.”
“Too late,”
Pete said as he stood and walled a few steps down the grassy knoll. “The vote’s
been taken. We do not endorse your stupid wheel. Bye?”
“Well, I
never!”
The result of
the vote for the NYC GMB rejection of Colonial Crutch’s wheel was printed in
the monthly Wobbly City newsletter.
Ah yes; The
Wobbly City; Emerson had taken on the responsibility for organizing a monthly
newsletter for the branch. No one requested that he do it, and no one offered
to help; he just thought it was the right thing to do and he felt like
volunteering to do it. He promised the general membership branch that he would
send each member attending the monthly meeting a first draft of the newsletter
for their approval before he printed it up and would spend no branch funds. It
was an offer no one could refuse, so they voted to make Emerson the editor of
the Wobbly City, a name he himself had come up with. For three years, every
month, Emerson culled news stories from the branch members, sometimes tweaking
minutes from meeting or pulling arms to get some copy. Usually he had to write
copy himself, under three different pseudonyms.
Sometimes it
got a little dicey about what he could print. Eupheus Crutch claimed all names
should be anonymous so the authorities couldn’t pin anything on anyone and
cautioned Emerson to remember that sabotage was disavowed by the union so don’t
print anything about it. Ry Grossinger took exception to a truthful article
about his nascent Dante Barista Union because it didn’t reflect the image he
wanted to have presented to the public. They almost came to blows over
propaganda versus truth. Ry would write the articles about him by himself.
Emerson had to edit the newsletter to let him do so, and he had the votes of
the general membership, padded that week with baristas to make sure his veto
held up.
When one
fellow worker threw his hat into the ring to be editor, every barista there,
and the few members who weren’t baristas, agreed to let the new guy have a
chance since Emerson had been doing it for three years. Tom Hood became the new
editor saying he would work with Emerson on the transition. He decided it was
better to use the internet technology top put the Wobbly City on-line and save
paper. One issue on the internet came out. After that, Tom Hood was too busy
with other more important projects to continue; and he didn’t realize how much
work he would have to put into it. The newsletter languished never to see the
light of day again. By the time Ry Grossinger had taken over the branch behind
the curtain and nominated Emerson back as the editor of the Wobbly City,
Emerson had already quit the branch.
It was nine years
later that the Labor Board said fired the Dante’s Barista should get his job back.
Emerson was glad Bruno was vindicated, after all this time. He'd always been a
hero to him. Bruno Ascus was not a union organizer; he was told he was one by Ryland
whose dirty work he did. Emerson remembered Bruno feeling his oats after Ryland
dared him to stand up to the manager. Then, after he was fired, while Ryland
kept his job, Ryland used Bruno as a test law case with some connections he
had. Bruno didn’t even know what NLRB stood for when Ryland filed the petition
on his behalf; all Bruno did was sign the paper.
In the nine years
since federal authorities decided he should get his case back, Bruno washed
dishes in delicatessens, took care of elderly homebound clients for an agency,
and washed floors in a rehab center. “It’s disgusting,” Emerson thought, “that
after all this time, his jobs were so bad that he still wanted his Dante’s
Coffee Shop job back!”
Emerson thought of calling up Bruno. He couldn’t
muster the courage. To Bruno, Ryland was a hero though he lost Bruno the best
job he ever had, literally. Emerson recalls how Ryland and two other Wobbly
baristas wore the IWW button at work, too, but carefully didn’t say anything to
management that would be considered grounds for firing; he wasn’t ready to play
that card, yet. Bruno wasn’t that discreet.
Bruno Ascus had
already moved on, married and had kids when Ryland, seeing another opportunity
for union fame, brought charges on his behalf to the NLRB accusing Dante’s of
unfairly abusing him for union activism. The board ruled against the coffee
chain. Dante’s took its case to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals the court
gave the case back to the NLRB after deciding that Bruno didn’t curse the
manager in front of customers; just in front of other baristas.
Two years later, the
NLRB had a new decision: Bruno’s firing was illegal no matter what because
Bruno’s union activism contributed to the decision to get rid of him. The NLRB pointed
out that Dante’ didn’t punish other employees for cursing—including the manager—and
that a memo about Bruno’s dismissal specifically said it was because Bruno
supported the IWW union.
When Emerson Davinsky
started feeling the need for anti-Alzheimer’s medication, he put the pen down
and stopped writing his memoirs. Through all the past e-mails and flame wars,
he couldn’t put on his pants without pulling up a memory.
When he saw the news
on-line about Bruno Ascus, he got that feeling again.
Bruno was vindicated after nine years after he was fired from Dante’s Coffee
Shop in the early days of the Ry Grossinger organizing there; Grossinger had an
idea, for IWW solidarity, for workers to wear buttons during work time, even
though only five of the twelve workers were in the union.
Ryland
had contacted the NLRB to schedule an election. Emerson and the other Wobblies
in the branch felt it showed their hand without a solid majority, it got Bruno,
naive as he was, into an argument with the manager and eventually fired. Before
a vote could be taken to join the union, it was postponed because they knew they
would lose, since Dante management packed the location with anti-union
stalwarts.
The
only person who benefitted from the organizing was Ry Grossinger; the corporate
news it generated made him slightly famous, enough to be invited to write a
preface to an old IWW anthology, get hangers-on, and make use of his law
credentials.
He
never asked permission from the IWW GMB to start the union drive and, finally,
depleted the GMB of funds by stuffing votes; only Dante workers went to vote.
Ry never shared funds raised by the Dante baristas with the GMB or GHQ. He even
started his own website and list-serve without approval. With the tide against Emerson
and no support from friends like Jack Covert who quit the branch, he never
brought Ry up on charges; he left the branch in disgust.
It
was the first shot in a volley of union organizing that the New York City
General Membership Branch of the Industrial Workers of the World tried to
accomplish. All the organizing had ended before it took hold, like moving a
broken chair before the glue had dried or trying to sit on the chair after it
had been removed, so eager were Emerson’s fellow workers to outdo each other.
Workers who lost their jobs because of the impatience of the advising
organizers would eventually win some of their cases in court after guilt and
pro bono defense helped them get through. Colonel Crutch even donated a sum of
his own money to ease his conscience and get workers their jobs back. Emerson
was long gone from the branch by the time mop-up began.
Colonial
Crutch moved on as Ryland moved away with his own version of the IWW. Emerson
stayed true to the General Membership Branch and tried to safeguard meetings
and funds for all members, not just Ryland’s gang or the Clutch-Willy faction.
In
Brooklyn Crutch and Willy were joined by Fergie and Emerson and a few others at
four shops that had let them help organize unions for them. Emerson was
especially helpful with his Mandarin ability by ad-libbing chants outside the
Chinese run businesses. For their services, all workers in two of the shops had
been fired and management demanded to see proof of legal immigrant status as a
way of scaring the un-fired workers into behaving.
Emerson
proudly participated in the union pushes at the shops in Bushwick. One day in
particular stands out in his mind as exemplary. The day began at 5:30am in
front of Great City Produce. A few workers arriving heard whistles and
home-made drums. A supervisor kept the door closed an hour until the Latino
manager arrived; he could speak with his own people, the Chinese bosses knew.
Next, Emerson and the other Wobblies walked to the nearby Americana Market. It
was there the previous year that four workers were fired for organizing. A few
stayed on because they were discreet and not openly involved with the union, so
the management thought.
After
stopping off for breakfast, Emerson took his fellow workers in his car a few
miles away to Dawn Plus Corp., formally called Rosy Supply Corp. Rosy Supply
was the company that fired all its workers involved with the IWW. Wobblies from
out of town in New York City at the time joined the demonstration to get the
workers their back pay.
The
final stop of that perfect union day was at Hung-Easy, the foodstuffs
distributor that Willy the Glove and Colonial Crutch went to after one worker
complained about them at Allanar El Camino. The warehouse was locked
up for the holiday. Despite that, the solidarity party continued until the police
came to send them away. Emerson drove his fellow workers back to the subway
station and headed home fulfilled.
Willy the Glove
expressed himself satisfied with the day’s events in every way. Everyone let
him believe it was his party. Emerson resented him and the way the branch was
strictly divided along selfish lines of heroism by Crutch and Ryland. Despite
all the hard effort, almost everyone who was being helped organizing lost their
jobs. Baristas usually didn’t go to Bushwich actions and Bushwich organizers
weren’t welcome at barista meetings. Only Emerson and a few other Wobblies
stayed on to participate in both. Emerson knew there had to be a better way.
The NYC GMB was ruining more people’s lives than they helped. Only Ryland came
out smelling like Bread & Roses.
“Tell us about the time Ryland Grossinger and Tumor
Israeli made the motion to get stocking hats for all the New York City Dante
baristas,” the historian sent by The Labor Studies Center in Ann Arbor at the University of Michigan adjusted the microphone in
front of Emerson and checked the recorder on the table to make sure it was
running. It was five years earlier that the Wobbly City newspaper was cited for
progressive journalism and added to the university archives. Gerald Rubin came
to New York to meet and interview its editor, Emerson Davinsky, who wasn’t the
editor any more or even active in the New York City General Membership Branch,
but it would be a good story.
“There were enough baristas there for a
quorum; five members minimum. They all voted ‘yes’ and the motion passed; that’s
all. It was that simple.”
“Did they say they would pay the branch
back for them?”
“Yes, that’s what Ry and Tumor said.”
“Ry?” Mr. Rubin looked amused.
“Yeah. They said they would, at the
wholesale price, of course, but none of them ever did.”
“Where did you buy the stocking hats from?”
“GHQ; Secretary-Treasurer Lexus in
Philadelphia had them made for the outreach store there. I asked her to send
them up pronto because the Dante’s Workers were planning a job action at the
Union Square store and wanted to have them; it would be cold out there on the
picket line.”
“It must have been upsetting,” the
historian commented.
“It wasn’t at first. I got a thrill going
to the picket line with the box full of stocking hats. All the baristas greeted
me like I was a hero coming to hold the fort down. Before I had a chance to
collect payment they grabbed the hats from the box. Some put them on their
heads, others stashed them somewhere; some took two, wore one and stashed the
other. Some friends of the baristas took one, too, and I never saw them again.”
“Did you at least get one?”
“No, they were all gone, all twenty of
them.”
“They hijacked the
General Membership Branch and looted the funds,” said Emerson somewhat
distraught at the regression of the branch. “Ry just smeared his own jelly over
it and made it his own with Tumor and the other barista friends of his.”
“What did the other non-affiliated members
do?”
“Well, that drunkard, Fergie, wagging his
tail in excitement, went along with the schmoozing Rye Bread spread over him.
He was Ryland’s peer; the same age. Not like me; I was an old fart to them.
Colonial Crutch had his head up his ass with his Bushwick project. His only
regret was that he couldn’t loot the GMB funds first. There was no money left
in the treasury when he came to the next monthly meeting and made a motion for
outreach funds.”
“What about Jack Covert?”
“After they wouldn’t listen to his advice
at the meeting, he slinked further into the shadows of the branch. Then he
wrote that e-mail on our list-serve: ‘You’re all a bunch of assholes,’ he
wrote, including me too, I guess.” Emerson and Gerald laughed at the notion of
the branch creep calling the others ‘assholes.’
“No one had the time or energy to fight
these schmucks and bringing them up on charges would have been a waste of time.”
“Why.”
“Why? Because Ry and the baristas were the
only members coming to meetings; they wouldn’t have voted for the charges if
there had been anyone to second the motion in the first place, which there wasn’t.”
“Look at them now. They have their own
website, their own column in the Industrial Worker. The ‘bored from within’ and
took over a void left when real Wobblies, sick with disgust, walked away,” Emerson
said shaking his head.
“I didn’t give up though,” he went on. “After
a year of boycotting the branch activities and meetings, I finally took Fergie’s
advice and went back.
“Did you go back to editing the Wobbly
City?”
“No, I didn’t. Ry chose Tom Hood to be the
editor and voted him in when I left the branch. The shithead wrote one hard
copy edition and one half-hearted electronic edition on the internet, and then
stopped doing it all together. Later another Dante barista, this sister worker
named Dyin’, was given the paper but she had bigger plans; the I.W. was her
goal and there she is printing out the crap Ryland and the new-fangled Wobblies
approve of, the fakirs they are.”
“They wouldn’t even vote to make me
secretary when I called the ace and put in my candidacy.” Emerson took a long
gulp on the water bottle he’d been holding. He’d been talking with the reporter
for half an hour and his mouth was getting high as his temperature rose. “Ry
Bread nominated a guy, actually a nice guy, but he had only been in the branch
a few months. His qualification, according to that louse, was that he was new
and should be given a chance to demonstrate and learn leadership skills, in
other words, he could be Ry Grossinger’s puppet.”
“I left the branch for good after that.
Well, actually I did go back a while later on when this folksinger from France
was in town wanted to do a fund-raiser for the IWW at this bar in Williamsburg.
I helped organized the show, went to the bar and all to get permission,
advertised it on Indymedia, and we had a pretty good turn-out. I only did it
because Fergie said the funds would be GMB funds; not Dante funds. I stood at
the door and asked patrons to donate a suggested five dollars and we raised
over three hundred dollars. But Fergie didn’t like that I was asking people to
donate funds, would you believe that?” The reporter from The Labor Studies Center in Ann Arbor shook his head in
disbelief.
“Like I was a class enemy; I wasn’t supposed to ask people to
donate five dollars or whatever they could afford. Fergie treated me like shit
and said he was going to tell Ryland Grossinger what I was doing like he was a
principal or something. Schmuck!”
A young woman walked into the library, a friend of Gerald
Rubin, and sat down at the table introducing herself to Emerson. “We’re almost
done, Flo.”
“Oh that’s okay,” she said, “Take your time.”
“Wow, what time is it? I have to get ready to go anyway,”
Emerson said looking at his watch. “Anyway, let me conclude: I left the branch
for good after that and the new secretary, the one that Ryland nominated, would
send me an e-mail from time to time asking me to reconsider coming back to the
branch. He persuaded me and I told him I would, but he kept asking me and
calling me on the phone like I didn’t answer. I called him back and left a
message and said I was coming to the next meeting whenever that would be but he
never called me back; it’s like there was a glitch in the e-mails in the
computer, but I have the proof; I have the e-mails he sent me and my responses
that didn’t seem to get through. Maybe someone was deleting them on purpose and
he never saw them. I don’t know. He kept writing asking me why I wouldn’t
respond and then said I was no longer in good standing and would not contact me
again.”
Emerson,
Gerald, and Flo stood and put on their winter coats and headed out into the
streets of Greenwich Village. Emerson was told his account would be put into
the file the labor studies department had on the IWW NYC GMB. Perhaps they were
spies satisfied that, with the losers in the branch and the dishonest ego
trippers they were, the F.B.I. had nothing to worry about.
Those monthly Wobbly
City newsletters Emerson edited (and mostly wrote himself with no help) are
great works, he felt. He would have kept doing them if the Wobblies at the NYC
GMB, spearheaded by Ryland, hadn't taken the editorship away from him and given
it to Tom Hood who wrote one belated edition and lost interest. Later, after Ry
Grossinger took over the branch, he had the nerve to make a motion that Emerson
to resume editorship after refusing to second his nomination for chapter
secretary. Emerson declined and left the branch. Emerson was glad he kept color
copies of all the editions.
If everything had
worked out as Emerson hoped, the IWW would again be the spirit that animated
the labor movement as it was a century ago. This rag-tag organization with two
thousand members in good standing* worldwide (*dues paid up to date) would have
had a lecture circuit like the businessman, author and investor, Robert
Kiyosaki who wrote Rich Dad, Poor Dad, not for
entrepreneuring weasels but for hard-working victims oppressed by that shitty
top-down attitude. Ayn Rand would have become a cartoon character villain in a ‘truth
and justice’ comic book about the un-American way a super hero of the working
class would be, realistically, and she would suffer her dog-eat-dog ways with
monster dogs eating her putrid flesh, literally.
All Emerson ever wished for, and all his Pop ever expected him to be
successful at was raising a family and being true to them, alive and after he
was gone. It just wasn’t working out that way. Even in the progressive movement,
there were under-achievers who tried to get over on others to prove their worth
to themselves and attract dumb-ass woman holding out for anti-heroes such as
themselves.
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