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A Musical Celebration of the Meaning of Labor!— I'm proud to include in my column a report on a very important event “Ethics Is a Force!” which took place recently in Las Vegas. I saw this presentation when it was given at the American Labor Museum in Haledon, New Jersey, and I loved it! I'm glad to agree with the opinions expressed about it by the union officials quoted in this report.—AB What makes unions great—and beautiful? Why have so many union jobs been lost? What's really wrong with the economy? What's the cause of economic injustice? How can economics be kind and efficient? As the performers commented on 11 songs—which they sang with often sweeping power, and with depth and pizzazz—they gave the answers to those questions! Their basis was Aesthetic Realism, the philosophy founded by the educator and poet Eli Siegel. Thomas Jolley of Cleveland, Tennessee, said to the performers later, “You are our reminder—for the whole convention—of what we're here for. It's not just your talent—it's what you're saying! ” Wayne Bailey, of Local 22C in Portland, Maine, spoke about how “informative” the presentation was, “but it also reaches down into your heart.” The company sang such labor classics as “Which Side Are You On?,” “Joe Hill,” and “Solidarity Forever.” They also sang songs that haven't been thought of as about labor, but which, they showed, are. And in every instance, through their comments and performance, the meaning of those songs came forth in a new, vivid way. “It was great,” Anthony Caifano of New York 's Local 1L told the cast. “Everybody loved it!” The Fight in Economics & in Every Person One of the singers was Timothy Lynch, President of Teamsters Local 1205 and an Aesthetic Realism associate. Early in the presentation he said: “Aesthetic Realism shows what the big fight is within the self of every individual person, and explains that it's also the fundamental matter in economic history. It's the fight between contempt for the world and respect for it. Contempt is getting ‘an addition to self through the lessening of something else.' And one of the awful things human contempt has made for is economics based on profit: on seeing people in terms of how much money you can get out of them; how much wealth you can get from their labor while paying them as little as possible. The history of unions has really been a history of people fighting against this contempt, and for respect.” There was the Rodgers and Hart song “Ten Cents a Dance.” It is, said Carrie Wilson, who sang it, “a soliloquy telling the inward sorrow of a girl who works in a dance hall. She stands for the effect of economic ill will: her long hours of work are to provide profit for someone else.” Here are the opening lyrics:
Ms. Wilson said, introducing the song: “In his ‘Goodbye Profit System' lectures of the 1970s, Mr. Siegel explained that we've reached the point in history when economics based on contempt for human beings no longer works.” This failure of profit economics is with us today. We see its effects, as (for instance) employers, in their quest for profit, are depriving millions of Americans of health benefits; trying to force union give-backs; cutting American jobs and sending those jobs overseas where they can pay workers much less. The performers quoted Eli Siegel as saying:
The Economy Needs What a Song Has The Company explained that what an economy needs in order to be successful is the same thing that makes a song beautiful. They quoted this Aesthetic Realism principle: “All beauty is a making one of opposites, and the making one of opposites is what we are going after in ourselves.” For example, there are the opposites sameness and difference—and they are at the basis of the Yip Harburg and Jay Gorney song “Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?” “We need,” said Kevin Fennell, who sang it, “to see that a person different from us has feelings as real as our own, deserves the same things we deserve—just as notes in a song are different, yet each is as real as another, and needed for the song to be.” “Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?” makes vivid the fact that “for one person not to have money and another to have it is the most outrageous and artificial difference in the world.” The Only Source of Wealth Timothy Lynch sang Paul McKenna's very funny song “The Union Buster,” to the delight and recognition of the audience. About the intense effort to break unions, a retired pressman from Local 527 in Atlanta commented later: “Nobody knows it more than we do down there.” Yet, the Theatre Company said, “Despite all the union busters, what Eli Siegel explained in the following great statement is the most powerful fact about economics”:
“You Hit the Nail on the Head” When “Ethics Is a Force!” concluded, to a standing ovation, GCC President George Tedeschi expressed to the delegate body his pride in having invited the Aesthetic Realism Theatre Company to the convention. The GCC videotaped the event, and one of the cameramen, Francis Vincent (Local 720, International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees), said of “Ethics Is a Force!”: “It was inspirational! You hit the nail on the head.” Said John Heffernan, President of Local 2N in New York: “Eli Siegel must have been some person! He had his finger on what is happening.” The Aesthetic Realism Foundation is a not-for-profit educational foundation based in New York City. To find out more about “Ethics Is a Force!” and Aesthetic Realism itself, call 212-777-4490 or go to www.AestheticRealism.org As New York City high school teachers, Leila Rosen and Sally Ross were members of the United Federation of Teachers. For more of their writings we recommend the following links: www.leilarosen.net and www.aestheticrealism.net/News-Lesson-Virus-SR.html.
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