Listen
up clown,
This is a member of your so-called
marketing “sweet spot” talking to you. I do not claim to represent all
18 to 24 year olds, nor do I need to because very soon you will
encounter an avalanche of correspondence from us, and we, as a
diverse, decentralized movement, will have a variety of ways
of communicating with you. Perhaps by dispatching letters to your
executive bosses, converting the bland walls of McDonald’s’ outlets
with our art installations, and fomenting campaigns at our schools to
oust your Big Mac-peddling establishments from campus.
Now, Ronald, this is not a threat. It is a reasonable assumption based
on the spectrum of tactics we students and youth employed during the
Taco Bell Boycott, a campaign which Mother Jones awarded the Campus
Activism Victory of the Year in 2005. If you want to understand how we
think (and we know you do, or else how would you convince us to buy
your burgers?) then understand this: we think the Coalition of
Immokalee Workers (CIW), the immigrant farmworker-led crew of
activists in southern Florida calling on your bosses to fix their
complicity in widespread labor abuse, has initiated a dynamic,
unstoppable movement.
A century back, Ricardo Flores Magon, a native of Oaxaca and a
one-time immigrant farmworker in the U.S., wrote of the revolution
transpiring in his homeland that:
The people of Mexico find themselves in
these moments of open rebellion against their oppressors, and, taking
part in the general insurrection are those who sustain modern ideas:
those convinced of the fallacy of political remedies as a means of
redeeming the proletariat from economic slavery, those who do not
believe in the goodness of paternalistic governments nor in the
impartiality of laws worked out by the bourgeoisie, those who know
that the emancipation of the workers must be carried out by the
workers themselves, those convinced of the need for direct action.
While the CIW also comprises workers
originally from Guatemala, Haiti and other areas of the Global South,
Magon's words strikingly echo the spirit of struggle in the CIW’s
pursuit of what they term Fair Food.
Today, food harvesting in the U.S. is anything but fair: tomato
pickers in Immokalee must pick two tons of tomatoes one-by-one --
literally 4,000 pounds -- just to make $50, and they regularly work 10
to 12 hour days with no overtime pay, no right to organize, no sick
days and no benefits whatsoever. But instead of begging the government
to intervene (local politicos are reliant on campaign contributions
from the agriculture bigwigs whose industry dominates Florida’s
economy), the CIW demands change from those directly responsible for
their oppression. This is you and your imperial fast food compatriots,
Ronald.
It is McDonald’s which authorizes the suffering of farmworkers to
secure their profits. No one else in McDonald’s’ supply chain -- the
series of business deals moving a tomato from the misery of the fields
to your Happy Meals -- walks away so handsomely, and we youth have
taken notice, thanks principally to the brave denunciations of
farmworkers themselves.
After their defeat in 2004, Taco Bell affirmed the ability of fast
food leaders to remedy abuses perpetrated at the other end of their
supply chain by caving in to all of the CIW’s demands including wage
increases and a progressive Code of Conduct (whereby the CIW
themselves would investigate reported labor abuses).
But there are three other gems of insight regarding corporate
campaigns that we, youth organizing with the CIW for Fair Food, have
gleaned from the Taco Bell Boycott:
1. Given both the U.S.’ intensely anti-labor climate as well as the
chilling power of capitalism’s most influential players, it is often
more strategic to organize for social change at the point of
consumption rather than the point of production.
Over the last decade and a half, CIW members have held community-wide
work stoppages, hunger strikes and multi-day marches across Florida to
pressure employers to raise their wages and improve their working
conditions. But substantial change only finally came about when, based
on an evolved understanding of who is predominantly responsible for
their condition, the CIW switched targets -- from crew bosses to Taco
Bell -- and, consequently, we consumers were able to organize
ourselves in solidarity.
2. In today’s capitalist world, image is everything. Therefore, for
many corporations their brand is also an Achilles heel.
Your bosses know this well. It is precisely why they invest $1.2
billion annually in advertising and why they have worked to sculpt the
Golden Arches into one of the planet’s most recognizable images. It is
exactly why Eric Schlosser, author of Fast Food Nation and an
outspoken ally of the CIW, explains that 96% of U.S. schoolchildren,
when shown your picture, can identify you by name, Ronald.
In 1997, when your bosses sued a pair of Greenpeace pamphleteers for
libel, the judge ruled that “the sting of the leaflet to the effect
that the Plaintiffs exploit children by using them, as more
susceptible subjects of advertising, to pressurize their parents into
going to McDonald’s is justified. It is true.” This is why your
existence, Ronald, is, frankly, repugnant.
Your life is an affront to the noble mission of clowning -- you do not
entertain children to make them happy, you seduce them into buying
unhealthy food yielded from a supply chain grounded in the
exploitation of farmworkers. Thankfully, your half-brother
Rolando the Clown is tirelessly persuading McDonalds’
customers to help you see the error of your ways. And we, the
thousands of youth intent on building a Fair Food Nation, Ronald, have
his and the CIW’s back.
3. A decentralized network -- comprised of numerous local chapters
acting autonomously and coordinating their efforts -- is powerfully
effective because it diffuses consciousness and struggle to multiple
fronts while empowering local groups to determine for themselves what
actions they will take, thereby diversifying tactics nationwide and
complicating response efforts for the corporation under attack.
Over the course of the Taco Bell Boycott, students from over 400
schools participated in organizing with the CIW for Fair Food. By the
time Taco Bell cried uncle, we youth -- operating within the
Student/Farmworker Alliance network -- had either purged or prevented
Taco Bell from doing on-campus business at 22 different schools. As
you can imagine, the public relations fall-out was devastating for
Taco Bell, and their little dog, too.
Already, even without the CIW having asked allies to boycott
McDonald’s, we youth are organizing to make you and your bosses
recognize farmworkers’ dignity and to collaborate with them directly
to remedy the inhumane pay and abusive treatment they endure. In
October, in what we deemed the 1-2 Punch (two days of youth-led
solidarity events supporting the CIW’s Campaign for Fair Food), we
launched forty actions in twenty-one states primarily aimed at
McDonald’s.
And in just a few weeks, from April 13-14, thousands of us will be
converging at your corporate offices to demand justice for tomato
pickers, followed by a spirited parade and carnaval in downtown
Chicago. We have caravans leaving from more than 25
cities across the nation, and just recently, Tom Morello
and Zach de la Rocha -- formerly of Rage Against the Machine -- joined
countlesss others in RSVPing for what promises to be a historic
weekend of art, music and cultural resistance. If we don’t see you
there Ronald, I promise you will see (and hear) us.
It is not enough that your bosses deny farmworkers the fair wages
their hard labor clearly merits, they also assume that their marketing
“sweet spot” -- that’s us -- doesn’t care about their treatment of the
folks picking their tomatoes. Or, equally insulting, your bosses
assume that we are so ignorant that we would believe them over the
word of the individuals who are enduring this abuse. (In this sense,
we are not just fighting for your bosses to recognize farmworkers’
dignity but indeed that of their youthful prospective diners: us --
and in the process of that crucial discovery we trust that your bosses
will locate and nurture their own dignity as well.)
It’s like this, Ronald: In the same way that you apply make-up to
conceal the face of a man more interested in making a buck than the
welfare of the young minds you are manipulating, so too do your bosses
shamefully attempt to hide the miserable pay and work conditions that
fuel their profit-making.
After the CIW went public in their petition for McDonald’s’
intervention, your bosses tried to pretend that farmworkers aren’t
really poor. A startlingly shoddy statistical study emerged, paid for
by your bosses, which attempted to distort the wages of tomato
pickers. In little time, labor academics and student organizations --
including United Students Against Sweatshops, United States Student
Association, National Latino/a Law Student Association and Student
Labor Action Project -- tore it to shreds.
I must admit, Ronald, we remain puzzled as to how the folks
responsible for allegedly displacing the Christian cross with the
Golden Arches as one of the world’s most identifiable images somehow
let this error-riddled survey go public. (I know you must have heard
about this gaffe from some co-worker back at headquarters, undoubtedly
followed by rolled eyes and a furious slap to the forehead).
Ronald, simply put, McDonalds’ business ethics are revolting, so as
your self-deemed “target market” we youth will likewise be revolting
against you and your bosses, declaring you our target -- until the
cruel practices that McDonald’s allows to flourish in the fields of
Florida are finally abolished, and necessarily under the direction of
the farmworkers themselves.
Sincerely,
Jordan Buckley
Jordan Buckley
is with the Community Labor Action Project in Texas, an Austin
affiliate of the Student/Farmworker Alliance network Get on the Bus to
Chicago. Hook up with a
caravan close to you!