March 8 Women's Strike

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Is this happening everywhere? 

Is this happening anywhere?

Will mcdonalds stay open?

Volunteering doesn't pay.

A day without women is like a day without sunshine. 

Is Lysistrata taking the day off?

Not all can afford to take the day off, but the day also extends to not spending any money.

get fucked slacker

Change your strain, JR.

If only you could get something done by skipping work.

Lennon-and-Ono-Bed-In-002.jpg

 

I watched when we rise 

I did my part

Don't forget to have a good excuse for your boss:

http://www.cnbc.com/2017/02/20/dozens-fired-after-skipping-work-to-parti...

Nancy,

Are you skipping zoning tomorrow to demonstrate your worth?

Letters won't get typed

Men will arrive at work in non-matching outfits

Office gossip will not get disseminated

The toner on the copier will not get changed

Coffee will not be brewed

Donuts & Bagels will not be brought in

Bosses phones will go directly to voice mail

 

organized by 2 murderers and a diehard maoist. change....

If I was required to pay to zone then yes, Ender.

pretty sure my donation has already been 'spent' 

And I will wear red to work in solidarity 

Affluenza day

How to Participate in the March 8th Women's Strike

The March 8 strike aims to reveal what happens on a day without women.

By Ilana Novick / AlterNet

March 7, 2017

http://www.alternet.org/activism/how-participate-march-8th-womens-strike

The Women's March and demonstrations of its type are all about showing up. Participants aim to make their presence heard. As L.A. Kauffman, the author of Direct Action: Protest and the Reinvention of American Radicalis told Vogue, they "create situations that shine a spotlight on injustice and force a crisis that authorities need to address."

Many who attended the D.C. march couldn't hear the speeches or were caught in human traffic jams so crowded they couldn't complete the official route. All of which didn't matter, of course, because the point was to be present. But what if there was one day where women didn't show up? A day women made their value known by their absence?

For their next big project, International Women's Strike organizers, including the activists behind the Women's March, are calling for an event of the opposite kind. The March 8 general strike for women aims to showcase women's importance by revealing what happens on a day without women.

Taking the day off from paid work is only the beginning. Planned to coincide with International Women's Day, the organizers request that participants engage in one or all of the following actions on March 8, as listed on their website:

Women take the day off, from paid and unpaid labor

Avoid shopping for one day (with exceptions for small businesses and businesses owned by women and minorities)

Wear red in solidarity with A Day Without a Woman

Exactly how to use this time is up to each individual participant, but across the country, women and allies of the strike are staging rallies, marches, benefit concerts and other gatherings to show support and solidarity. In New York City, they will assemble in Washington Square Park for a tour of sites critical to progressive history, such as the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory, where young immigrant women died in a horrific fire in 1911, the deadliest industrial disaster in history at the time, which led to substantial labor reforms. In Philadelphia, strikers will stand in solidarity with the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers, who have been without a contract for 1,200 days.

Some critics, including Maureen Shaw, writing in Quartz, and Meghan Daum in the LA Times, argue that this strike will mostly amount to a day without privileged women—women who can afford to take the day off without fear of lost wages or other repercussions from employers. Shaw notes that, "As empowering as strikes may feel, they tend to be most effective when they are centered on achieving a particular policy goal," and compares this strike to those of labor unions fighting for higher wages, better working hours, or specific additions to their working conditions.

But the women's strike is only one step in fighting for a platform that includes all of these asks and more: environmental justice, reproductive rights and fair wages. The point is to show how many unseen, uncompensated and unvalued tasks women perform, and how much society depends on them.

It's supposed to be inconvenient, but Daum and Shaw's responses also assume that organizers haven't considered the economic barriers to striking (in fact, they take pains to explain that there is more than one way to participate). You can attend a rally before or after work, wear red, decline to shop, or decline to perform unpaid labor if taking the day off from paid labor is not an option.

For more information, including a letter to inform your employer of strike participation, visit A Day Without a Woman. The International Women's Strike website has a complete list of events around the country.

Ilana Novick is an AlterNet contributing writer and production editor.

Cool. 

I'm delivering Firewood to some Lady tomorrow, was thinking I might take her for Lunch if the Kids are at school.

Would free Lunch violate the Strike terms?

I think not.

kids won't be at school if they have female teachers.

The Girl goes to "Stuart Country Day" which is a fancy Princeton school with Nuns.  At least there used to be Nuns.  Not sure about the Boy, but if he can stay home & play video games, good for Him.

Nice Kids.  During the X-mas season, they ask their folks "Is Kwazy Uncle Disco coming over ??"

They teach me their insanely violent video games.

Sideshow?  Really?

Alexandria City, VA schools closed today...Several in DC. Maryland.

Much wider by the end of the day.

Standing Rock setting up on the NAtional Mall,  something in the air all reet.

Is this thread about women striking from the Zone? ;) 

I had to go to work today, too many deadlines. 

I'm a female teacher, Hillman. Lots of us worked today to educate our students. Please refrain from sexist comments.

>>>>>>> Sideshow?  Really?

My list was an attempt, using humor, to demonstrate that, even decades after the movie "9 to 5" and progress that's been made since then, it remains the case that in typical offices, women still mostly perform these mundane but essential tasks.  I witnessed engineers actually go & complain to the secretaries that the copier was out of paper instead of simply refilling it himself.

But yeah, I do enjoy Inappropriate humor . . .

That's a relief.

My mother, 86, was taken by me to her new doctor I picked for her today.

Madre was not thrilled the doctor was a young woman.  My wife's late mother had similar issues with women in what she considered men's roles.

Young woman doctor was so smart and kind that madre was won over.

A small victory.

Aiq, you're taking care of a lot of people - your mom is lucky you're helping her. I hope you're taking good care of yourself, too.

1993, with an update

Bloom County 3_8_17_0.jpg

And in other news..sales of Ivanka's clothing line are up over 300%.

http://thehill.com/blogs/in-the-know/in-the-know/322818-ivanka-trump-clo...

Did anyone here actually participate in this? I swear I heard more bitching about it by butthurt men than any relevant news coverage.

Pearl Jam made a nice gesture:

http://www.jambands.com/news/2017/03/08/pearl-jam-celebrate-internationa...

 

Out here, the women were working at all of the local establishments I visited yesterday, the bank, Goodwill, the cafe and the brewpub.  We didn't see any women shoppers though, which was outside the norm.  Lots of men were poking around early in the day, when the weather was better, so maybe the lack of women shoppers was attributable to the strike.  Later in the day, the weather turned cold, wet and menacing, and foot traffic died altogether.  

 

Between cruddy weather and civil discontent, it's been a brutal season for retailing.  I've seen half a dozen local business go belly up in the last two months, including big stores like Big Five, American Apparel and Half Price Books.  Spring can't come soon enough.

 

 

Yesterday, I was heating my soup in our relatively small lunch room and I turned around from the microwave to wish my fellow co-workers a Happy International Women's Day.

 

I was the only man in the room and I was surrounded by my female friends and acquaintances: immigrants from Chile, Mexico, China, Vietnam, Cambodia, The Philippines, Iran, and India.  There were a few women who were born in the US as well.  I'm not exaggerating: just a casual routine gathering of people from around the world eating lunch; sharing space.

 

It really hit me hard just how blessed I have been to live and work in such a wonderfully diverse community.

 

MUCH LOVE to the Women of the World.   heart

Women rule the world, give thanks and praise.

>> It really hit me hard just how blessed I have been to live and work in such a wonderfully diverse community.

Except for the cleaning lady and office manager, my office is 100% male.

Ender, for the heck of it, I just checked into my colleagues' women vs. men numbers:

 

My agency has 401 people on our employee list:

345 are women

56 are men

 

 

There's little wonder why all of us are underpaid!  surprise