Please see the article in the first comment.
As I have written before, some of the most effective disruption tactics have been pioneered by labor unions; that’s why the dissolution of labor unions has always been a top priority for both by corporations and the governments they control.
Look at the tactics used by French unions in this article.
— French farmers turned pigs loose in front of government buildings and dumped piles of manure on roads and in front of supermarkets and banks, to protest low prices for meat, milk, and other products. The result? The government promised €1.1 billion ($1.2 billion) in additional support.
— Taxi drivers blocked access roads to airports and attacked “Uber” vehicles with rocks and bats to protest Uber’s presence in France which undermines the wages and employment of unionized taxi drivers. The result? Uber suspended its service in France.
— Ferry workers protested plans to sell their service to a corporation that would have cut 500 jobs; they blocked access to the English Channel tunnel by regularly burning tyres and piling rubble on the motorway throughout the summer. The result? All but 100 of the jobs were saved.
— Workers at Goodyear tyre plant, at Caterpillar and 3M, have all literally held their plant managers hostage to demand better severance payments for worker layoffs. The result? They got what they demanded.
Disruption works.
The governments in Egypt, Tunisia, Algeria, and throughout the Muslim world enact policies specifically to satisfy multinationals and foreign investors; applying the tactic of system disruption to corporations to advance political demands will not be different. It is just as much within the power of multinationals to determine government policy as it is for them to policy within their companies..
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