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<iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/StanWeir" width="640" height="480" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe> | <iframe src="https://archive.org/embed/StanWeir" width="640" height="480" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen="true" mozallowfullscreen="true" allowfullscreen></iframe> | ||
[[category:Labor]] [[category:1940s]] [[category:1950s]] [[category:1960s]] [[category:ILWU]] [[category:East Bay]] | [[category:Labor]] [[category:1940s]] [[category:1950s]] [[category:1960s]] [[category:ILWU]] [[category:East Bay]] [[category:Oral Histories]] |
Oral History
Interviewed by Chris Carlsson in Mission District flat in 1997
Stan Weir, 1921-2001, was a longtime labor radical... called "Red" during his days as a longshoreman, he led 57 B-Men in a Kafkaesque struggle with Harry Bridges and the ILWU Executive Committee, after they were cashiered over breaking rules that had been developed secretly and imposed retroactively! Weir's many writings covered rank-and-file union politics, focusing on as he liked to put it, "unions that stay on the job." In this 2 hour interview/discussion with Chris Carlsson, himself a longtime publisher and writer (Processed World, Shaping San Francisco), many ideas about contemporary strategies for organizing, facing technical change, automation, etc. are broached.
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