Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Texans Stage Mock Funeral To Mourn The ‘Death Of Good Jobs’ In @GOP Congressman’s District #p2 #tcot

from http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2011/08/23/302188/mock-jobs-funeral/

RIP Good Jobs

Staffers at the Houston office of GOP Rep. John Culberson (R) must have gotten quite a surprise on Thursday when they looked outside to see more than 100 constituents gathered for a funeral. But this wasn't a typical funeral — these Texans were gathered to mourn the loss of good, high-wage jobs in their state.

Mourners circled around a mock casket for "Good Jobs," and Taps played in the background while Rev. Louis Dorsey eulogized. "I used to be middle class!" one woman cried out during the ceremony. Constituents also chanted "Hey, hey, what do you say? How many jobs have you killed today?"

DORSEY: My brothers and my sisters, we are assembled here today to mourn the passing of the jobs in Texas. Jobs died because of a steady influx of minimum wage jobs, tax breaks for corporations and the super-rich, and the policies of politicians like Rep. John Culberson.

Watch it: http://youtu.be/0GkydNrMBI4

Dorsey went on to say, "Good jobs were much loved and appreciated by all here today. This loss is tragic because it is the result of reckless greed on Wall Street and in Congress. While the grief we endure for the loss of Good Jobs is great, we must not let this tragedy continue to happen." A longer version of the video is available here.

The rally was organized by Good Jobs = Great Houston, and was intended to illustrate "how politicians like Culberson are deliberately pursuing policies that are killing jobs across Texas." The constituents at Culberson's office included unemployed workers who want the congressman to start prioritizing their needs over corporate balance sheets.

According to the organization, they seek to hold Culberson accountable "for voting for legislation that could kill 1.8 million jobs nationwide and over 200,000 in Texas." Texas is currently tied with Mississippi for the highest percentage of minimum wage jobs in the nation, while "the median hourly earnings for all Texas workers was $11.20 per hour in 2010, compared to the national median of $12.50 per hour."

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