In this episode, we run through a wave of labor fights and political organizing that all point to the same thing: working people are done waiting their turn. From teachers in San Francisco forcing movement after a historic strike, to nurses in New York City refusing to be rushed into a weak contract, to health care workers walking out at Kaiser Permanente, this is what collective power looks like in real time. We also dig into the fight at JBS in Greeley, where Haitian workers are organizing under brutal conditions while navigating immigration threats — and why their near-unanimous strike vote is about dignity as much as wages.
We zoom out to connect these fights to the legacy of the 2006 immigrant walkouts that helped kill the U.S. Congress’s Sensenbrenner bill, and what today’s organizers can learn from that moment about scale, strategy, media, and clear demands. Then we head to Fort Worth to break down how machinist Taylor Rehmet flipped a deep-red state senate seat by focusing on bread-and-butter issues like schools, health care, and union rights — and by actually listening to voters instead of chasing culture-war nonsense.
The throughline: rank-and-file democracy matters, solidarity works, and power doesn’t come from consultants or billionaires — it comes from people willing to take risks together. From picket lines to ballot boxes, this episode connects the dots between labor struggle, immigrant justice, and grassroots politics in a system designed to keep working people divided.
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