Lund provides valuable voice of the barking underdog

February 1, 2015
Issue 

The Barking Dog
Edited by Caroline Lund
Order via lundshep@att.net
US$20 in US or $25 elsewhere

I asked Barry Sheppard, the longtime partner, friend and comrade of late US socialist, auto-worker and union activist Caroline Lund (pictured) to collect and publish The Barking Dog, because I thought it was one of the best shop floor newsletters from an auto worker I had ever read.

I believed this collection would be an inspiration and a guide for the next generation of rank-and-file auto workers. But I was wrong: The Barking Dog is much more than that.

The Barking Dog, a collection of Lund’s shop floor newsletters as an auto worker in California that ran from 1998 to 2006, is a history lesson.

It is an analysis of the machinations of The Machine That Changed the World, Toyota’s lean production system, from inside the beast itself. Caroline worked at the New United Motor Manufacturing Inc (NUMMI) plant, celebrated for bringing Toyota’s methods to US manufacturing.

The system de-skills work and chops up the work into ever-smaller units, so that workers are interchangeable and easier to speed up or cut back. Labor Notes dubbed it “management-by-stress”.

The book is an expose of corporate corruption and union capitulation, from the point of view of rank-and-file workers. It is a study of ordinary workers, pushed to the breaking point, who decided to push back.

It is a public record of the resistance and rebellion that grows in the hearts of workers who are often ignored and dismissed by media hacks and union office rats.

And it is the journal of a woman with the wit, fortitude, and drive to pursue her vision of what it meant to do the right thing, against all odds.

I was surprised by what The Barking Dog revealed. I didn’t work at NUMMI with Lund, but we were friends and fellow militants. I didn’t need to reread these old shop floor flyers, I thought — I had lived it.

But as I turned the pages, I realised that the times and struggles I lived were bigger than me, too big for me to absorb all at once. This was Lund’s special talent.

The Barking Dog is a people’s podium. Caroline was the editor, not a soapbox orator. She stood up for the underdog.

She voiced unpopular but thoughtful opinions, confronted harassment head-on, and didn’t back down when the company or the controlling union caucus tried to shut her down. But she devoted more space to voices of her fellow workers, and to struggles in other workplaces, than she did to herself.

The Barking Dog includes the voices of rank-and-file workers at Saturn, Caterpillar, Ford, Delphi, GM and United Airlines; longshore workers; a fired Bart worker in San Francisco; letters from Germany. This list is off the top of my head.

I read letters from women fighting harassment, disabled workers fighting persecution, and of course the voices of workers who feared to give their names but needed to tell their stories and hoped to rally their fellow workers to fight. The Barking Dog was no lone wolf.

Caroline Lund was a socialist of the old religion — like Eugene Debs, who once said: “I would not lead you out if I could; for if you could be led out, you could be led back again. I would have you make up your minds that there is nothing that you cannot do for yourselves.”

Young workers and activists looking for ways to connect and invigorate a new generation of militant workers can use The Barking Dog as a template. It’s simple. All it takes is guts.

[Reprinted from labornotes.org. Gregg Shotwell is a retired UAW-GM member and author of Autoworkers Under the Gun..]

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