Unions demand Congress keep ban on ‘ghost guns’ / by Press Associates

Photos from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives showing Nevada-based Polymer80 “ghost guns” being sold at a gun show. (Photos included in a March 2021 legislative presentation by Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence.)

Reposted from the People’s World


WASHINGTON —Five unions and the AFL-CIO Transportation Trades Department are urging Congress to permanently extend a law banning the manufacture of untraceable firearms, also known as “ghost guns.” They say the guns, with no metal in them, can go through airport, bus, and train detectors and become a threat to transportation workers.

But the unions and their congressional allies of both parties, including Sens. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, Jack Reed, D-R.I., Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., and Reps. Adriano Espillat, D-N.Y., Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., and Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., face an uphill battle against the ghost guns. That’s even with the endorsement of Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.

That’s because the 36-year-old Reagan era law expired on March 8, and the Republican-run House majority has shown no inclination to renew it. Reed, the Senate Armed Services Committee Chair, didn’t try to attach the ban to last July’s defense bill though he dropped the ban, as an amendment, into the hopper. The House’s Republicans had eliminated the ban from their version of the defense bill.

And while the notorious gun lobby, the National Rifle Association, is tied up in a massive fraud trial in New York and on the verge of bankruptcy, the nation’s number-two gun group, the Gun Owners of America, opposes renewing the ghost gun ban.

“Since 1988, the Undetectable Firearms Act required all firearms to be detectable by containing enough metal to set off walk-through metal detectors or x-ray machines, ensuring firearms are not taken to areas where they are expressly prohibited,” TTD, the Flight Attendants, the Government Employees, the Transport Workers, the Airline Pilots, and SEIU wrote to congressional leaders.

“More and more, flight crews and gate agents must deal with the excessive and all-too-often violent behavior of unruly passengers. Our members have been physically and verbally assaulted simply for carrying out their critical duties of keeping the flying public safe.

“Should Congress fail to timely reauthorize the Undetectable Firearms Act, flight crews, gate agents, and security professionals at airports could face the possibility of having to restrain an unruly passenger brandishing a loaded firearm that evaded airport security detection. This scenario could be deadly for aviation workers and passengers.”

“Permanently authorizing the Undetectable Firearms Act would prevent the manufacturing and possession of undetectable firearms at airports, crowded stadiums, and courtrooms, ensuring that firearms do not enter these secure areas unknowingly. Simply put, reauthorization of this legislation is a national security imperative.”

While the national ghost gun ban has expired, at least three states—Maryland, Washington, and New York—have also banned the weapons, a Google search shows.


We hope you appreciated this article. At People’s World, we believe news and information should be free and accessible to all, but we need your help. Our journalism is free of corporate influence and paywalls because we are totally reader-supported. Only you, our readers and supporters, make this possible. If you enjoy reading People’s World and the stories we bring you, please support our work by donating or becoming a monthly sustainer today. Thank you!


Press Associates Inc. (PAI), is a union news service in Washington D.C. Mark Gruenberg is the editor.

Art is labor, so why aren’t musicians and other artists viewed as workers? / by John Pietaro

‘Revolutionary Artists Fight Against War and Fascism’: Members of the John Reed Club on the march in New York in 1934. | Smithsonian Institution / Louis Lozowick papers

Reposted from the People’s World


rt is labor. It’s really that simple. Creative professionals have crafted their art into a career. While there’s no dispute that the work of musicians, writers, actors, and dancers as well as visual, film, and performance artists begins with visceral inspiration, our pride lies also in our success. Art is labor. It’s highly specialized, it requires countless hours, boundless energy, and visionary determination.

If art is work, why aren’t musicians and other artists viewed as workers?

Much of the problem lies in the oddly American concept that creative pursuits are but hobbies, perhaps side gigs at best. But another reason for this misconception can actually be found within artists: When we separate ourselves from other workers—and other unions—we can easily fall prey to the divisiveness that’s long been weaponized against the labor movement for well over a century.

The Harlem Artists Guild marching on May Day 1934.

The most radical years

Artists—cultural workers—of an earlier age came to understand the need for unity among all workers in the fight for fair wages, job security, and other factors of workplace justice. We can look to the radical years of the 1920s and particularly the ’30s as the performing and fine arts unions as well as “fraternal” and professional organizations of creatives grew in breadth, reach, and diversity, often carrying with them a stinging militant intensity.

The scope soon widened to encompass free speech, health and safety laws, racial justice, and women’s and immigrants’ equality, as well as the battle against child labor. Ultimately, labor’s agenda came to include sick leave, the 40-hour work week, vacation, holidays, benefits, pensions, the grievance and arbitration process, and of course the contracts negotiated to legally ensure all of this.

The Associated Musicians of Greater New York, American Federation of Musicians (AMF) Local 802, was founded in an act of rebellion at that time. It recognized the immediate need for a union built on racial equality and inclusion, as did the reconstructed Screenwriters Guild (now WGA), Screen Actors Guild, and Actors Equity, followed by the Guilds of Variety Artists and Musical Artists, among others.

Highly relevant to artists’ liberation were the left-wing organizations such as the national John Reed Club, a radical multi-arts grouping named for writer and journalist Reed, and its associated collectives. Among these were the Artists Union, the Workers Music League, and the esteemed Composers Collective of New York, which included Aaron Copland, Elie Siegmeister, Charles Lewis Seeger, Henry Cowell, Ruth Crawford, and Marc Blitzstein.

Other such vital organizations were the Harlem Artists Guild, the League of American Writers, and League of American Artists. These formal organizations had constitutions, held regular strategizing meetings, and staged important events. Most had their own journals as well, such as Art Front.

The Artists Union, 1934.

The boldness of cultural workers during those years is best exemplified by this quote from Charles Lewis Seeger, musicologist, founder of the Composers Collective, and the father of Pete Seeger, who, years later would be renowned for his own music of social change:

“We felt urgency in those days…. The social system is going to hell here. Music might be able to do something about it. Let’s see if we can try. We must try.” (“Unsung Songs of Protest: The Composers Collective of New York,” New York Folklore)

Today’s labor movement and the arts

The recent period has exemplified a new day of labor unrest in most every quarter, and strikes across the country have empowered the movement.

Among arts workers, this year we’ve witnessed a powerful campaign by the Writers Guild of America, sustaining a 148-day strike which ended in a historic victory. And SAG-AFTRA entered its negotiations brandishing a strike vote against the same AMPTP. SAG-AFTRA’s strike also resulted in another stunning win, following strong and tireless support from the arts unions as well as the wider movement.

The AFM, Actors Equity, IATSE, AGMA, AGVA and others within and beyond the entertainment and arts community, have stood by these union siblings all along.

Some of these trends began even earlier, as evidenced by the Local 802 members who are faculty at the New School’s School of Jazz and Contemporary Music. In militant support of our ACT-UAW co-workers, 802 refused to cross the picket line and engaged in multiple demonstrations of solidarity, marching, and playing music, in the streets of Greenwich Village.

From the IWW Little Red Songbook

Following ACT-UAW’s smashing success, our members saw the benefit of such mutual activism when our own negotiations committee demanded and won a contract of parity for the first time. And more recently, there was an outpouring of support for the actions of the New York City Ballet Orchestra. When faced with a seemingly insurmountable struggle, there’s nothing to compare with the sight of union comrades standing, marching, and chanting during multiple rallies.

In the current climate, with reactionary anti-union sentiment from the political right-wing, the business sector, and whole segments of governance, solidarity must become both mantra and mission.

The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) and journalist, songwriter Ralph Chaplin in particular, coined the oft-heard phrase “Solidarity Forever” in his 1911 song of the same name. The IWW reinforced this with the lasting slogan “An injury to one is an injury to all,” the heart of solidarity itself.

This article originally appeared in the December 2023 issue of Allegro, the journal of AFM Local 802.


We hope you appreciated this article. At People’s World, we believe news and information should be free and accessible to all, but we need your help. Our journalism is free of corporate influence and paywalls because we are totally reader-supported. Only you, our readers and supporters, make this possible. If you enjoy reading People’s World and the stories we bring you, please support our work by donating or becoming a monthly sustainer today. Thank you!


John Pietaro is Poet, Arts Journalist, Creative Writer, Spoken Word Artist. Works at Local 802 AFM. DJ, co-host Beneath the Underground at Sheena’s Jungle Room on WFMU. Staff Writer, Columnist, Critic at The NYC Jazz Record.