Chat on the Olive Harvest Strike in Spain
Right from the first day of the conflict several dozen
farmers and employers from Bujalance discussed the different aspects of
the strike online. They complained about the red tape of the Socialist
Party, which they accused of buying votes by securing splendid dole
money for the mob. They ranted on about the lack of restraint of the
seasonal workers, who don’t cling on to the olive trees like
themselves. They moaned about the lack of solidarity shown by other
landowners, about the technological backwardness of Bujalance and about
the communist/fascist terror of the union. The following is a summary
of their debate. The original can be found here.
Kulak Chat-Room
*
I have about 800 olive trees and there is no way that I could bring in
the harvest. What does this CC.OO guy think that he is doing? Leaving
the workers without a wage for a year? Who will bother to contract them
after the strike?
* I often find myself amused by this village which
exists for about 40 years now seperated from civilisation under the
rule of the PSOE. I will bring in the harvest, even if it is side by
side with the Guardia Civil, that I swear.
* This is what fucking
annoys me in this web-forum, a lot of creeds, but what about the
strike? No bloody clue? You buggers from Bujalance, I know that you
still don’t use olive vibrators, but you must at least have computers.
Just tell us what’s happening. I was told on the phone that trees which
are ripe for the harvest can be picked, is that true?
* I feel shame
for this village. Where are the balls that it used to have? Why do we
allow such a son of a bitch to ruin the village, how long are we
supposed to be trapped in the past? All the villages in the region are
developing, only Bujalance isn’t. Let’s kick Manolo out of the village
and his followers will go with him as well.
* Fascist!
* Red Bastard!
* Long live the strike! Hey you, who just said that you will bring in your harvest, we will cut your damned two little olives!
*
Today I was trapped three quarters of an hour in the traffic jam,
simply because of the fucking road block of the day labourers. They
should block the fucking roads of their whore mothers.
* Manolo has
a tidy wage from the CC.OO, he wants to enter politics, if he succeeds
he won’t give a damn about the day labourers.
* That’s right, there are the regional CC.OO elections soon.
*
How is it poossible that this fascist and his four followers are able
to force a whole village to its knees? Because of the pickets and their
threats. Anyone who goes to work will get his face smashed, the car
demolished, the trees cut or the tractor burned. Fascism in its purest
form.
* I know Mr. Ramirez [Manolo] personally, he even defends violent Basques.
* I would really like to invent an automatic harvest machine and send them all to hell.
*
What about the collective contract? Did they agree yet? I don’t know
what to do with my gang, they already picked in Montoro und they are
supposed to go to Bujalance tomorrow.
* Most of the workers aren’t
even members of the CC.OO. These are the only two month that they have
to work anyway and now they use the opportunity and go on strike.
*
Even the bigger companies seem to get nervous, the strike is dragging
on despite their threat not to hire people for the whole rest of the
year.
* They don’t get nervous. They won’t hire anyone from
Bujalance for the next ten years, then you will see who will get
nervous. They will eat stones with eggs.
* Today Manolo started his
hunger strike, now he wants to turn himself into a victim. Also today
some small peasants went to work on the fields. We have to support them.
* Manolo cannot go on hunger strike, he is diabetic.
*
Bloody fascists, your whore mothers went to the fields, as well, but at
night time and that’s why you came into the world. Leave Manolo alone!
* Shut up, the 40s are over.
* Who of you in this forum has got a Cirafelli? Is this machine any good? I think of getting myself one. Thanks.
*
History repeats itself. In 1975 the olives from Bujalance achieved the
highest prices, that was before Manolo’s friend became mayor. He
brought in all gypsies from the region and everything went down the
drain. In the oldern days about 24,000 people lived here, now only
8,000.
* Also Mr. Ramirez knows very well how to get the gypsies behind him and the gypsies are allowed to do what ever they want.
*
The Romanians should come to Bujalance, then the day labourers in
Bujalance wouldn’t be spoilt with wages like 15,000 to 20,000 Pesetas a
day anymore.
* On all strike days, even during the general strike,
most of the workers from Bujalance went working in other villages and
we are not allowed to harvest our four olive trees which bear the
income of the whole year. They should be ashamed.
* Exactly. And by
the way, do you know how many of your workers have cash-in-hand jobs on
construction sites while still cashing dole money?!
* And Ghandi
Manolo Ramirez asks workers to renovate his house without having a
planning permission. Who is talking about workers’ rights?!
* I
don’t understand why you all get so wound up, here in Bujalance nothing
happens at all, no one starves to death, everyone stuffs their bellies
with bread and beer, with the latter in particular, most of the
strikers only work two month and the rest of the year they live on the
four or five unemployment benefits coming in for each family.
* That’s how they have always lived, of olives and on the dole. This year they will only have the dole money.
*
The second mayor of Bujalance, Mrs. Antonia Cabanillas proposes a
‘restructuring of Bujalances agricultur’, she demands we should
undertake ‘an effort like the one of the shipyard workers of Izar’, but
what the hell do we know of ship-building? Phantastic ideas,
qualification programs, new industries and all, but how are we supposed
to make a living today and tomorrow?
* Cheers, I am 40 years old, a real Bujalancero and I still cannot understand how fucking daft one can be in this village.
Towards
the end things got nastier, a lot of gypsy and communist blood was
supposed to be shed, some wanted to pass the head around for a
professional killer in order to shoot Manolo from the town hall’s
balcony, others made appointments for duels or wanted to re-use the
mass graves of the Civil War.
[prol-position news #2, 5/2005]

