The "O" Word
Conservative by Nature, Christian by Choice
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Tyson Update

August 8th, 2008 . by Cary

Just got this in the comment section on this post:

Ed
ed.nicholson@tyson.com | 199.66.1.5

Labor Day Reinstated as Paid Holiday at Shelbyville, TN, Plant
Tyson Foods Requested Change from Union

Springdale, Arkansas – August 8, 2008 – Tyson Foods, Inc. announced today it has reached a new agreement with the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU), an American union, reinstating Labor Day as one of the designated paid holidays under the contract for covered employees in the Shelbyville, Tennessee, plant.

Tyson made this request on behalf of its Shelbyville plant employees, some of whom had expressed concern about the new contract provisions relative to paid holidays. In an effort to be responsive, Tyson asked the union to reopen the contract to address the holiday issue, and the union agreed to do so. The union membership voted overwhelmingly Thursday to reinstate Labor Day as one of the plant’s paid holidays, while keeping Eid al-Fitr as an additional paid holiday for this year only. This means that in 2008 only, Shelbyville employees will have nine paid holidays.

For the remainder of the five-year contract period, the eight paid holidays will include: New Year’s Day, Martin Luther King Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day and a Personal Holiday, which could either be the employee’s birthday, Eid al-Fitr or another day requested and approved by their supervisor.

This issue concerns only the plant at Shelbyville, Tennessee. Labor Day has always been celebrated, and continues to be, at the other 118 Tyson plants across the country.

The Shelbyville complex employs approximately 1,200 people. Approximately 1,000 workers are covered by the RWDSU union agreement at that location.

Note: The Shelbyville plant has 250 Somali employees, not 700, as was previously erroneously reported. They were employed at the plant via the Tennessee Department of Employment Security.

http://www.tyson.com/Corporate/PressRoom/ViewArticle.aspx?id=3021

From Tyson Foods, 2008/08/08 at 8:08 AM

Nothing like a little dander getting up to produce some results, eh?

Hey, Tyson foods – how’s your wallet feeling?

Note – I normally don’t include e-mail addresses in these types of releases, but I feel that the inclusion this time is needed for authentication. I also didn’t think this little backwater would garner this kind of corporate attention, but there you go.

Red Friday

August 8th, 2008 . by Cary

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Are ya wearing it? You should be!

On today’s The O Word, I talked about the New Orleans Saints game against an anonymous JV team in a pre-season game at the University of Phoenix Stadium, James Doohan’s ashes didn’t make it too space this time, the Olympics are a wonderful love-fest by the MSM to China, Osama’s driver was sentenced to a wrist-slap, Obama’s new salute, and the armed invasion of US soil by armed Mexican Army members – show #20!

I’ve added a badge in the sidebar – for the White Talk Radio Network – where everybody knows your name. Come on over! If you want an invite to join, drop me a line in the comments.

Have a great weekend!

Thank you for stopping by, In GOD We Trust, God bless you all, Time, Inc. is a bunch of weasels, listen to The O Word on BlogTalkRadio, Wear Red on Fridays, and support Warriors for Innocence!

Tyson Foods

August 4th, 2008 . by Cary

As my loyal reader knows, I usually take the weekend and spend most of it with TMBWitW and our daughter, MEG, only occasionally checking e-mail and what not.

On Saturday, Texas Fred posted about Tyson Foods in Shelbyville, Tennessee, and their union’s new contract, which drops Labor Day in favor of the islamic or muslim holiday of eat al’s fart eid al-fitr, which marks the end of ramadan.

The discussion is lively, as usual, over at Fred’s. There is a rumbling of mostly “How dare they start capitulating to the muslims” and a general air of boycott is permeating the area.

My take? I think that Tyson (and the union) is setting a bad precedent – this is a nation founded on Christian ideals, and allowing an aggressive cult like islam to start dictating how the people of this nation should act is the start of a slippery slope to allowing muslims to insist that sharia law be implemented here.

As long as I have breath, that ain’t gonna happen without protest and defense of our system of law.

I think a boycott is a good idea. Add Tyson Foods overall to the list, along with Citgo (Chavez-run oil), and this list of Tyson products in particular. If you happen to know of subsidy holdings of Tyson, let’s hit them there, too.

Well, it’s otherwise a gorgeous morning (barely in the high 80’s this morning, bit of a cold-snap dontchaknow) and MEG was up early. We’ve had breakfast, and she is watching her favorite clown fish. I think I’ll cruise around the ‘net a bit and then see what she wants to do next. Maybe we’ll work on the letters again today.

Thank you for stopping by, In GOD We Trust, God bless you all, Time, Inc. is a bunch of weasels, listen to The O Word on BlogTalkRadio, Wear Red on Fridays, and support Warriors for Innocence!

Red Friday

June 13th, 2008 . by Cary

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Wearing my Lightning Sharp polo today – being all casual and what not.

You would have known this if you had listened to the show this morning – oh, wait, that’s right. I had connectivity issues and couldn’t host the show, so it was pretty much a bust.

Next time.

One of the things I was going to touch on on the show was the Supreme’s ruling that people don’t have to be citizens in order to be protected by this country’s constitution.

Great. Now all the illegals can claim rights under the constitution, since the Gitmo detainees have managed to weasel their way under it’s umbrella.

President Bush, it’s time to grow a pair – what, are you afraid your popularity rating will nosedive? You aren’t headed for another term in the White House, so what’s the harm? Cowboy up, Mr. President, and tell the Supremes they are WRONG to grant rights to non-citizens.

So, if you are a terrorist, fighting US soldiers, and are captured in the process of fighting US soldiers, and you are not wearing a uniform – it’s OK! Before, if the US had abided by the Geneva Convention, the detainee would have been executed in the field. Since that is distasteful to the liberals, the US afforded them protections under the Geneva Convention, by instead imprisoning them and granting them legal representation. Apparently that isn’t enough for the Justices Who Would Be Kings, and now these non-citizens, held for participating in non-uniformed acts of aggression on uniformed members of a recognized, standing army, have all the same rights and privileges as any citizen of the United States under the constitution.

Fantastic. Annie, get your gun.

Thank you for stopping by, God bless you all, listen to The O Word on BlogTalkRadio, Wear Red on Fridays, and support Warriors for Innocence!

Wednesday – er, Thursday Catch-up

December 13th, 2006 . by Cary

You remember the bug TMBWitW had on Sunday? I got it on Monday, it laid me out for quite a while.

Mulligan has joined the baby pool, so the competition is getting tighter!

I meant to blog on this next item on Monday at the latest, but the bug kept me down, then on Tuesday I was playing catch-up for all the things I didn’t get accomplished on Monday, so here we are, stealing a few seconds before I head off for work: (note – it’s now after work on Thursday, and time keeps on slippin’…)

In Sunday’s Arizona Republic, there was an article on the op-ed pages. Not just any article, but something I have been waiting on for a while now.

M. Zuhdi Jasser is, according to the bio at the end of the special piece, a Phoenix physician and chairman of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy. Dr. Jasser wrote:

“The first thing one must understand about the whole hullabaloo with the Muslim imams taken off a Phoenix-bound plane in Minneapolis is that it most definitely was not about the right to prayer or freedom of worship.
“And much as the imams and their handlers may try, it is certainly not about victimization.”

The Republic’s on-line site (www.arizonarepublic.com) does not archive non-staff articles, so please bear with me. Feel free to search on his name at the site under archives; he comes up quite often.

Dr. Jasser is a rare person in this day and age – a Muslim who is actually, on an on-going basis, calling for the moderates to step up and denounce the extremists. He has called for and organized peaceful gatherings of Muslims (as opposed to muslims, no uppercase) in order to put forth an acceptable face on the religion that is being hijacked by radicals. His cry is the same as many of ours: “Why aren’t the moderates doing anything?” He is, in fact, also doing something, and for that I give him credit. Now, if there were only more who thought like him. I am afraid, however, that if the radical muslims continue in their quest to remove the US and Israel form the face of the earth, the moderates of the faith will also be removed.

Dr. Jasser continues, further in:

“The preponderance of evidence points to some troubling coincidences during flight preparation, regardless of where we stand on this issue. The distribution of their seats, while in fact random, raised concern. Changing seats after boarding, rather than before, raised concern. Conversations in Arabic afte boarding raised concern. Seatbelt extenders raised concern. However, no passenger refused to board afte seeing and hearing the imams pray aloud at the gate. Taken individually, each of the reported actions could be something any of us would do. However, in totality, although unfortunate in retrospect, it remains hard to fault a cautous crew who must act with little information to ensure a safe flight.
“But let us look at the response of the imams since the incident.
“They rushed toward the media never looking back. They have taken their story of victimization to every soft media they could find.they then stoked the same tired Muslim flames of victimization through their own political pulpits in mosques around the Valley.”

If you recall, and Dr. Jasser goes on to say, that CAIR had jumped on the vicitim bandwagon even before the imams had made it back to Phoenix the next day; it is my opinion that CAIR (are you lurking again, CAIR? Are you reading these words? Then leave a comment, you chickens. Call me a liar.) wanted to run the victim flag as far up the highest flagpole they could in the hopes that someone would hear their cries and start falling all over themselves apologizing.

I ain’t gonna apologize. I applaud the crew for their actions. I berate the imams for their insensitive approach and swiss-cheese explanations (It was the required prayer time? For what, three of the six of you? Are you going to report the other three so they can be reprimanded? Didn’t think so.); and I also give a big F- to the liberal media outlets that made a big to-do over the issue before they had the full story.

Dr. Jasser:

“Though this was not about prayer, let us look at the prayer itself: certainly a central part of our faith both alone and in congregation. The Quran teaches Muslims that God did not amke our faith to be too difficult. Thus, during travel, many of us pray alone in silence when we cannot find a private place or where public display is not appropriate.
“Prayer is an intimate thing, five times a day for Muslims. It is a personal conversation with God and not about showing others how devout we are.”

There were members of a local mosque gathered at Sky Harbor (it just so happened they gathered in front of the building with “US Airways” on it, positioned so the cameras could get the whole thing on film – kinda like a certain crying she-hag) in order to publicly pray, in “protest” of the treatment of the imams (microphones were provided so everyone could hear how righteous they were). They, most likely, did not understand that the imams weren’t removed for praying, but for the actions which mirrored terrorist tactics. And, I beleive, they missed the part in muslim training school where prayer was a “personal converation with God and not about showing others how devout” they are.

If any group of people acted like the imams did after boarding the plane, I would hope and pray that they were removed, no matter what religion they were.

I also applaud Dr. Jasser for continuing his call with the view that religion and politics don’t mix – and I will certainly stand by that. While devout people can be excellent leaders, they lose their effectiveness when they turn their positions into bully pulpits, no matter what religion or politic you look at.

Thank you for stopping by, God bless you all, Wear Red on Fridays, and get in on the Baby Pool!

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