Industrial Workers of the World - South Dakota IWW https://www.iww.org/taxonomy/term/675/0 en IWW members in Sioux Falls South Dakota demonstrate in solidarity with immigrant workers on May Day https://www.iww.org/node/3393 <p><img width="240" height="231" border="1" align="right" src="/graphics/photos/color/events/bilde.jpg" /><a target="_blank" href="http://www.argusleader.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2007705020332"><strong>Article and Photo by By Sheri Levisay - The <em>Argus Leader</em>, May 2, 2007</strong></a></p><p>It's hard to get people to a rally about workers rights on a beautiful 70-degree day in Sioux Falls.<br /><br />In fact, it's hard to get people interested on any day in Sioux Falls, said Mike Beaver, one of the organizers of a May Day Rally on Tuesday at Van Eps Park.<br /><br />&quot;People don't care,&quot; Beaver said.<br /><br />But six people did care enough to show up near the Minnehaha County Courthouse, trickling in between 4 and 5 p.m.<br /><br />The majority of them are active with the Industrial Workers of the World, &quot;a solidarity union interested in immigrants rights, both legal and illegal,&quot; Beaver said.<br /><br />Some of them looked the part. Beaver wore a T-shirt saying, &quot;Not my president.&quot; Various piercings, tattoos, red-streaked hair. One smoked a cigar, another a pipe. One carried a police-style riot shield.<br /><br />Travis Stuckey, another organizer, showed up a bit late. &quot;It's the first time I've ever worked on May Day,&quot; he said.<br /><br />He had passed out Spanish-language pamphlets at bus stops, near the John Morrell plant and other places where Hispanic workers were likely to gather.<br /><br />As the activists waited, the discussion wandered from Cinco de Mayo to using cell phones to tell what time it is (&quot;Man, you're paying $40 a month for a watch&quot;) to a new kind of dog food that reduces poop, then turned to the U.S. economy.<br /><br />&quot;There's maybe 20 years max before this country falls into the Third World&quot; if we don't recover manufacturing jobs, Stuckey opined.<br /><br />About 5:15, Stuckey went to his vehicle to pull out signs and literature. Chris Huska of Act Now to Stop War &amp; End Racism exchanged pamphlets with Stuckey.<br /><br />When they stood near Minnesota Avenue with signs, there were a few honks - hard to tell whether in accord or in anger.<br /><br />None of the immigrants the group was trying to help showed up. But South Dakota's low pay and dearth of unions will keep these activists passing out workers rights pamphlets.<br /><br />&quot;It's needed here quite a bit,&quot; Beaver said.&nbsp;</p> South Dakota IWW News - All Departments and Unions International Solidarity May Day Wed, 02 May 2007 20:19:00 +0000 x344543 3393 at https://www.iww.org