Ssangyong Strike film; Oakland, Calif; Oct. 25 at 10:30 am
Ssangyong Motors Factory Occupation Documentary

Sunday October 25th, 10:30 a.m. to 12:30
An 18-minute documentary on Ssangyong Motors factory occupation (with English subtitles), produced by militant railroad workers from Doro Chiba in Japan, will be screened. Updates on imprisoned strikers and the conditions for workers in South Korea, along with open discussion, will follow the film.
The Ssangyong strike and factory occupation in Pyeongtaek, South Korea, ended on August 5, 2009, having lasted 77 days. It began when 1700 workers seized the small auto plant on on May 22. Yet 976 workers were able to successfully defend it to the end -- against repeated military assaults by riot cops, company-hired goons, and scabs. The settlement, signed by Ssangyong court receivership management and the Korean Metal Workers' Union local president, was a negotiated defeat for the workers; the surrender of the factory was followed by felony charges and heavy sentences against occupiers, as well a massive lawsuit against the KMWU.
Despite this, the workers fought valiantly and uncompromisingly for over 2 months, demonstrating a militancy and class consciousness sorely lacking in the world today. Like the 6-day occupation of the Republic Windows and Doors factory in Chicago last December, or the 3 Visteon factory occupations in the British Isles, the Ssangyong struggle is an inspiration to workers everywhere -- especially as the current crisis has been used as a pretext to further attack the working class. It's about time we turned the class war back on its feet; the Ssangyong struggle offers many lessons for fighting back.
Location:
Niebyl-Proctor Marxist Library
6501 Telegraph Avenue, Oakland, California
510-595-7417
Free; Wheelchair accessible
Video clips from the documentary can be seen here:
Whoa! I never knew such a film existed. Thanks for this.
This would be really great as a torrent agree with molly. thanks
i've stuck them up as .flv files here
(i had problems converting them to avi, but they play fine with Media Player Classic)
Thanks for doing that. I'm a non-techie, so I had no clue what file type to convert them to.
Jesus, JK, are you in the stone age?
You should know how to have these files merged up, in MKV format and viewable on VLC!
Jesus, JK, are you in the stone age?You should know how to have these files merged up, in MKV format and viewable on VLC!
a couple of years ago I was the youth of today
Now we laugh at the likes of you.
Cheers for the up though.






Can this be put up as a torrent somewhere?