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Didar Singh Bains, ‘Peach King’ who built Northern California’s Sikh community, dies

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Didar Singh Bains, ‘Peach King’ who built Northern California’s Sikh community, dies

In 1980, Didar Singh Bains pitched a plan for what he hoped can be an annual Sikh parade in his hometown of Yuba Metropolis, Calif.

However his friends, in a city of 19,000 about 40 miles north of Sacramento, pushed again, fearing violence and unrest.

“Some thought he was loopy,” recalled Karm Bains, Didar Bain’s son and a Sutter County supervisor, in a 2018 interview with NBC Information. “Individuals are going to throw rocks.”

However Didar Bains thought in another way.

“He mentioned it’s necessary for us to inform the individuals who we’re,” mentioned Karm Bains. “We’re fellow Individuals, law-abiding residents, and we would like every part you need in your youngsters.”

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The annual celebration throughout the first weekend of November now attracts some 100,000 Sikhs and others from throughout the nation.

A farmer as soon as deemed the “Peach King” and probably the most outstanding American Sikh leaders, Didar Bains died Sept. 13 in Yuba Metropolis. He was 84.

Born in a small farming village within the Punjab area of India in 1938, Bains got here to the U.S. in 1958 with $8 to his identify, following his father who had left for America when Didar was 10, in keeping with a tribute written by his daughter, Diljit Bains, in UC Davis’ Pioneering Punjabis Digital Archive.

From Imperial Valley to Yuba Metropolis, Didar Bains labored his method up the state and up the ladder. He finally settled in Sutter County, with its topography and rivers reminding him of Punjab (Punjab interprets to “Land of 5 Waters”), Karm Bains mentioned.

In 1962, whereas sending cash to his household again in India, Bains additionally saved up sufficient to purchase a 10-acre parcel within the south facet of city. He quickly leaned into rising peaches.

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Peaches will be notoriously troublesome to develop, Bains mentioned. Simply two days of frost in April worn out half the crop this yr, he mentioned.

Pruning, thinning and harvesting peaches have to be achieved inside a really tight timeframe, Karm Bains mentioned. Harvesting must be achieved inside a window as brief as three days.

However Didar Bains had a knack of discovering good soil. Mixed together with his work ethic and management expertise, his farm grew to a whole bunch of staff. By 1978, he had change into the biggest unbiased peach farmer in California, and maybe the world, incomes him the “Peach King” moniker.

Bains additionally expanded and diversified his farm, rising cranberries, raspberries and different crops in 13 counties all through California, in addition to Washington, Florida, British Columbia and India. His farm was the second-largest grower of cranberries for Ocean Spray, Diljit Bains wrote.

Kash Gill, Didar Bains’ nephew who turned town’s first Sikh mayor in 2009, recalled his uncle leaping in a tractor at 4:30 a.m. and staying in the orchards till 8:30 at evening.

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“He mentioned, ‘This can be a method I can see each one in every of my timber,’” Gill mentioned. “He would drive the tractor, so he himself can see firsthand what kind of crop he has.”

As Bains’ enterprise grew, he additionally assumed the function of a group chief. He all the time emphasised three tenets of Sikhism: residing an sincere life, thanking God and sharing with these in want.

His farms employed a whole bunch of staff, lots of them Sikh immigrants getting their first job within the U.S. Lots of these staff had fled India after 1984, when hundreds of Sikhs had been massacred in three days of violence following the assassination of Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, who was killed by two Sikh bodyguards.

As a toddler, Gill would spend nights and weekends at his uncle’s home. In the course of the evening, Gill recalled, Bains would get calls from Sikh immigrants who had been detained after coming to the nation illegally and had one free cellphone name to make.

“Once they got here to America,” Gill mentioned, “there have been solely two issues they wanted to know: Didar Bains and Yuba Metropolis.”

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Didar Singh Bains

(Household photograph
)

Bains additionally helped a whole bunch of his family members, giving them housing, jobs and even land.

He turned the youngest president of the Stockton Gurdwara Sikh temple in 1965h. He raised funds to construct a Sikh temple in Yuba Metropolis within the Sixties, and based the World Sikh Group in 1984 to advocate for the group. He donated hundreds of thousands to assist construct Sikh temples worldwide, and hundreds extra to assist a Wisconsin police officer recuperate from a mass capturing at a Sikh temple in 2012.

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When American Sikhs had been repeatedly focused after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror assaults by individuals who perceived them as Muslim., Bains and different Sikh leaders organized a gathering with President George W. Bush.

When Gill misplaced his metropolis council bid in 2004 by a small margin, Bains instructed him: “Strive once more.” Gill finally received a council seat in 2006 and have become mayor three years later.

“I may simply see a giant glow,” Gill recalled watching Bains at Gill’s swearing-in ceremony as a mayor.

In 2014, Gov. Jerry Brown honored Bains on the Sikh Temple of Sacramento.

“Didar’s youthful than me,” Brown instructed the group, in keeping with the Sacramento Bee. “The rationale I look youthful is as a result of I don’t work as arduous as he does.”

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In Yuba Metropolis, Bains’ legacy is all over the place, even on the Walmart and Residence Depot shops that he helped deliver to town. He helped town develop as nicely, particularly in its western and northern ends, mentioned Dave Shaw, town’s present mayor. Tens of hundreds of American Sikhs now dwell within the metropolis and surrounding county.

The town earlier this yr celebrated the groundbreaking of a park named after Didar Bains — whose first identify interprets to “visionary” in Punjabi.

“He had a imaginative and prescient and a mind-set of the place he wished the folks to be,” Karm Bains mentioned. “I hope this isn’t the top of an period. Hopefully, it’s only a passing of the torch for the following era to come back.”

Didar Bains is survived by his spouse of 58 years, Santi Bains; sons Ajit and Karm; daughter Diljit; brothers Dilbag and Jaswant Bains; and sisters Gurmeet Gill, Resham Nagra and Surinder Dale.

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Disney tech executive Aaron LaBerge leaves company after more than 20 years

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Disney tech executive Aaron LaBerge leaves company after more than 20 years

Aaron LaBerge, chief technology officer of Disney Entertainment and ESPN, announced Monday that he is departing the Burbank-based media giant and will join casino and sports-betting company Penn Entertainment.

LaBerge will step into his new role as chief technology officer of Penn Entertainment in July, according to the Pennsylvania-based corporation, which offers integrated entertainment, sports content and casino gaming experiences. He has spent more than 20 years at Disney, where he specializes in technology and product for the company’s media divisions.

LaBerge will still be affiliated with ESPN because Penn Entertainment is behind ESPN Bet, the sports network’s gambling venture.

“I’m excited to join another talented team at PENN Interactive and lead our technology strategy,” LaBerge said in a statement.

“PENN Entertainment is at the forefront of the fast-changing gaming and sports media industry. I plan to use my experience from Disney and ESPN to help make ESPN BET an essential piece of the sports fan experience. Together, we’ll push the limits and redefine how fans interact with sports and gaming.”

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In a memo to his team on Monday, LaBerge explained that he had decided to leave Disney for personal reasons related to his family .

“Disney is more than just a company to me; it’s been my home, my inspiration, and a part of the most rewarding chapters of my life, both personally and professionally,” LaBerge wrote in the memo.

“The true magic of Disney isn’t just in our stories or our technology but in each of you. Your passion, creativity, and brilliance have made my journey unforgettable.”

Disney chairmen Dana Walden, Alan Bergman and Jimmy Pitaro later informed staff that the search for LaBerge’s replacement is underway. Chris Lawson, executive vice president of content operations at Disney Entertainment and ESPN, will assume an interim leadership role in the months ahead of LaBerge’s exit.

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Column: The UAW sends a lightning bolt into anti-union states with a huge victory at a VW plant

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Column: The UAW sends a lightning bolt into anti-union states with a huge victory at a VW plant

Until Friday, the phrase “union victory at Chattanooga” could mean only one thing: the defeat of a Confederate army by forces under U.S. Grant at the Battle of Chattanooga in late November 1863.

No longer. On Friday, the United Auto Workers scored a decisive victory at a Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tenn., as workers voted overwhelmingly to organize with the UAW.

The vote looks like a milestone. It was the UAW’s first victory at an auto plant in the Deep South, following two defeats — in 2014 and 2019 — at the same plant. It comes on the heels of the UAW’s success in negotiating impressive new contracts with the Big Three domestic automakers in October.

The real importance of this election is not just the organizing of this factory. It’s that it announces the South is open to unions.

— Labor historian Erik Loomis

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The vote opens the door to further votes and organizing drives across the region, where political leaders have kept unions weak in part through anti-union right-to-work laws — all 14 Deep South states, as well as 12 others, have those laws. Next on the schedule is a vote by 5,000 workers at a Mercedes plant in Alabama, scheduled to take place May 13-17.

“The real importance of this election is not just the organizing of this factory,” says labor historian Erik Loomis. “It’s that it announces the South is open to unions…. This has been the greatest struggle for the American labor movement for more than a century. A serious breakthrough in the South is now possible.”

The vote also represents a strong rebuke to the GOP political establishment in the South. Indeed, it turns the history of regional auto worker organizing on its head. In 2014, it may be remembered, Tennessee’s GOP establishment pulled out the stops to discourage workers at the Chattanooga plant from organizing with the UAW.

VW was willing to accept unionization, with an eye toward replicating the labor-management “works councils” common among manufacturing companies at its home in Germany. (“Volkswagen considers its corporate culture of works councils a competitive advantage,” a member of VW’s board had told the Associated Press.)

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In response, then-Gov. Bill Haslam threatened the company with retribution, declaring that Tennessee would withdraw incentives for Volkswagen if the UAW was voted in.

Then-GOP Sen. Bob Corker, a former Chattanooga mayor, flew down from Washington to voice an almost certainly specious claim that VW executives had “assured” him that the company would open a new SUV manufacturing line at the plant — if the workers turned the UAW down. A local VW executive disputed that.

With shocking cynicism, Corker co-opted the language of political resistance to discourage workers from voting in the union, stating that if the UAW won the vote, “it’s going to be something we can overcome — we will overcome.”

I marveled at the time that the ghost of Pete Seeger, who had turned a couple of traditional gospel songs into the civil rights anthem “We Shall Overcome,” didn’t rise from the grave and impale Corker on a lightning bolt.

Corker also perverted another protest slogan into an attack on workers by declaring, “the whole world is watching.”

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The 2014 organizing campaign failed on a 626-712 vote. After the UAW filed a protest with the National Labor Relations Board over the interference by Haslam, Corker and their cronies, the 2019 revote was held. It was another defeat for the union, but narrower, with 48% of the votes in favor, compared with 46% in 2014.

This time around, the vote was 2,628 in favor versus 985 against — a 72.7% majority.

Early signs that the Chattanooga workers would vote to unionize didn’t stop GOP politicians from trying to place their thumbs on the scale. In a joint statement issued the day before voting began, Tennessee’s current GOP governor, Bill Lee, and the governors of Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, South Carolina and Texas decried what they hypocritically called “the unionization campaign driven by misinformation and scare tactics that the UAW has brought into our states.”

The governors noted that all three automakers that signed the October contracts with the UAW had announced layoffs since then. That’s true, but it was a lie to ascribe the layoffs to the union contracts: In each case, the companies linked them to an unexpected slowdown in the market for electric vehicles.

What the governors didn’t mention — an inadvertent oversight, you can be sure — several of the non-union foreign automakers with plants in the South, such as Mercedes, Tesla and BMW, all of which are being targeted by the UAW, have also announced layoffs.

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Perhaps more to the point, in the wake of the Big Three contract settlements, Toyota, Honda, Nissan and Subaru all announced raises of as much as 11% for their workers — plainly a demonstration that higher pay at unionized companies ripples into the nonunion sector of an industry. All those companies except Subaru have plants in states represented by the governors who issued the statement; Subaru’s only U.S. plant is in Lafayette, Ind.

“In America,” the governors wrote, “we respect our workforce and we do not need to pay a third party to tell us who can pick up a box or flip a switch.” They added, “when employees have a direct relationship with their employers, that makes for a more positive working environment. They can advocate for themselves and what is important to them without outside influence.”

Students of anti-union rhetoric will recognize this spiel as drawn directly from the playbook of intransigently anti-union employers such as Starbucks, including the assertions that union representation is inimical to the smooth operation of a workplace and that unions interfere with the employee-employer relationship.

As almost any experienced worker knows, “direct contact” between the rank-and-file and management almost never works out to the advantage of the workers unless they have the leverage that comes from collective action. The governors’ claim that employees can successfully “advocate for themselves” is virtually pure myth.

The governors also may have failed to read the room, as the saying goes. “The demographics of the South are different than they were 10 years ago,” Loomis told me. “More Latinos and more people moving from the North has been transformational to the South generally — the shift of politics in Georgia due to the expansive growth of Atlanta is one example. Charlotte has become a massive destination for young Black professionals, for another. The South simply isn’t as different from the rest of the nation as it used to be.”

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Nor should one overlook the distinct change in labor policies at the federal level. Joe Biden’s stature as possibly the most pro-labor president in American history has been widely noticed. He is the only president to walk a union picket line, as he did during the UAW contract negotiations; he has been sticking with Julie Su, his nominee as secretary of Labor against ferocious opposition from Big Business; and his National Labor Relations Board has fulfilled its role as a guardian of collective bargaining rights.

Whether NLRB oversight of the Chattanooga vote tamped down the company’s efforts to undermine the vote isn’t clear, but it couldn’t have hurt.

The UAW’s success in its contract negotiations may emerge as a powerful argument in favor of organizing at other auto plants. There may be some defeats in the South lurking on the horizon, but there may also be further successes.

It’s worth recalling what happened after Grant’s victory in Chattanooga in 1863. Following the nearly simultaneous Union victories of July 1863 at Vicksburg, Miss., and Gettysburg, Pa., Chattanooga tightened the noose on the Confederacy, opening the door to Sherman’s march to the sea in 1864 and the end of the Confederacy.

Last week’s vote in Chattanooga might, just might, be an equivalent turning point in the long war for worker rights and welfare.

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Google fires 28 employees who protested Israel cloud contract

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Google fires 28 employees who protested Israel cloud contract

Google has terminated 28 employees after dozens of workers participated in sit-ins inside company offices this week to protest the tech giant’s work in Israel amid the war against Hamas in Gaza.

The protests, organized by the No Tech for Apartheid campaign, raised concerns about Google and Amazon’s $1.2-billion cloud computing contract with the Israeli government and military. The campaign is demanding that Google and Amazon drop the effort, known as Project Nimbus.

The advocacy group staged protests and sit-ins Tuesday at Google offices in New York and Sunnyvale, Calif., where nine Google employees were arrested for trespassing. The campaign said the firings included people who did not directly participate in the sit-in protests.

Google said the employees had violated company policy.

In a letter to Google staff, Chris Rackow, Google’s vice president of global security, said the workers were terminated after an internal investigation, adding that their actions ran afoul of the company’s code of conduct and harassment rules.

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“They took over office spaces, defaced our property, and physically impeded the work of other Googlers,” Rackow wrote in a memo obtained by the New York Post, which first reported the firings. “Their behavior was unacceptable, extremely disruptive, and made co-workers feel threatened.”

In a statement on Thursday night, Google said all of the 28 people whose employment was terminated was “definitively involved in disruptive activity inside our buildings.”

“The groups were live-streaming themselves from the physical spaces they had taken over for many hours, which did help us with our confirmation,” Google said. “And many employees whose work was physically disrupted submitted complaints, with details and evidence. So the claims to the contrary being made are just nonsense.”

The protest group said the workers “have the right to peacefully protest about terms and conditions of our labor.”

“In the three years that we have been organizing against Project Nimbus, we have yet to hear from a single executive about our concerns,” the No Tech for Apartheid campaign said in a statement. “These firings were clearly retaliatory.”

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The group said it plans to continue organizing until Google drops the contract.

The protests in the tech industry have escalated in the wake of Israel’s bombardment of the Gaza Strip, which began in response to the Oct. 7 attack on Israel by Hamas-led militants in which about 1,200 people were killed and about 240 taken hostage.

More than 33,000 Palestinians in Gaza have been killed in Israel’s air and ground offensive, according to Gaza health officials.

Google has said that its technology is used to support numerous governments around the world, including Israel’s, and that the Nimbus contract is for work running on its commercial cloud network, with the Israeli government ministries agreeing to comply with Google’s terms of service and acceptable use policy.

“This work is not directed at highly sensitive, classified, or military workloads relevant to weapons or intelligence services,” Google said in a statement.

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