SLAM Strikes Again
In the war against Harvard staff layoffs, the Student Labor Action Movement (SLAM) has just chosen a new battlefront for its latest guerilla attackâthe desktop backgrounds on Lamont computers.
Members have apparently been changing the backgrounds to display the groupâs slogan, âGreed is the new Crimson,â prompting one student worker at Lamont to gripe in an email, âNote the absence of âconstantly resetting desktop backgroundsâ in the above list [of my job responsibilities]. While I know you enjoy creating more work opportunities for others, please spare me the courtesy.â Ouch. Sorry, SLAM, weâre sure you meant well.
More on how the groupâs been slamming Harvard, after the jump.
SLAM has a petition, that sets out its demands, including a meeting with university administration, the suspension of layoffs, and the recall of all workers let go since October 2008.
SLAMâs other strategies have included unfurling banners in public placesâeverywhere from Annenberg to Dean Smithâs town hall meeting
to President Faustâs lunch at Eliot. The group has also staged rallies against layoffs, most recently this past Thursday, in front of the Holyoke Center.
So is Harvard listening? Are the new desktop backgrounds working? We canât judge yet whether or not SLAMâs tactics are actually helping workers, but at least students seem to be paying attentionâkind of. Some were taken by the grammatical implications of the phrase âGreed is the new Crimson.â We were especially amused by this highly Harvardian response to a SLAM email:
âPerhaps they haven't responded because âgreedâ unlike âcrimsonâ is not a color, and therefore saying âgreed is the new crimsonâ would be lexically similar to saying to âkoala is the new circleââa situation in which you are trying to include a member of a class of nouns (in my case animals) into a pre-existing class of nouns (such as shapes). Perhaps if you had refined your message into a nuanced argument comprised of phrases that made coherent sense instead of a mindless slogan, then the President and Corporation would be better able to understand and respond to your concerns.â
FlyBy isnât by any means against labor rights, but we might have to agreeâwith a philosophy that seems to boil down to the poster slogan âHarvard is rich, no layoffs,âânuance just isnât one of the SLAMâs strengths.
Photo courtesy The Harvard Crimson/Zhongrui Yin