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Part of the Union Lyrics

Now I'm a union man
Amazed at what I am
I say what I think, that the company stinks
Yes I'm a union man

When we meet in the local hall
I'll be voting with them all
With a hell of a shout, it's "Out brothers, out!"
And the rise of the factory's fall

Oh, you don't get me, I'm part of the union
You don't get me, I'm part of the union
You don't get me, I'm part of the union
Until the day I die
Until the day I die

The union has made me wise
To the lies of the company spies
And I don't get fooled by the factory rules
'cause I always read between the lines

And I always get my way
If I strike for higher pay
When I show my card to the Scotland Yard
And this is what I say:

Oh, oh, you don't get me, I'm part of the union
You don't get me, I'm part of the union
You don't get me, I'm part of the union
Until the day I die
Until the day I die

Before the union did appear
My life was half as clear
Now I've got the power to the working hour
And every other day of the year

So though I'm a working man
I can ruin the government's plan
And though I'm not hard, the sight of my card
Makes me some kind of superman

Oh, oh, oh, you don't get me, I'm part of the union
You don't get me, I'm part of the union
You don't get me, I'm part of the union
Until the day I die
Until the day I die

You don't get me, I'm part of the union
You don't get me, I'm part of the union
You don't get me, I'm part of the union
Until the day I die
Until the day I die
6 Meanings

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Cover art for Part of the Union lyrics by Strawbs, The

Despite first glance, this is not a pro-union song, if you read between the lines. In the 70s the UK was rife with strikes. This was a topic of film and TV. In Carry On - At Your Convenience, the shop steward was perpetually calling his fellows out on strike for the most trivial reasons, no sugar for the tea etc. Monty Python\'s Flying Circus had the country devastated by the theatre critics strike. In Fawlty Towers - The Kipper and the Corpse. the Major reads in the newspaper about another car strike. Basil\'s comment was "if they don\'t like making cars, why don\'t they get a job designing cathedrals or composing violin concertos. The British Leyland concerto in four movements, all of them slow, with a four hour tea break in between".

Cover art for Part of the Union lyrics by Strawbs, The

A fantastic song about the pride British people once had in their mighty Trade Unions and the power ordinary workers exercised over their country and their rights in the workplace. Brings a tear to my eye to see our country today.

Cover art for Part of the Union lyrics by Strawbs, The

Yeah, a massive fail! Who on earth would want to protect workers from the greed of capitalism?

If you know anything about Britain in the 70s you will know that Trade Unions were not protecting anyone from anything. They were exploiting ridiculous labour laws to hold the whole country hostage to the point where we didn't even have enough power so that everyone could have electricity. They drove the country to the point of bankruptcy! Your username indicates that maybe you think that kind of clusterfuck is actually a good thing, but for me if that is the enemy of capitalism then give me capitalism every day of the week.

@Rommie you're talking twoddle, mate, the oil crisis left us without electricity, and that was certainly nothing to do with the unions. The N.U.M. strike was called because British miners were being paid 8% less than their European counterparts and the government attempted to hide that. The country was driven to bankruptcy by the inadequacy and incompetence of governments of both red and blue stripes. Unions did what they always have done and what they were set up to do: protect their workers and fight for fair working conditions and wages. Clearly, even before Covid, neoliberalism and the society with...

Cover art for Part of the Union lyrics by Strawbs, The

Despite first glance, this is not a pro-union song, if you read between the lines. In the 70s the UK was rife with strikes. This was a topic of film and TV. In Carry On - At Your Convenience, the shop steward was perpetually calling his fellows out on strike for the most trivial reasons, no sugar for the tea etc. Monty Python\'s Flying Circus had the country devastated by the theatre critics strike. In Fawlty Towers - The Kipper and the Corpse. the Major reads in the newspaper about another car strike. Basil\'s comment was "if they don\'t like making cars, why don\'t they get a job designing cathedrals or composing violin concertos. The British Leyland concerto in four movements, all of them slow, with a four hour tea break in between".

Cover art for Part of the Union lyrics by Strawbs, The

0/3 on Tory rich kid, but nice ad-hominem.

@Rommie If you want to see ad hominem, look no further than your esteemed Prime Minister, Maggie Thatcher, who launched the greatest personal attack against every last working man in the North of England, Scotland, and Wales in the history of western civilisation. Don't you dare try to play the personal attack card when communities still suffer because of arrogant and self-centred people like you who supported and voted for her.

I literally just said I wasn\'t a Tory

Cover art for Part of the Union lyrics by Strawbs, The

If anyone wants to know why Great Britain was such a massive fail in the 70s, just listen to this song.

 
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