Mohawk Valley formula

The plan includes discrediting union leaders, frightening the public with the threat of violence, using local police and vigilantes to intimidate strikers, forming associations of "loyal employees" to influence public debate, fortifying workplaces, employing large numbers of replacement workers, and threatening to close the plant if work is not resumed.

[1][2] The Remington Rand company did indeed ruthlessly suppress the strikes, as documented in a ruling by the National Labor Relations Board, and the plan has been accepted as a guide to the methods that were used.

Noam Chomsky has described the formula as the result of business owners' trend away from violent strikebreaking to a "scientific" approach based on propaganda.

An essential feature of this approach is the identification of the management's interests with "Americanism", while labor activism is portrayed as the work of un-American outsiders.

Workers are thus persuaded to turn against the activists and toward management to demonstrate their patriotism.