On this day in 1914, the Ludlow Massacre occurred when the Colorado National Guard and a private security force attacked 1,200 striking coal miners, killing 21 people, including women and children. The event took place during the Coloardo Coalfield War, a period of violent labor unrest in Colorado from 1913-1914.
The massacre was the culmination of months of labor strife in Ludlow, Colorado. It began at a meeting between the anti-union militia and a reluctant labor leader Louis Tikas. Although Tikas disocuraged violence, the strikers, who had noticed machine guns placed above the Ludlow colony, took cover in ad hoc fire positions.
Accounts differ as to who shot first, but a battle commenced between the armed factions, leading to nearly dozen deaths, including one twelve-year old boy who was shot in the head. After the violence subdued, Tikas and other strikers were found shot in the back.
The chief owner of the mine, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., was widely condemned for having orchestrated the massacre. In retaliation, the miners armed themselves and attacked dozens of anti-union establishments over the next ten days, destroying property and engaging in several skirmishes with the Colorado National Guard in a 40-mile front from Trinidad to Walsenburg.
An estimated 69 to 199 deaths occurred total during the strike, leading historian Thomas G. Andrews has called it the "deadliest strike in the history of the United States".
Although the strikers' demands were not met, the event electrified national discussions of labor and had a positive impact on labor rights in the long run.
-- Colorado Experience: Ludlow Massacre :red-fist:
-- Woody Guthrie Ludlow Massacre :hammer-sickle:
Hola Camaradas :fidel-salute-big: , Our Comrades In Texas are currently passing Through some Hard times :amerikkka: so if you had some Leftover Change or are a bourgeoisie Class Traitor here are some Mutual Aid programs that you could donate to :left-unity-3:
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Foundations of Leninism :flag-su:
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Anarchism and Other Essays :ancom:
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Next Friday 23 of April we are gonna watch :meow-floppy:
Gamera Guardian of the Universe :turtle-pogger:
The giant turtle is awakened from his long slumber to protect Japan from a rival monster's destructive power.
The European Super League drama is absolutely incredible. I know a lot of comrades aren't sports fans, but y'all are missing out.
Among the many, many reactions, they've got the Conservatives in Britain talking about expropriating the teams and having them be collectively owned by the citizenry. That should tell you how wild things are.
Also, it's a good reminder of how much smarter the conservatives are at politicking. They're dominating the headlines with promises to "save football", which will win them more support than anything they could have said about the economy, the NHS, immigration, education, etc.
What’s also amazing, it’s absolute peanuts. 5 billion dollars, governments can throw 100 billions around, for cheap 10 point bump they’ll absolutely fuck them over
Could I get a quick primer
The short version is that soccer in Europe is essentially all open. Where baseball in the US has, for example, 30 teams, and a new team would have to buy their way into the league, European soccer has a structure where teams have to earn their place in the top leagues. First you work your way up through your country's league, then you get the chance to compete against the best teams from other countries. In theory, anyone could form a team and work their way up to the top of Europe. And the best teams can get demoted if they lose enough.
Some of the richest and most famous teams from various countries announced that they're going to be forming their own, closed league with permanent spots for the teams.
These teams are almost all owned by American billionaires and sheiks from Saudi Arabia and the UAE. The breakaway league would be controversial regardless, but this detail further fuels the flames.
And they've done all this on their own with financial help from JP Morgan Chase. So they are essentially also rebelling against every governing body for soccer at every level and saying "the teams are businesses, we own them, we can do what we want with our businesses."
Wow thanks for the details! 😊
So basically par for the course capitalism shit lmao. I'm kinda surprised something like this hadn't happened yet tbh.
It's been sort of happening for years. Teams like PSG, Chelsea, Manchester City have been bought by financial groups and oil conglomerates to whitewash money, and have poured billions of dollars into somewhat shitty teams turning them into massive powerhouses that can suck up all the players and the talent. That said, even with all the talent and money in the world PSG and City still haven't won the Champion's League. :fidel-cool: Likewise, some of the super big teams with a ton of money, like Tottenham and Arsenal, keep on missing out on qualifying for the Champion's League despite having a ton of fans, so they want this league so they always get to qualify.
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love this video by novara on it.
that dude seems cool. also, I would love to have my job be reading people the news and giving them my enlightened take on it. that seems like something I could do.