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#generalstrike

11 posts10 participants1 post today

Today in Labor History May 20, 1946: The U.S. government took over control of the coal mines (again). On April 1, 400,000 UMWA coal miners from 26 states went on strike for safer conditions, health benefits and increased wages. WWII had recently ended and President Truman saw the strike as counterproductive to economic recovery. In response, he seized the mines, making the miners temporarily federal employees. He ended the strike by offering them a deal that included healthcare and retirement security.

The coal strike was part of the strike wave of 1945-1946, the biggest strike wave in U.S. history. During WWII, most of the major unions collaborated with the U.S. war effort by enforcing labor “discipline” and preventing strikes. In exchange, the U.S. government supported closed shop policies under which employers at unionized companies agreed to hire only union members. While the closed shop gave unions more power within a particular company, the no-strike policy made that power virtually meaningless.

When the war ended, inflation soared and veterans flooded the labor market. As a result, frustrated workers began a series of wildcat strikes. Many grew into national, union-supported strikes. In November 1945, 225,000 UAW members went on strike. In January 1946, 174,000 electric workers struck. That same month, 750,000 steel workers joined them. Then, in April, the coal strike began. 250,000 railroad workers struck in May. In total, 4.3 million workers went on strike. It was the closest the U.S. came to a national General Strike in the 20th century. And in December 1946, Oakland, California did have a General Strike, the last in U.S. history.

Then, in 1947, Congress passed the Taft-Hartley Act, which severely restricted the powers and activities of unions. It also banned General Strikes, stripping away the most powerful tool workers had. And there hasn’t been a General Strike in the U.S. since.

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@wdlindsy

IIRC, a few months back, the French government threatened—not *did*, mind you, but just *threatened*—to raise the retirement age a couple years..and damn near the entire country rose up in a #GeneralStrike until the government relented.

I wonder how long it'll take before we get how all this works...?

Today in Labor History May 16, 1934: Teamsters initiated a General Strike (5/16-8/21) for union recognition in Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota, which was, then, the main distribution center for the upper Midwest. The worst violence occurred on Bloody Friday, July 20, when police shot at strikers in a downtown truck battle, killing two and injuring 67. Continuing violence lasted throughout the summer. The strike formally ended on August 22. The strike was led by the Trotskyist Communist League of America, which later founded the Socialist Workers Party (United States). While this General Strike was going on in Minneapolis, there was an equally violent General Strike going continuing on San Francisco’s waterfront (5/9-7/31), with much of the West Coast dockers joining them (Everett, WA; Portland, OR; Seattle, WA; and Los Angeles, CA). 9 workers were killed in the West Coast waterfront strikes, along with over 1,000 injuries and over 500 arrests. At the same time, there was also a General Strike going on in Toledo, OH, the Auto Lite Strike (4/12-6/3), in which 2 workers were killed.

Today in Labor History May 15, 1919: Workers in Winnipeg, Canada, initiated a huge general strike involving 30,000 workers. The strike lasted until June 26th, when the Winnipeg Labor Council declared the strike over. During the strike, the Mounted Police tried repeatedly to violently suppress the workers. The workers called for a six-hour workday and a five-day work week. During the strike, virtually the entire workforce halted work. Even the local cops voted for the strike. However, the strike committee asked the cops and utility workers to stay on the job to help keep basic services functioning. They set up a huge public kitchen which served food to hundreds of people each day. The Winnipeg “Free Press” called the strikers bohunks, aliens and anarchists. The called in the Royal Mounted Police and arrested dozens of people, charging some with seditious conspiracy. On Bloody Saturday, June 21, the Mounties fired into the crowd, killing one and wounding thirty others. In May and June, General Strikes broke out in 30 other Canadian cities.

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Remember the conditions for peace:

Everyone in your reach is well fed, well loved, and well rested according to their cultural expectations.

This is completely in our reach.

But only if we turn away from the perverts who would see us at each others' throats, who tell us we are naturally violent and fearful when few of us actually fit that description.

Want to fight fear?

Build trust.

Stop competing.

Start cooperating.

Leave those assholes behind.

“Sen Barrasso dodges multiple Qs about whether he’d support suspending habeas corpus for undocumented in the country, ultimately saying he didn’t think the issue would come before Congress.”

GOP MOC have repeatedly given Trump carte blanche -treat him as a🚨KING. They’re allowing him to disregard the with respect to the , , ,

Attend a NO KINGS rally.

A is needed.

nbcnews.com/politics/congress/

NBC News · Sen. John Barrasso dodges when asked whether he would support suspending habeas corpusBy Megan Lebowitz

Today in Labor History May 11, 1968: The "Night of the Barricades" occurred in Paris, from May 10-11. It started when security forces blocked student protesters from crossing the river. As a result, they threw up barricades. The police attacked them at 2 am on May 10, savagely beating them and arresting hundreds. In response to the police violence, students and workers called for a General Strike on May 13.

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@QasimRashid and for this reason, I can only see things continue to slide. I'm pulling together what resources I can to leave the US because I know they'll go after everyone who even thinks differently from them.

Honestly, if there isn't a #GeneralStrike by years end, the US is dead. It's shell nothing more than a dictatorship. The principles we grew up being told were American were just another lie.