Toastie, to random
@Toastie@journa.host avatar

Indigenous people in the United States experience one of the highest maternal mortality rates of any ethnic group.

Now there's a guaranteed basic income program in for pregnant people.

https://www.hcn.org/articles/social-justice-first-direct-cash-assistance-program-exclusively-for-indigenous-parents-launched

DontMindMe, to fuck_cars
@DontMindMe@zirk.us avatar

🚋 advocates, 🚲 & throughout state needed to provide online public comment for the WSDOT’s Highway System Plan, which will seek to promote walking & and reduce vehicle 🚙 miles traveled.

Comments open thru Dec. 18: https://lakechelannow.com/statewide-draft-highway-system-plan-available-for-public-comment-through-december-18/

@fuck_cars

KatM, to random
@KatM@mastodon.social avatar

Quite a lovely evening here in western #Washington. #PNW 🌅

#photography #sailboat #sunset

snowywingspub, to lgbtqia
@snowywingspub@wandering.shop avatar

Calling all queer creatives in the area! Come join our own Leigh Hellman tomorrow for an afternoon of practicing, performing, and connecting at the Queer Writers Workshop.

Saturday, October 7th from 1-3 PM at Make.Shift Art Space, 306 Flora St.

Registration is $10 but no one is turned away—Please email [email protected] if funds are a barrier to attending.

Learn more: https://makeshiftartspace.org/shop/queerwritersworkshop

@lgbtqia

elijax, to classicalmusic Italian
@elijax@mas.to avatar

of

you can use the discount code

trio

to have a 95% discount valid on everything. It may be combined also with the discount of the entire discography. It works only on the desktop website, not on the mobile bandcamp app.

@classicalmusic

https://elijax.bandcamp.com/album/autumn-suite-live-at-coolidge-auditorium-washington-dc-10-11-2018

von, to random
@von@social.lol avatar

Despite popular belief, most of Washington is dry and quite barren, but still has cool spots like this. It’s the Western side of Washington that is green and rainforesty. This is in the Eastern side of the state.

morgan,
@morgan@sfba.social avatar

@von I am a Californian, I've visited Washington for some mountain biking, And I really enjoyed my time in the Cascades; Angels Staircase was amazing in the fall, with the golden larches blazing.

https://photos.app.goo.gl/xvwU5622MXsaAPvf8

I read a book once that I really enjoyed, Of Men and Mountains. It was written by William O. Douglas, a Supreme Court justice, about his outdoor life as a young man in Washington state. It really did a great job of describing the place and time, the outdoors, the environment, the nature. I enjoyed it quite a bit.

https://www.google.com/books/edition/Of_Men_and_Mountains_Scholar_s_Choice_Ed/K1pDrgEACAAJ?hl=en

@bookstodon

CitizenWald, to random
@CitizenWald@historians.social avatar

29-31 August 1897: 1st Congress in Basel.

Leader Theodor Herzl meticulously choreographed the event so as to lend it an air of significance as well as hold together disparate constituencies.

https://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/120-years-later-3-days-in-Basel-that-changed-the-course-of-the-Jewish-nation-503768

The preamble to the Program called for establishment of a "home in for the people, secured under public law," thus leaving open the question of statehood but affirming that the result required international support

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basel_Program

1/n

CitizenWald,
@CitizenWald@historians.social avatar

: When unfolded, this album commemorating the First Congress (August 29-31, 1897), depicts the delegates.

Here, 162 of them. Figures vary, but 200-250 persons took part, including 17 —though they became voting members only in 1898

Interesting that this evidently American document featured portraits of not only the movement’s leaders—but also and Columbus. Trying to suggest an equivalence of nation-building—or just patriotic filler?

2/n

curved rows of portraits of delegates in wreaths with Herzl in center at each corner of the page: six-pointed stars (condition: stains from old tape at folds)
detail of delegate portrait in preceding photo: six women in the lower row
left: portrait of Washington, facing right, after Gilbert Stuart right: imagined portrait of Columbus, facing left

JMMontpelier, to academicchatter
@JMMontpelier@historians.social avatar

“Everyone knows” that saved the portrait when troops burned the White House in 1814.
But the real story is a lot more complicated, as you’ll discover in our post, “The Great Portrait Rescue.” https://digitaldoorway.montpelier.org/2019/08/22/the-great-portrait-rescue/?utm_content=buffer5b07d&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

Painting by William Woodward, MF2009.2.1, Courtesy of The Montpelier Foundation.

@academicchatter

kris_inwood, to anthropology
@kris_inwood@mas.to avatar

"The Well-Being of Indigenous Communities in the Pacific Northwest: Anthropometric Evidence from British Columbia’s Jails, 1864-1913", new working paper from Ian Keay & Kris Inwood
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4544077

@economics @anthropology @sociology @geography @politicalscience @criminology @healthecon @ecosocio @econhist @econtwitter.net

MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History August 19, 1916: Strikebreakers attacked and beat picketing IWW strikers in Everett, Washington. The police refused to intervene, claiming it was federal jurisdiction. However, when the strikers retaliated, they arrested the strikers. Vigilante attacks on IWW picketers and speakers escalated and continued for months. In October, vigilantes forced many of the strikers to run a gauntlet, violently beating them in the process. The brutality culminated in the Everett massacre on November 5, when Wobblies (IWW members) sailed over from Seattle to support the strikers. The sheriff called out to them as they docked, “Who is your leader?” And the Wobblies yelled back, “We all are!” The sheriff told them they couldn’t dock. One of the Wobblies said, “Like hell we can’t!” And then a mob of over 200 vigilantes opened fire on them. As a result, seven died and 50 were wounded. John Dos Passos portrays these events in his USA Trilogy.

@bookstadon

MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History August 11, 1894: Federal troops drove over 1,000 jobless workers from the nation's capital. Led by Charles "Hobo" Kelley, an unemployed activist from California, and Jacob Coxey, they camped in Washington D.C. starting in July. Kelley's Hobo Army included a young journalist named Jack London and a young miner-cowboy named Big Bill Haywood. Frank Baum was an observer of the protest and some say it influenced his Wizard of Oz, with the Scarecrow representing the American farmer, the tin man representing industrial workers and the Cowardly Lion representing William Jennings Bryan, all marching on Washington (Oz) to demand redress from the president (the Wizard). 650 miners, led by a "General" Hogan, captured a Northern Pacific train at Butte, Montana, en route to the protest. The Feds caught up with them at Billings, forcing a surrender, but a few eventually made it to Washington.

@bookstadon

markgdavis, to random
@markgdavis@me.dm avatar

More to come soon, but I successfully completed the most intense and challenging hike in my life up Bootjack Peak (https://www.wta.org/go-hiking/hikes/bootjack-mountain) this past Thursday. 3,900 foot climb to one of the most incredible vantage points of the Central Cascades including a big view of Mt. Rainier. My body is sore. It feels like I ran a marathon. Good thing my stay has a hot tub.

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