MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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Today in Labor History August 19, 1920: A peasant insurrection began in Tambov, USSR, over the confiscation of their grain. Led by Alexander Antonov, a former official of the Socialist Revolutionary Party, the Green Army uprising evolved into a guerrilla war against the Red Army, Cheka Units and the Soviet authorities. The Bolsheviks finally suppressed the revolt in June, 1921. 240,000 died in the rebellion and over 50,000 were imprisoned. They also used chemical weapons on the peasants. Dissident writer, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, wrote about it in a short story in his book, “Apricot Jam and other Stories,” (2010).

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MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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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.

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LaurentiusFisch, to bookstodon German
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Cover-to-Cover 14/17: https://laurentius-fisch.com/taler/ => Diese Geschichte kann man gratis lesen!
Täglich ein Cover. Für einen schmalen Taler: Als er unverhofft statt in Tante Erikas Absteige im Paradies landet, beschliesst „Jürgen von Rehlenhagen“ das Beste aus der Situation zu machen und lässt es gewaltig krachen. Für einen Storch endet es besonders bitter. @bookstodon

LaurentiusFisch, to bookstodon German
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LaurentiusFisch, to bookstodon German
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Cover-to-Cover 12/17: https://laurentius-fisch.com/cover-to-cover/
Täglich ein Cover. Jesus: Ein Mann und seine Mission. Gnadenlos und ohne Rücksicht auf sich selbst kämpft er für seine Kinder. Die Sache hat nur einen klitzekleinen Haken. @bookstodon

MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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Today in Labor History August 16, 1933: The anti-Semitic Christie Pits riot took place in Toronto, Canada. At the time, Toronto’s Jewish community was predominantly poor and working-class. During the summer, they would go to the predominantly Anglo Beaches to swim. Some of the locals formed a "Swastika Club" and openly displayed the Nazi symbol to intimidate the Jews. The riot broke out after a baseball game when people displayed a blanket with a large swastika painted on it. A number of Jewish and Italian youth rushed the Swastika sign to destroy it, resulting in a melee with fists and clubs. A mob of more than 10,000 joined in, amidst cries of Heil Hitler. Miraculously, no one died. However, scores were injured. Many required medical and hospital attention.

The incident was depicted in two graphic novels: “Christie Pits” (2019) written by Jamie Michaels and illustrated by Doug Fedrau, and “The Good Fight” (2021) by Ted Staunton and Josh Rosen.

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MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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Today in Labor History August 16, 1819: Police attacked unemployed workers demonstrating in St. Peter's Field, Manchester, England. When the cavalry charged, at least 18 people died and over 600 were injured. The event became know as the Peterloo Massacre, named for the Battle of Waterloo, where many of the massacre victims had fought just four years earlier. Following the Napoleonic Wars there was an acute economic slump, terrible unemployment and crop failures, all worsened by the Corn Laws, which kept bread prices high. Only 11% of adult males had the vote. Radical reformers tried to mobilize the masses to force the government to back down. The movement was particularly strong in the north-west, where the Manchester Patriotic Union organized the mass rally for Peter’s Field. As soon as the meeting began, local magistrates tried to arrest working class radical, Henry Hunt, and several others. Hunt inspired the Chartist movement, which came shortly after Peterloo.

John Lees, who later died from wounds he received at the massacre, had been present at the Battle of Waterloo. Before his death, he said that he had never been in such danger as at Peterloo: "At Waterloo there was man to man but there it was downright murder." In the wake of the massacre, the government passed the Six Acts, to suppress any further attempts at radical reform. The event also led indirectly to the founding of the Manchester Guardian newspaper.

Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote about the massacre in his poem, “The Masque of Anarchy.” The authorities censored it until 1832, ten years after his death. Mike Leigh’s 2018 film Peterloo is an excellent portrayal of the massacre, and the events leading up to it. Many writers have written novels about Peterloo, including the relatively recent “Song of Peterloo,” by Carolyn O'Brien, and “All the People,” Jeff Kaye. However, perhaps the most important is Isabella Banks's 1876 novel, “The Manchester Man,” since she was there when it happened and included testimonies from people who were involved.

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LaurentiusFisch, to bookstodon German
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Cover-to-Cover 11/17: https://laurentius-fisch.com/cover-to-cover/
Täglich ein Cover. Der Pferdeflüsterer: Für Rollo läuft es nicht optimal, vor allem in Beziehungsfragen. So bleibt ihm bald nur noch sein liebstes Hobby: Pferde. Und Bert, der Rasenmähermann. Bis die Dinge unerwartet außer Kontrolle geraten.
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Today in Labor History August 15, 1918: The American 27th Infantry landed in Vladivostok to join a Japanese-initiated attack against Bolshevist forces. The soldiers suffered from problems with fuel, ammunition, supplies, and food. Their horses, used to temperate climates, couldn’t function in sub-zero Russia. And their water-cooled machine guns froze and became useless. During their 19 months in Siberia, 189 U.S. soldiers died.

Upton Sinclair referenced the Siberian expedition in his novel “Oil!” and blamed capitalist motives for the intervention.

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MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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Today in Labor History August 15, 1906: W.E.B. DuBois demanded equal citizenship rights for African-Americans during the second meeting of the Niagara Movement, saying, "We will not be satisfied to take one jot or little less than our full manhood." Founders of the movement named it for the “mighty current” of change they hoped to achieve. DuBois made his famous statement at Harper’s Ferry, sight of the failed insurrection led by John Brown, in 1859. For a wonderful speculative fiction story based on the premise that John Brown had succeeded in his raid, with the help of Harriet Tubman, read Terry Bisson’s “Fire on the Mountain” (1988).

In addition to cofounding the Niagara Movement, DuBois also cofounded the NAACP. He devoted his life to fighting racism, segregation, Jim Crow and lynchings. DuBois opposed capitalism and blamed it for much of the racism in America. He was also a prolific writer, an anti-nuclear and peace activist, and a proponent of Pan-Africanism.

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LaurentiusFisch, to bookstodon German
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Cover-to-Cover 10/17: https://laurentius-fisch.com/cover-to-cover/
Täglich ein Cover. Der Pfeifenheini: Habt ihr einen gestörten Nachbarn? Oder kennt ihr einen Typen, der euch permanent auf den Geist geht? Auf der Arbeit oder im Privatleben – ja? Der Pfeifenheini ist schlimmer.
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Patreon is the only place where you can read the entirety of my flash fiction story, "All In", originally published in the Big Book of Orgasms Volume 2 by Cleis Press.

Subscribe for as little as $5 a month to get exclusive trans queer erotica posts, previews, and candid selfies, while actively supporting my work and helping me keep my blog online.

https://www.patreon.com/posts/exclusive-read-2-79859188

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Today in Labor History August 14, 1791: Dutty Boukman led a Vodou ceremony with enslaved people from Saint Domingue plantations that led to the start of the Haitian Revolution, the largest slave uprising since the Spartacist revolt against the Romam empire. Boukman was born in Senegambia. His name, Boukman, came from the English “Book Man,” because he not only knew how to read, but taught other enslaved people how to read. He, and priestess Cécile Fatiman, had led a series of meetings with enslaved people prior to August 14 to organized and plan for the uprising. Boukman was killed by French troops a few months into the revolution. Trinidadian Marxist writer C. L. R. James wrote the best book on the Haitian Revolution: “The Black Jacobins,” (1938). Also, be sure to check out the wonderful music of the contemporary Haitian pop group, Boukman Eksperyans, named for the Haitian revolutionary, Dutty Boukman. A fictionalized version of Boukman plays the title character in Guy Endore's novel “Babouk,” an anti-capitalist parable about the Haitian Revolution.

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LaurentiusFisch, to bookstodon German
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Cover-to-Cover 9/17: https://laurentius-fisch.com/cover-to-cover/
Täglich ein Cover. Ordnung: Mildred sortiert die Medikamente ihres Arztgatten um. Von dessen ausgeklügeltem Ordnungssystem ahnt sie nichts. Das Aufräumen hätte Mildred besser sein lassen.
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LaurentiusFisch, to bookstodon German
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