MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Labor Fest 2024 is coming to the SF Bay Area this July.

If you're in the Bay Area, July 21, 5-8 pm, please come hear me read from my working-class historical novel, Anywhere But Schuylkill. Signed copies will be available.

Make an evening of it. Or a weekend.
Lots of wonderful speakers and musical and theatrical performances!
And report-backs on organizing efforts among low-wage workers of color.

@bookstadon

ALT
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  • plink , to palestine group
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    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History June 7, 1929: Striking textile workers battled police in Gastonia, North Carolina, during the Loray Mill Strike. Police Chief O.F. Aderholt was accidentally killed by one of his own officers during a protest march by striking workers. Nevertheless, the authorities arrested six strike leaders. They were all convicted of “conspiracy to murder.”

    The strike lasted from April 1 to September 14. It started in response to the “stretch-out” system, where bosses doubled the spinners’ and weavers’ work, while simultaneously lowering their wages. When the women went on strike, the bosses evicted them from their company homes. Masked vigilantes destroyed the union’s headquarters. The NTWU set up a tent city for the workers, with armed guards to protect them from the vigilantes.

    One of the main organizers was a poor white woman named Ella May Wiggans. She was a single mother, with nine kids. Rather than living in the tent city, she chose to live in the African American hamlet known as Stumptown. She was instrumental in creating solidarity between black and white workers and rallying them with her music. Some of her songs from the strike were “Mill Mother’s Lament,” and “Big Fat Boss and the Workers.” Her music was later covered by Pete Seeger and Woodie Guthrie, who called her the “pioneer of the protest ballad.” During the strike, vigilantes shot her in the chest. She survived, but later died of whooping cough due to poverty and inadequate medical care.

    For really wonderful fictionalized accounts of this strike, read “The Last Ballad,” by Wiley Cash (2017) and “Strike!” by Mary Heaton Vorse (1930).

    https://youtu.be/Ud-xt7SVTQw?t=31

    @bookstadon

    mima , to palestine group

    This is what real on the ground looks like for and ! ​:mokou_heart:​

    40 people from help defend 40 aid trucks going into from far-right settler raids

    @palestine @israel

    RE: https://leftodon.social/users/omdimbeyachad/statuses/112478337407845242

    RememberUsAlways , to palestine group
    @RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

    “But if there were a Palestinian state now, it would be run by Hamas and we would have a Taliban-like state – a satellite state of Iran” he told RBB, a local broadcaster, on Thursday. “Is this what the progressive movements of the Western Left want to create?”








    @palestine
    @israel https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2024/05/19/palestine-taliban-like-state-salman-rushdie-taliban-knife/

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar
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