bodomenke, to tesla German
@bodomenke@hessen.social avatar

„Wut gegen [Autofabriken] entstammt einer wutbürgerlichen Selbstgerechtigkeit, gerade das macht sie alltäglich. Dagegen helfen nur Beratungsangebote.“

@tazgetroete Ich habe dann mal das Lead-In eines Euren anderen Posts recycelt und hier verwendet. Passt hier genauso gut. 😊👍

https://mastodon.social/@tazgetroete/112417694088698239

SteveThompson, to mtg
@SteveThompson@mastodon.social avatar

Excellent.

"DC Appeals Court hands major victory to DOJ in latest January 6 ruling: report"

https://www.alternet.org/dc-appeals-court-doj/

"The DC Circuit Court of Appeals ruled on Tuesday that all participants in the January 6, 2021 siege of the U.S. Capitol can be charged with disorderly or disruptive conduct — even if they were personally not destroying property or acting violently."

#GOP #Trump #Jan6 #MTG #insurrection #Capitol #riot

SherBeareth, to Marriage
@SherBeareth@mastodon.world avatar

#justiceclarencethomas faced criticism on Tuesday over comments he made during a case focused on the #January6 2021, #riot at the #Capitol.

"In oral argument today, Justice Thomas is minimizing the severity of the 1/6 insurrection at the Capitol. Perhaps that's because his #wife was part of the conspiracy. What a disgrace that he's sitting on this case," lawyer Jeffrey Toobin wrote on X.

https://www.newsweek.com/clarence-thomas-faces-backlash-over-jan-6-case-comments-what-disgrace-1890966

thejapantimes, to worldnews
@thejapantimes@mastodon.social avatar

Former President Donald Trump calls those who stormed the Capitol in 2021 "hostages" as part of a narrative one scholar said could encourage more people to resort to violence in politics. https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2024/04/16/world/politics/trump-embraces-jan-6-rioters/ #worldnews #politics #donaldtrump #us #republicans #jan6riot #riot #capitol #capitolattacks

deflockcom, to Russia
@deflockcom@mastodon.social avatar
MikeDunnAuthor, to Virginia
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History April 2, 1863: Bread riots occurred in Richmond, Virginia, as a result of a drought the previous year, combined with a blockade by the Union Army and overall Civil War-related shortages. Food riots occurred throughout the South around this time, led primarily by women. During the Richmond riot, women broke into storehouses and shops, stealing food, clothing and jewelry before the militia was able to restore order.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #CivilWar #rebellion #Riot #looting #richmond #virginia #women

MikeDunnAuthor, to Mexico
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History March 18, 1918: U.S. authorities arrested Mexican anarchist Ricardo Flores Magón under the Espionage Act. They charged him with hindering the American war effort and imprisoned him at Leavenworth, where he died under highly suspicious circumstances. The authorities claimed he died of a "heart attack," but Chicano inmates rioted after his death and killed the prison guard who they believed executed him. Magon published the periodical “Regeneracion” with his brother Jesus, and with Licenciado Antonio Horcasitas. The Magonostas later led a revolution in Baja California during the Mexican Revolution. Many American members of the IWW participated. During the uprising, they conquered and held Tijuana for several days. Lowell Blaisdell writes about it in his now hard to find book, “The Desert Revolution,” (1962). Dos Passos references in his “USA Trilogy.”

#literary #historicalfiction #workingclass #LaborHistory #RicardoFloresMagon #magon #magonistas #mexico #mexican #Revolution #chicano #prison #Riot #books #author #writer @bookstadon

MikeDunnAuthor, to Russia
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History March 13, 1968: Student demonstrations in Warsaw led to street riots. All Polish universities went out on strike against the repressive communist regime, with students occupying the campus buildings. The strike, which came in the wake of Soviet withdrawals of diplomatic relations with Israel, in the protest of the 1967 war, spread throughout the country, leading to a violent government crackdown and antisemitic purge that was branded as anti-Zionism. Thousands of Jews fled the country because of political harassment and being fired from their jobs.

MikeDunnAuthor, to anarchism
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History March 11, 1919: Ukrainian Jewish anarchist Mollie Steimer was arrested in New York City and charged with inciting to riot. She was charged with sedition and eventually deported to Soviet Russia, where she met her lifelong partner Senya Fleshin. The two agitated for the rights of anarchist political prisoners in the USSR. The authorities there deported her again, this time to western Europe, where she and Fleshin organized aid for political prisoners. With the rise of the Nazis in Europe, she and Fleshin fled to Mexico, where they spent the rest of their lives working as photographers. She died in 1980.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #anarchism #MollieSteimer #deportation #nazis #ukraine #jewish #riot #soviet #prison #antisemitism #sedition #ussr #newyork #photography #mexico

MikeDunnAuthor, to Cleveland
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History March 6, 1930: 100,000 people demonstrated for jobs in New York City. Demonstrations by unemployed workers, demanding unemployment insurance, occurred in virtually every major U.S. city. In New York, police attacked a crowd of 35,000. In Cleveland, 10,000 people battled police. In Detroit, the Communist Party organized an underemployment demonstration. Over 50,000 people showed up. Thousands took to the streets in Toledo, Flint and Pontiac. These demonstrations led to the creation of the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), sponsored by Republican congressman Hamilton Fish, with the support of the American Federation of Labor, to investigate and quash radical activities.

MikeDunnAuthor, to Women
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History February 24, 1917: The Petrograd bread riot that started yesterday (March 8 on Western calendars) turned into a revolution. Soldiers refused to fire on demonstrators and turned on their officers. Then they stormed the arsenal and liberated 20,000 automatic pistols, torched the police stations and emptied the prisons.

MikeDunnAuthor, to anarchism
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History February 22, 1918: At the height of the first Red Scare, U.S. authorities raided the office of “Cronaca Sovversiva.” Sacco and Vanzetti had written for this anarchist paper and donated money to it. It was their first documented link to the anarchist movement. Luigi Galleani published the paper from 1903 to 1920. He came to the U.S. in 1901 after escaping from an Italian prison. He participated in the Paterson silk strike where he was wounded and charged with rioting.

ai6yr, to ArtificialIntelligence

Hmm, what dystopian Sci-Fi movie is this headline from? 🤔 🤪

Fireworks confused Waymo before San Francisco mob burned it, witnesses say
https://sfstandard.com/2024/02/12/waymo-san-francisco-burned-arrests/

MikeDunnAuthor, to Women
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History February 13, 1837: A Flour Riot occurred in New York City. 6,000 New Yorkers, attending a "bread, meat, rent, and fuel" meeting in Chatham Square, assaulted local flour merchants who they claimed were hoarding flour in order to drive up the price. The Locofocos (a libertarian-like faction of the Democratic Party that opposed Tammany Hall) organized a public protest against runaway prices that turned into a riot. The police arrested 40 people.

MikeDunnAuthor, to random
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History February 10, 1355: The St Scholastica Day riot broke out in Oxford, England. 63 scholars and up to 30 locals died in rioting. It started when two students from the University of Oxford complained about the quality of wine in a Tavern. The students’ quarrel with the tavern-keeper escalated to blows. Other customers joined in and the melee turned into a riot. The violence continued for over three days, with armed gangs coming in from the countryside to assist the townspeople. Violent disagreements between townspeople and students were common, due in part to privileges the crown gave to the university at the town’s expense.

TheMetalDog, to random
@TheMetalDog@mastodon.social avatar

#TheMetalDogArticleList
#BraveWords
Today In Metal History 🤘 February 9th, 2024 🤘 RIOT, THE SWEET, DEATH ANGEL, RAVEN, SKID ROW
TALENT WE LOST R.I.P. Max B. Yasgur (owned the farm where the Woodstock Music and Art Fair was held in 1969): 1919 – 1973 The old joke is that that 400,000 people attended, but a million said they did...

https://bravewords.com/news/today-in-metal-history-february-9th-2024-riot-the-sweet-death-angel-raven-skid-row

#TodayInMetalHistory #Riot #TheSweet #DeathAngel #Raven #SkidRow

dada, to internet French
@dada@diaspodon.fr avatar

On me disait, ce midi, que les données qui vont sur internet, c'est relou mais ça n'est pas vraiment si grave.

J'ai commencé par éclater le « j'ai rien à cacher » avec la porte des toilettes.

Puis j'ai rappelé l'histoire de l'avortement aux États-Unis, qui est devenu illégal du jour au lendemain avec des conséquences dramatiques pour trop de femmes.

J'ai calmé le débat.

#intimité #vieprivée #internet

lautre,
@lautre@mastouille.fr avatar

@feudjais @zgou @dada @niavy
La Police dépend du Ministère de l'Intérieur, qui gère aussi les Mairies et tous les services annexes.
Je préfère nettement l'utilisation de Linux et des logiciels libres plutôt que Microsoft dans les ministères.

Tout savoir sur Olvid
https://linuxfr.org/users/abriotde/liens/olvid-la-securite-a-la-francaise-c-est-chez-les-americains

Comparatif des messageries :
https://linuxfr.org/news/matrix-pour-decentraliser-skype-whatsapp-signal-slack-et-discord

Palmarès des services : https://linuxfr.org/users/tkr/journaux/petit-topo-des-messageries-securisees-et-leurs-alternatives

Des détail sur le problème de sécu remonté en 2019
2019 : https://linuxfr.org/users/dj_/journaux/sortie-de-tchap-messagerie-d-etat-base-sur-matrix-et-riot

#matrix #skype #riot

MikeDunnAuthor, to journalism
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History January 31, 1971: For the second time in six months, rioting broke out during an anti-war protest in East Los Angeles. Police fired into the crowd, killing one protester. The anti-war demonstrations were organized by the Chicano Moratorium. Chicanos were dying at a higher rate during the Vietnam War than white Americans. During the August 29, 1970 protests, police killed three people, including Journalist Ruben Salazar. Oscar Zeta Acosta portrayed Salazar in his 1973 novel, “The Revolt of the Cockroach People.” Hunter S. Thompson portrayed Acosta as his “Samoan attorney” in “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.”

@bookstadon

MikeDunnAuthor, to Philippines
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History January 30, 1970: 20,000 people rioted in Manila. They were protesting the regime of US-backed dictator Ferdinand Marcos after his State of the Nation address. Over 2,000 attempted to storm the US embassy chanting “Down with imperialism!” Riot police and soldiers beat protesters with truncheons and rifle butts. At least 50 people were hospitalized and at least six died. Riots continued throughout the year. They were part of the First Quarter Storm.

MikeDunnAuthor, to workersrights
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History January 29, 1834: Chesapeake and Ohio Canal workers rioted. President Jackson sent in troops to quell the unrest. It was the first time the government used troops to suppress a domestic labor dispute. Workers rebelled because of deadly working conditions and low pay. George Washington had designed the canal project. He intended it to facilitate transportation of goods from the Chesapeake Bay to the Ohio River Valley. Construction teams were made up mostly of Irish, German, Dutch and black workers. They toiled long hours for low wages in dangerous conditions. From this, and similar projects of the era, came the line: “the banks of the canals are lined with the bones of dead Irishmen.” Also from this project came the poem:

Ten thousand Micks,
They swung their picks,
To build the new canal.
But the choleray
Was stronger ‘n they
And twice it killed ‘em all.

TheMetalDog, to random
@TheMetalDog@mastodon.social avatar



Today In Metal History 🤘 January 25th 2024 🤘 RIOT, SACRIFICE, GARY MOORE, DIMMU BORGIR, ALICE IN CHAINS
TALENT WE LOST R.I.P. Mark Reale (RIOT): June 7th, 1955 – Review 2012 (aged 56) HEAVY BIRTHDAYS Happy 39th Mercedes Sherida Lander (KITTIE) - Review 1984 Happy 54th David Ingram (BENEDICTION) - Review 1969 Ricardo Confessori (ANGRA) ...

https://bravewords.com/news/today-in-metal-history-january-25th-2024-riot-sacrifice-gary-moore-dimmu-borgir-alice-in-chains

, , , ,

GWU_Deutschland, to random
@GWU_Deutschland@mastodon.gamedev.place avatar

at : 530 are losing their jobs, because "investments are not paying off" as the CEO puts it.

In other words: Workers are paying the price for reckless trend-chasing and mismanagement. This comes from a company which has made the news many times for its toxic work environment. Game devs endured it, now they get laid off and the C-suite stays on and gets millions in pay-outs.

This is the hallmark of an industry that mistreats its workers.

https://mastodon.gamedev.place/@GameDeveloperDotCom/111804832267669594

MikeDunnAuthor, to romania
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History January 21, 1999: Striking miners used stones and clubs to force their way through riot police in Bucharest Romania in the Mineriad of 1999. They were protesting against low wages and poor working conditions. The Mineriads were a series of protests by Jiu Valley miners in Bucharest during the 1990s.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #bucharest #romania #mining #coal #strike #wages #police #Riot

MikeDunnAuthor, to northcarolina
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History January 18, 1958: The Battle of Hayes Pond, the Battle of Maxton Field, or the Maxton Riot was an armed confrontation between members of a Ku Klux Klan (KKK) organization and Lumbee Indians at a Klan rally near Maxton, North Carolina. The KKK drove through town with a loudspeaker advertising the event and recruiting participants, infuriating the local indigenous community, which took up arms to disrupt the rally. They fired into the crowd, forcing the Klansmen to flee. The police arrested several Klansmen and charged them with inciting a riot, while some media sources praised the Lumbees and condemned the Klansmen.

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