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Pplnthlabrmvmnt

@pplnthlabrmvmnt / pplnthlabrmvmnt.tumblr.com

People doing movement work! Also sometimes their stylish ways.
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what's with this name? you reblogged my work but i don't know how comfortable I am with my shit being linked to "macktivism"

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Ooops, no nothing like that. My friends and I just wanted to highlight the oft-stylish, interesting, great people fighting for worker rights/collective liberation. Not commenting on looks.

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reblogged

A short history of May Day

The first of May is a moment for us to remember the Chicago Haymarket Martyrs of 127 years ago. These Chicago anarchists helped to lead the major battle of the day, not only for the 8 Hour Day, but also for social liberation. The origins of May Day go back to May 4, 1886, marking the Haymarket Massacre. This memorable day began as a rally of striking workers who were demanding an eight-hour work day, climaxing with a bomb produced by an unknown individual while the police dispersed the peaceful rally. The blast and ensuing gunfire resulted in the deaths of seven police officers and at least four civilians; scores of others were wounded. Eight anarchists were convicted of conspiracy during the legal proceedings that followed. Although the evidence was scarce, and it could not be proven that any of the eight defendants had thrown the explosive projectile, seven were sentenced to death and one to 15 years in prison. The death sentences of two of the defendants were commuted to life in prison, and another committed suicide before his hanging. The other four were hanged on November 11, 1887. In 1893, Illinois’ new governor pardoned the remaining defendants and criticized the evidence that was used during trial. Since this day, we honor those who have fought, sacrificed and died for the defense and advancement of the working class.

Present conditions

Since the events of Haymarket, we have wrestled much from the capitalist class and the state through struggle. During the past 30 years, these forces have attacked our small, yet hard-fought-for gains. Continued attacks on working conditions, increasingly precarious and low wage work, deindustrialization, and marginalization have become the new normal. Governments have imposed round after round of social austerity measures, where workers and families have been expected to swallow cuts to public funding of services so that the richest can continue to profit from the fruits of our labor.

Today’s struggles/Tomorrow’s struggles

Despite this grim situation, today we have much to celebrate and look forward to. Over the last year, we have seen in Québec the biggest social movements in Canadian history spearheaded by combative unions to fight against neoliberal cuts to education and for quality free education. The Chicago Teachers Union went on strike and joined with parents and community members to protect their bargaining rights and working conditions and fight school closures. Workers from various fast food chains, warehouses, car washes and superstores, which have historically been near impossible to organize into business unions, have been participating in strike actions and various direct action in the demand for better working conditions. Unionized longshore workers have been fighting to hold the line on additional concessions to the bosses in one of the last bastions of union density and shopfloor power. While we celebrate these efforts and whatever small victories gained thus far, working class victory can only come from struggles owned and controlled by the workers themselves, not from above but from below and built with their own self-activities. These developments within the broader labor movement are a welcome sight in comparison to what is seen by some as a decade of relative inactivity. We see it as important that the workers and community partners involved in these campaigns recognize that they are confronting head-on the relationship between the ruling and working classes, and that successfully challenging this relationship will require more than one-day strikes and solidarity rallies. It will require nothing less than workers forcefully overcoming barriers of race, migration status, gender, sexuality, and gender identity to unite as one class, bound by continuous solidarity, and always pushing forward through escalations of action.

The need for a new workers’ movement

We hope this new, combative spirit by some workers invigorates a new and militant workers’ movement in North America—a workers’ movement that will no longer wait for politicians and bureaucrats to resolve the growing inequalities and oppressions. This spirit might bring a new wave of workers to replace the stale unionism with more democratic, combative and autonomous labor organizations which realize that laws and political institutions are put in place for the defense of the ruling class, and that only our own labor organizations, autonomous from the political institutions, can bring about the effective fighting force needed to replace the current, and build a new world. This new workers’ movement should be allied with supportive movements, such as those against cuts to social services and education, and those movements against all forms of oppression and inequality. We see the interconnectedness of various forms of oppression as we wage these struggles, along with the fights against the expansion of and brutality of police forces and prisons, the criminalization of the poor and undocumented, and the continued attacks on reproductive freedoms. As these and many other forms of oppression work in conjunction with class exploitation, we must build movements which see common interest in these struggles and which actively and mutually oppose the assaults on one another.

A new world to build

By engaging in these struggles, we gain necessary experience, initiate needed debates, and confront the current austerity agenda of the elite outside of current labor laws. Through struggle, we lay the possible foundations of a future world. Through struggle, we can as a class start to imagine and organize for a classless society and one completely emancipated from all forms of oppression. This May Day, just like every other, is a call for workers to organize against the everyday exploitation of capitalism. In the spirit of those who fought for the eight hour day, let us continue the fight for the advancement of our class. We need to look toward building a society without power, profit, and privilege, in which working people in workplaces and communities make the decisions about how our work is done and what we want from it. We need a movement that fights for real gains within the context of this society while using its own organizations as the basis for a new one. In Struggle & Solidarity,

Prairie Struggle Organization, Wild Rose Collective, Four Star Anarchist Organization, Common Struggle/Lucha Común, Workers Solidarity Alliance, Free Association of Anarchists, Miami Autonomy & Solidarity.

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#hotpeopleinthelabormovement #organizing2.0 #solidarityforever #robotunion

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youngstero

in honor of transgender day of visibility here our photos of Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera, the two founders of STAR (Street Transgender Action Revolutionaries) which dedicated itself to helping homeless transgender and gay youth beginning in the 1970′s - here is a link to a pdf of a zine with a detailed history of STAR, several really amazing interviews and pieces written by Sylvia and an interview with Marsha - both beautiful trans women of color and both of whom should never be forgotten 

Yes yes yes!

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I don’t bother writing about Fox News. It is too easy. What I talk about are the liberal intellectuals, the ones who portray themselves and perceive themselves as challenging power, as courageous, as standing up for truth and justice. They are basically the guardians of the faith. They set the limits. They tell us how far we can go. They say, ‘Look how courageous I am.’ But do not go one millimeter beyond that. At least for the educated sectors, they are the most dangerous in supporting power.

There's an old saying that the difference between a liberal and a radical is that the former flees a room when a fight breaks out.

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reblogged

On this day, March 25th, in 1911: At 4:45 PM EST, a fire started in a scrap bin at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory.

Today we remember: Lizzie Adler (24), Anna Altman (16), Annina Ardito (25), Rose Bassino (31), Vincenza Benanti (22), Yetta Berger (18), Essie Bernstein (19), Jacob Bernstein (35), Morris Bernstein (19), Gussie Bierman (22), Vincenza Billota (16), Abraham Binovitz (30), Rosie Brenman (23), Sarah Brenman (17), Ida Brodsky (15), Sarah Brodsky (21), Ada Brooks (18), Laura Brunetti (17), Josephine Cammarata (18), Francesca Caputo (17), Josephine Carlisi (31), Albina Caruso (20), Annie Ciminello (36), Rosina Cirrito (18), Anna Cohen (25), Annie Colletti (30), Sarah Cooper (16), Michelina Cordiano (25), Bessie Dashefsky (25), Josie Del Castillo (21), Clara Dockman (19), Kalman Donick (24), Celia Esenberg (17), Dora Evans (18), Rebecca Feibisch (17), Yetta Fichtenholtz (18), Daisy Lopez Fitze (26), Mary Floresta (26), Max Florin (23), Jenne Franco (17), Rose Friedman (18), Diana Gerjuoy (18), Masha Gerstein (17), Catherine Giannattasio (22), Celia Gitlin (17), Esther Goldstein (20), Lena Goldstein (22), Mary Goldstein (18), Yetta Goldstein (20), Rosie Grasso (16), Bertha Greb (25), Rachel Grossman (17), Mary Herman (40), Esther Hochfeld (21), Fannie Hollander (18), Pauline Horowitz (19), Ida Jukofsky (19), Ida Kanowitz (18), Tessie Kaplan (18), Beckie Kessler (19), Jacob Klein (23), Beckie Koppelman (16), Bertha Kula (19), Tillie Kupferschmidt (16), Benjamin Kurtz (19), Annie L’Abbate (16), Fannie Lansner (21), Maria Giuseppa (Tortorelli), Lauletti (33), Jennie Lederman (21), Max Lehrer (18), Sam Lehrer (19), Kate Leone (14), Mary Leventhal (22), Jennie Levin (19), Pauline Levine (19), Nettie Liebowitz (25), Rose Liermark (19), Bettina Maiale (18), Frances Maiale (21), Catherine Maltese (39), Lucia Maltese (20), Rosaria Maltese (14), Maria Manaria (27), Rose Mankofsky (22), Rose Mehl (15), Yetta Meyers (19), Gaetana Midolo (16), Annie Miller (16), Beckie Neubauer (19), Annie Nicholas (18), Michelina Nicolosi (21), Sadie Nussbaum (18), Julia Oberstein (19), Rose Oringer (19), Becky Ostrovsky (20), Annie Pack (18), Providenza Panno (43), Antonietta Pasqualicchio (16), Ida Pearl (20), Jennie Pildescu (18), Vincenza Pinelli (30), Emilia Prato (21), Concetta Prestifilippo (18), Becky Reines (19), Fannie Rosen (21), Israel Rosen (17), Julia Rosen (35), Louis (Loeb), Rosen (33), Yetta Rosenbaum (22), Jennie Rosenberg (21), Gussie Rosenfeld (22), Nettie Rosenthal (21), Emma Rothstein (22), Theodore Rotner (22), Sarah Sabasowitz (17), Santina Salemi (24), Sarafina Saracino (25), Teresina Saracino (20), Gussie Schiffman (18), Theresa Schmidt (32), Ethel Schneider (20), Violet (Velye), Schochet (21), Golda Schpunt (19), Margaret Schwartz (24), Jacob Seltzer (33), Rosie Shapiro (17), Ben Sklover (25), Rose Sorkin (18), Annie Starr (30), Jennie Stein (18), Jennie Stellino (16), Jennie Stiglitz (22), Sam Taback (20), Clotilde Terranova (22), Isabella Tortorelli (17), Meyer Utal (23), Catherine Uzzo (22), Frieda Velakofsky (20), Bessie Viviano (15), Rosie Weiner (20), Sarah Weintraub (17), Tessie Weisner (21), Dora Welfowitz (21), Bertha Wendorff (18), Joseph Wilson (21), Sonia Wisotsky (17)

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reblogged

"My name is Meaghan Perkins and I’ve played dobra in Batala NYC since August 2013. I am a mac-and-cheese enthusiast, feminist, and a proud Texan. Growing up in the land of Friday Night Lights, for years I played horn in a 300 person marching band. From that experience, I have a deep appreciation for the way music lifts up communities and forms collective identity.

I first fell in love with samba reggae music in college when I had the incredible opportunity to study in the northeast of Brazil. The energy and exuberance of the music excited me, and like the marching bands of my youth, I loved how the samba reggae bands were an integral part of community life.

One of the many reasons I joined Batala was because it was an all women’s band. In a world where we received so many damaging, limiting messages about what it means to be a woman, I draw such inspiration and strength being surrounded and supported by so many caring, passionate, powerful, badass women in Batala. Batala is my happy place!”

Meaghan, Dobra

Photo credit: Paul O’Reily

#hotpeopleinthelabormovement

Meaghan here is an incredible researcher, strategist and organizer in the national fast food worker organizing movement. She is a badass and is an excellent epitome of hot people in the labor movement. 

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