German author and ex-MP Jürgen Todenhöfer was arrested in Germany for tweeting that "Benjamin Netanyahu is doing the same to Palestinians that Nazis did to Jews." No one seemed to mind when he previously called for George w. Bush and Tony Blair to be arrested for their complicity in war crimes.
Yeh, it was inspiring to see so many people out there demonstrating. But it would've been even better if there were a set of demands. And this wouldn't be that hard. I'm sure the organizers (particularly the Dem Party operatives) want to keep the message simple: Votes Dem & they'll save you from this nightmare. But the overwhelming majority of the public wants Free Health Care; affordable housing and groceries; Free College or, at least, relief from college debt; Family Leave; Childcare; effective action on the Climate Crisis; and an end to U.S. support of Regime Change and Genocide. That's the platform. Super simple. Super popular. And, hey, might even get the Dems elected. But I guess they feel it's more important not to alienate the zionists and their wealth backers. image
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Today in Labor History October 21, 1981: Kuwasi Balagoon was finally captured following a Brinks robbery. Balagoon had been a member of the Black Panther Party. While in prison, he became disillusioned with the Panthers, became an anarchist and joined the more militant Black Liberation Army. He escaped from prison twice. In 1979, while on the lam from his second prison escape, he helped to free political prisoner Assata Shakur, who fled to Cuba and who recently died their (2025). In 1986, he died in prison from AIDS. In 2019, PM Press released a collection of writings by and about Balagoon called, “Kuwasi Balagoon: A Soldier's Story.” And the prison abolitionist group, Black and Pink, which supports LGBTQ and HIV-positive prisoners, has, since 2020, run a "Kuwasi Balagoon award" for those living with HIV/AIDS. #workingclass #LaborHistory #anarchism #blackpanthers #BlackLiberationArmy #racism #blm #newafrika #assatashakur #prison #prisonescape #politicalrisoner #author #writer #books #BlackMastodon [@bookstadon]( ) image
Today in Labor History October 21, 1920: Anarchist general Kim Jwa-jin drew Japanese forces into an ambush, leading to the victory of Korean nationalists in the Battle of Chingshanli, during the struggle to end the Japanese occupation. Over 1,000 Japanese and 60 Koreans died in the battle. Japan ruled Korea from 1910-1945. Kim played a significant role in the development of anarchism in Korea. When he was only 18, he publicly burned a slave registry, releasing 50 families from enslavement—the first slave emancipation in modern Korea. In 1930, he was assassinated by Park Sang-sil, an agent of the Japanese colonial government. #workingclass #LaborHistory #anarchism #korea #japan #colonialism #slavery image
Today in Labor History October 21, 1894: French anarchists incited a revolt on the penal colony of Île Saint-Joseph, in the Salvation Islands of French Guiana, which included the infamous Devil’s Island. The revolt was a response to the guards killing an anarchist prisoner. The uprising was quickly put down, with the guards slaughtering several anarchists, and torturing many more, some of whom later died from their wounds. Captain Alfred Dreyfus was held there (1895-98) after his wrongful, antisemitic conviction for treason. Charles Delescluze, libertarian socialist and future leader of the Paris Commune, was sent there in 1853. Clément Duval, a member of the Panther of Batignolles anarchist gang of robbers, spent 14 years on Devil’s Island, making 20 escape attempts. In 1901, he succeeded and fled to New York, where lived until his death at the age of 85. The first political prisoners brought to Guiana were Jacobins, in 1794. Numerous slave rebellions also occurred in the colony, until slavery was finally abolished, in the wake of the 1848 French Revolution. The novel and film “Papillon” takes place there, as does Joseph Conrad's short story “An Anarchist” (1906). Delescluze, who was killed on the barricades during the Commune, wrote an account of his imprisonment in Guiana, “De Paris à Cayenne, Journal d'un transporté.” And Duval wrote about it in his 1929 memoir, “Outrage: An Anarchist Memoir of the Penal Colony.” Guiana is the only continental South American territory to remain a European colony into the 21st century. #workingclass #LaborHistory #prison #uprising #Revolution #anarchism #pariscommune #devilsisland #slavery #guiana #books #papillon #novel #memoir #writer #author [@bookstadon]( ) image