Sure, but it would help even more if we expropriated all their wealth, redistributed it amongst the working class, seized the means of production, and abolished capitalism. Remember, the richest don’t gain their wealth from working and have relatively little taxable income. For example, Mark Zuckerberg, whose net worth is somewhere in the $200-250 billion range, pays himself a $1 base salary at Meta, but takes home $27 million in compensation, mostly in company shares that aren’t subject to the marginal income tax. And the majority of billionaires’ overall wealth comes from profits from stocks, bonds, property, and other investments that are, likewise, not subject to income tax image
Who Own the Media: *Elon Musk, X, Net Worth $681 Billion *Larry Ellison, Paramount Global (CBS, MTV, Comedy Central) & trying to buy Times Warner, Net Worth: $370 billion *Mark Zuckerberg, Meta, Net Worth $264 billion *Jeff Bezos, Washington Post, Net Worth: $215 billion *Michael Bloomberg, Business Week, Net Worth: $104.7 billion *Carlos Slim Helu, New York Times, Net Worth: $99.1 billion *Sheldon Adelson, Las Vegas Review Journal, Net Worth: $29.8 billion *Rupert Murdoch, Wall Street Journal, Net Worth: $24 billion *Anne Cox Chambers, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Net Worth: $17 billion *Laurene Powell Jobs, The Atlantic, Net Worth: $15 billion *Patrick Soon-Shiong, Los Angeles Time, Net Worth: $8.5 billion *Marc Benioff, Time, Net Worth: $5.8 billion *John Henry, The Boston Globe, Net Worth: $5.7 billion *Chatchaval Jiaravanon, Fortune, Net Worth: $115 million image
Today in Labor History December 20, 1971: Doctors Without Borders was founded by French doctors and journalists in the wake of the Biafra succession. Their first mission was in support of victims of the 1972 Nicaraguan earthquake. In the mid to late 1970s, they provided aid to refugees from the Khmer Rouge. They spent 9 years (1976-1984) in Lebanon during their civil war. They’ve spent decades in Africa helping in the battles against AIDS and Ebola. Their volunteers have been attacked by soldiers, kidnapped and bombed. In 1999 they won the Nobel Peace Prize. #workingclass #LaborHistory #DoctorsWithoutBorders #msf #medical #healthcare #aids #ebola #civilwar #palestine #gaza #nobelprize #civilians #CeasefireNow #FreePalestine #EndTheOccupation image
Today in Labor History December 20, 1968: John Steinbeck died on this date. He was most famous for novels written from the perspective of working men and women, the poor and downtrodden, including East of Eden, Grapes of Wrath, Of Mice and Men, Tortilla Flats and Cannery Row. In 1935, he joined the communist League of American Writers. He supported Arthur Miller when he faced contempt charges for refusing to cooperate with HUAC. The FBI and the IRS harassed him throughout his career. Yet he wrote glowingly about U.S. troops during the Vietnam War. He won the Pulitzer Prize for Grapes of Wrath in 1939, and the Nobel Prize in 1962. He also wrote the screenplay for the Elia Kazan film, Viva Zapata, starring Marlon Brando. #workingclass #LaborHistory #steinbeck #writer #author #books #novels #fiction #literature #nobelprize #fbi #communism [@bookstadon]( ) image
Today in Labor History December 20, 1957: British working-class singer/songwriter Billy Bragg was born. Bragg was a strong supporter of the 1984 miners’ strike and has been an outspoken critic of fascism, racism, sexism, homophobia and transphobia. And he’s a really nice guy. You can read my review of his book “Roots, Rockers & Radicals” here: #workingclass #LaborHistory#billybragg #folkmusic #folk #union #strike #mining #lgbtq #homophobia #racism #sexism #fascism #antifa
Today in Writing History December 20, 1954: Sandra Cisneros, American author and poet was born. Her work explores the Chicana identity, immigration, poverty, misogyny and the challenges of having a bicultural identity. #workingclass #LaborHistory #sandracisneros #author #writer #chicana #immigration #poverty #feminism #books #identity #fiction #Literature [@bookstadon]( ) image
Today in Labor History December 20, 1790: The first American cotton mill began operation in Pawtucket, Rhode Island. The mill, owned by Samuel Slater, employed children aged 4-10. He also hired entire families, forcing them to live in his company housing and buy all their living necessities from his company store. Ann Arnold, aged 9, was Slater’s first employee. In 1810, he introduced the power loom, which was too much for young children to handle. So, he started hiring the next cheapest labor: young women. By 1835, 55% of all millworkers in the U.S. were children. In the New England mills, the children worked 12-hour days, 6 days per week in the winter. In the summer, they were forced to work 16 hours per day. On Sundays, he forced them to attend his Sunday school, where he indoctrinated them in “Christian values” like hard work and subservience to one’s masters. The children spent twice as many hours in the mill than kids spend in the classroom today. Kids were fined for not working hard enough. But they resisted the abuse whenever they could, sabotaging the factory, setting fires, and stealing property. In 1814, the mill owners petitioned the state to organize a police force to subdue the increasingly rebellious child workforce. 30 years later, on May 26, 1824, 102 young women and children at Slater’s mill initiated the first factory strike on U.S. soil. They, along with sympathetic community members, blockaded access to Slaters mill, shutting down operations and inspiring workers at other nearby mills to join their strike. They also went to the homes of the mill owners, shouting insults and breaking their windows. In early June, the mill owners and the workers came to an agreement, the details of which have been lost to history, and the workers returned to the mills. Congress tried several times to enact child labor laws in the early 20th century, eventually passing the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, which prevented bosses from employing children during school hours, and in dangerous tasks. This law, and some of the earlier attempts, came in the wake of active organizing to protect children, including Mother Jones’s famous March of the Mill Children, in 1903, when she led a contingent of children and supporters from Philadelphia to President Teddy Roosevelt’s summer home, on Long Island, to “ask him to recommend the passage of a bill by congress to protect children against the greed of the manufacturer. We want him to hear the wail of the children, who never have a chance to go to school, but work from ten to eleven hours a day in the textile mills of Philadelphia, weaving the carpets that he and you walk on, and the curtains and clothes of the people.” Another important contribution to the movement to end child labor came from photograph Lewis Hine, who published a series of photographs of children doing dangerous work in coal mines, glass works, and textile mills. I used his powerful photograph of colliery Breaker Boys for the cover of my first novel, Anywhere But Schuylkill. My protagonist, Mike Doyle, started work in the colliery at age 13. If interested, please send me $25 via Venmo (@Michael-Dunn-565), along with your mailing address, and I will send you a signed copy! The U.S. never actually protected all children from exploitation. For example, the child labor laws always had exemptions for agricultural labor. And bosses often violated the existing laws, without consequence, including today. Meanwhile, growing numbers of states have passed new laws over the past five years that make it easier for bosses to exploit children and employ them in dangerous jobs. #workingclass #LaborHistory #children #childlabor #mill #exploitation #cotton #childexploitation #childabuse #lewishine #motherjones #strike #union #books #fiction #novel #writer [@bookstadon]( ) image
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And measles. And Pertussis. And children dying of Hepatitis B. And general hysteria around vaccines. And let's throw in some hardcore transphobia, while we're at it. @Smudge The Insult Cat 🐀 image
Today in Labor History, December 19, 1918: Pepita Carpena was born. She was an anarchist, labor organizer, antifascist fighter during the Civil War, and activist in the Mujeres Libres group. #workingclass #LaborHistory #anarchism #feminism #fascism #antifascism #civilwar #spain #pepitacarpena image