Today in Labor History January 1, 1879: Ben Reitman was born. Reitman was a comrade and one-time lover of Emma Goldman, a doctor to hobos and prostitutes, and an anarchist organizer. He wrote the novel, “Boxcar Bertha.” Scorsese later made a film based on this book. Reitman became a hobo at the age of ten, but returned to Chicago and got a job in a lab. In 1900, he started medical school. His first daughter founded the nudist Out-of-Door Club at Highland, New York. As a physician, Reitman performed many abortions when they were still illegal. In 1907 he founded the Hobo College for migrant education, political organizing and social services. The during San Diego Free Speech Fight in 1912-1913, vigilantes tarred and feathered him, burned “IWW” into his skin and raped him with a broom. In 1916, he served six-month in prison for breaking the Comstock Law by disseminating information on birth control. #workingclass #LaborHistory #anarchism #benreitman #emmagoldman #IWW #freespeech #prostitution #sexwork #abortion #immigration #birthcontrol #prison #writer #author #books #novels #fiction [@bookstadon]( ) image
Today in Labor History January 1, 1808: The United States banned the importation of slaves. However, illegal smuggling of slaves continued unabetted. Many Americans continued to engage in the slave trade by transporting Africans to Cuba and Brazil. From 1808 to 1860, nearly 33% of all slave ships were either owned by American merchants, or were built and outfitted in American ports. Furthermore, smugglers imported roughly 50,000 slaves into the United States after 1808, in violation of the law, mostly through Spanish Florida and Texas. In 1819, South Carolina Governor Henry Middleton estimated that 13,000 smuggled African slaves arrived every year. In 1820, Congress made slave-trading a capital offense. Yet out of 74 total slaving-trading cases brought before the U.S. courts between 1837 and 1860, nearly all were acquitted. Only one man, Nathaniel Gordon, was ever executed for illegal slave-trading in the U.S. #workingclass #LaborHistory #slavery #abolition #BlackMastodon image
Today in Labor History January 1, 1804: Haitian slaves, led by Jean Jacques Desalines, declared independence from France, making Haiti the first free black republic in the world. The U.S. refused to recognize Haiti for the next 70. France extracted millions in restitution, destroying any hope of ever moving out of deep poverty. The slave revolt against the French began in 1791 with the call by Dutty Boukman, a vodou priest. Toussaint L'Ouverture led the revolution. (For a really great history of the Haitian revolution, please see the “Black Jacobins,” by H. L. R. James) #workingclass #LaborHistory #haiti #Revolution #ToussaintLOuverture #boukman #slavery #books #author #writer #nonfiction #BlackMastodon [@bookstadon]( ) image
It's just a flu.... Yeh, keep saying it and do nothing at your own peril. *12-50,000 flu deaths/year, just in the U.S. and just in a typical year. *This year's K-clade H3N2 strain is particularly virulent, with 81,000 hospitalizations and 3,100 deaths so far this season (and we're still early in the season) *Not too late to get vaccinated and it does reduce risk of severe outcomes *Despite its loss of credibility and adoption of pseudoscientific snake oil and bunkum, the CDC still recommends the vaccine for everyone older than 6 mos (as does all the legitimate & still credible health and science organizations) . #influenza #flu #publichealth #vaccines
And yet, in spite of this media complicity and propaganda trying to justify and whitewash Israel’s crimes against humanity, *Nearly 40% of U.S. Jews now consider it a genocide: https://www.timesofisrael.com/poll-nearly-four-in-10-us-jews-say-israel-has-committed-genocide-in-gaza/ *Overall, U.S. public support for Israel’s military action in Gaza has dropped to an all-time low of 32%: *While those who believe Israel’s actions are “fully justified” has dropped to just 23%, a 27-point drop since October 2023: https://www.cnn.com/2025/07/18/politics/cnn-poll-israel-support image
Today in Labor History December 31, 1930: American singer-songwriter, guitarist, civil rights activist and actress Odetta was born. She played and sang folk music, blues, jazz and spirituals. She influenced Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Mavis Staples and Janis Joplin. She is perhaps most remembered for her performance of “O Freedom” at the 1963 March on Washington. In reference to the Civil Rights Movement, she described herself as "one of the privates in a very big army." #workingclass #LaborHistory #folkmusic #civilrights #protest #activism #odetta #BlackMastodon
Today in Labor History December 31, 1918: U.S. courts found Marie Equi guilty of sedition for speaking out against World War One. Marie Equi was born to working-class immigrant parents in New Bedford, Massachusetts. As a young woman, she went to work in a textile mill. Her first documented experience as an activist came in 1893, when she horse-whipped Reverend Orson D. Taylor, a land developer and superintendent of the Wasco Independent Academy, after he reneged on paying her lover, Bessie Holcomb, her salary for teaching at the institution. Many local people considered Taylor as a crook and applauded her attack. In 1897, she moved to San Francisco to study medicine. She practiced medicine in Portland, Oregon, where she cared primarily for working-class and poor patients. However, she came back to San Francisco to volunteer during the 1906 earthquake. In 1913, she went to support a strike by women cannery workers at Oregon Packing Company over low wages. When the IWW and socialists joined the strike, the demands broadened to include equal rights for women and the right to free speech. During that strike, police clubbed her as she protested their brutality toward a pregnant woman. The experience radicalized her and drew her into the anarchist and the radical labor movements. She became a leader in Portland’s unemployment crisis of 1913-14, supported the IWW’s free speech fights, and the labor battles of the region’s timber workers. Throughout her career as a doctor, she provided information on birth control and abortions despite both being illegal at the time, providing discounts to lower income women. She was imprisoned in 1916 for providing abortion literature. As nationalism and jingoism increased during the years leading up to U.S. involvement in World War One, there were massive Preparedness Parades held throughout the country. Equi believed the war was about profits for capitalists at the expense of working-class people. During one Preparedness Parade in downtown Portland, she unfurled a banner that reading: Prepare to die, workingmen, JP Morgan & Co. want preparedness for profit. She was arrested at this protest, and again in 1918. They sentenced her to three years at San Quintin, which President Wilson commuted to one. After her release, she returned to Portland and invited IWW organizer Elizabeth Gurley Flynn to come live with her. #workingclass #LaborHistory #marieequi #anarchism #feminism #lgbtq #antiwar #strike #police #policebrutality #abortion #birthcontrol #sedition #prison #IWW image
They haven't even been convicted of anything, nor even brought to trial, and they have been imprisoned for over a year now, in spite of British rules requiring a trial within 6 months of arrest. image
And the most perfect example of why capitalism is a disaster and must be overthrown. Any wonder that nearly two-thirds of young people in the U.S. hold a favorable view of socialism? image
Today in Labor History December 30, 1890: Victor Serge was born on this date in Brussels. Serge was a novelist, poet, historian, & militant activist most well-known for his novel, “The Birth of Our Power.” In 1909 he moved to Paris, where he collaborated with Raymond Callemin on the newspaper L’anarchie. Callemin was executed in 1913 for his role in the Bonnot gang of anarchist bank robbers. Serge never participated in any of their robberies, but refused to denounce them in his paper. Consequently, he got five years imprisonment for his association with the gang. He wrote about this in his novel, “Men in Prison.” After his release, in 1913, he was expelled from France, moved to Barcelona, joined the CNT union, wrote for their newspaper, “Tierra y Libertad,” and participated in the General Strike and anarchist uprising of 1917. He went to Russia in 1918, initially in support of the communists. However, he quickly became disillusioned with the repressive, autocratic rule, particularly the suppression of the Kronstadt rebellion in 1921. Throughout the 1920s, he was stationed in Berlin and Vienna, where he wrote for the Comintern journal International Press Correspondence and began associating with the Trotskyists. After his return to the Soviet Union in 1925, he was kicked out of the Communist Party and later imprisoned, where he began writing his most famous books. In the late 1920s-early 1930s, he completed “Men in Prison,” “Birth of Our Power,” and “Year One of the Russian Revolution,” which were published abroad, but suppressed in the USSR and ignored or criticized by much of the mainstream and Communist press. In 1933, he and his son were deported to a gulag in Orenburg, where they were nearly starved to death. Yet he still managed to write four more books while imprisoned there. An international campaign for his release was launched by friends abroad, including Magdeleine Paz, André Malraux and André Gide. In 1936, he was granted permission to leave the Soviet Union, but they confiscated all of his manuscripts and had to rewrite them from memory. He fled to France, where he was under constant harassment by the left and the right. In 1940, he reached Marseilles, which was then a refuge for anti-fascist intellectuals and political militants seeking to escape Europe. He lived there briefly under the protection of American diplomat Varian Fry, working there with other anti-fascist artists and writers on the Emergency Rescue Committee, before fleeing to Mexico, where he lived until his death in 1947. Throughout his latter years, while living in Mexico, he continued to be harassed by both the left and right, with some even accusing him of being a Nazi sympathizer. Many believe he was poisoned by the Soviet secret police and there is evidence that the MGB ran an assassination squad among Mexico City cab drivers. He also continued to write, publishing “Memoirs of a Revolutionary, 1901–1941,” “The Case of Comrade Tulayev,” and “The Long Dusk.” #workingclass #LaborHistory #victorserge #anarchism #communism #fascism #nazis #soviet #ussr #bonnottgang #revolution #uprising #antifascism #writer #author #fiction #novels #books [@bookstadon]( ) image