May 2011
1 tag
“Fate silenzio potremmo svegliare gli italiani!”
– #spanishrevolution
May 31st
2 notes
May 31st
2 tags
La Germania fermerà il suo ultimo reattore nucleare entro il 2022, diventando così la prima potenza industriale a rinunciare all’energia atomica: lo ha annunciato oggi il ministro per l’Ambiente.
May 30th
4 notes
May 29th
2 tags
May 29th
2 tags
Plastic Pattern People Glad to get high and see the slow motion world. Just to reach, and touch, the half notes floating. Worlds spinning orbit quicker than 9/8ths Dave Brubeck. We come now, frantically searching for Thomas Moore, rainbow villages. Up on suddenly, Charlie Mingus and our man Abdul Malik, to add bass, to a bottomless pit of insecurity. You may be plastic because you never meditate,...
May 29th
2 tags
Introduction - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised You will not be able to stay home, brother. You will not be able to plug in, turn on and cop out. You will not be able to lose yourself on skag and skip out for beer during commercials, Because the revolution will not be televised. The revolution will not be televised. The revolution will not be brought to you by Xerox In 4 parts without...
May 29th
11 notes
2 tags
May 29th
2 tags
Small Talk at 125th and Lenox - Wikipedia, the... →
May 29th
2 tags
May 29th
2 tags
May 29th
2 tags
May 28th
May 28th
1 note
May 27th
2 notes
2 tags
May 24th
3 notes
2 tags
May 23rd
1 tag
May 23rd
1 note
2 tags
May 23rd
5 notes
1 tag
We, the unemployed, the underpaid, the subcontracted, the precarious, the young … demand a change towards a future with dignity. We are fed up of reforms, of being laid off, of the banks which have caused the crisis hardening our mortgages or taking away our houses, of laws limiting our freedom in the interest of the powerful. We blame the political and economic powers of our sad situation and we...
May 21st
1 note
1 tag
May 21st
43 notes
1 tag
May 17th
30 notes
1 tag
“Referendum Sardegna, oltre il 97% dice no al nucleare.”
May 16th
“Terra di stupori e miraggi. Lo sguardo si addentra in lei con passo incerto....”
– Gabriel Trujillo Muñoz
May 14th
1 tag
May 3rd
2 notes
1 tag
May 2nd
1 note
1 tag
May 2nd
1 tag
May 2nd
1 tag
May 2nd
4 notes
3 tags
May 1st
7 notes
3 tags
Eight-Hour Movement
When the Chicago labor movement emerged in 1864, the eight-hour day quickly became its central demand. Exhausted by 12 to 14 hours a day of work, six days a week, workers throughout the city and state organized to secure a law limiting the workday to eight hours. In 1867, the Illinois legislature passed such a law but allowed a huge loophole that permitted employers to contract with their employees for longer hours. Trying to eliminate that option, Chicago labor called for a citywide strike that began on May 1, 1867, and practically shut down the city's economy for a week. When the strike collapsed, the law collapsed with it and workers were left unprotected. In the 1880s, the issue resurfaced and became the key demand of a movement that shook the city and the nation. In 1884, the Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions—predecessor of the American Federation of Labor—urged American workers to observe an eight-hour day beginning May 1, 1886. Implying direct rather than legislative action, the eight-hour movement united skilled and unskilled workers of all nationalities. Chicago anarchists, trade unionists, and the Knights of Labor, despite the coolness of their national organizations, actively promoted and profited from the movement, and made Chicago its national center. In the midst of that scheduled agitation, the bomb exploded at Haymarket, giving the movement its martyrs and diverting and defeating the larger movement of which it had been a part. After Haymarket, the eight-hour day became one among a menu of issues promoted by the labor movement, rather than the key catalytic goal around which a movement organized. Under pressure from newly stable labor institutions, different industries gradually decreased hours, giving workers more time for leisure activities. The eight-hour day finally became a reality in 1938, when the New Deal's Fair Labor Standards Act made it a legal day's work throughout the nation.
May 1st
3 notes
3 tags
May 1st
3 tags
May 1st
3 tags
Haymarket Affair →
May 1st
3 tags
May 1st
3 tags
May 1st