THE ABSURD TIMES WE AINT WOKEISH Illustration: The Governor of Florida faces the WOKE forces of evil. Will he be ready for Donald? WE AINT WOKE by Honest Charlie Well, I want to take care of a few things first. First of all, I'm going to use the first-person singular. So there. And this is personal, not some general issue. You are welcome aboard. Next, let's consider the French, or French itself. I have heard that language is phonetic, so let's look at a few things. First, in linguistics, there is a term called schwa, or a sort of capital B (not available on a standard keyboard). How would you write it in French? "Eouis", of course. The first thing that would have come to me when I saw "eouis" written down, was "schwa," of course. OK, let's take another: CHAMPS! Now I would be tempted to pronounce that as if it were a team that was triumphant over any other team in their league, or whatever. WRONG! It is pronounced "Shawnz," of course! People complain that the French will not recognize anyone's ability to pronounce their language, as if there were only one way to pronounce it, but there are slight variations every 30 miles or so. Never mind that someone here from Mississippi, meeting someone from New Jersey, along with someone from Nebraska will all recognize each other as native speakers. Same thing in France. One big difference, however, is what I ran into in most other countries. No matter what the language, some of the people disliked Americans very much, and not without good reason. They pretend to be unable to speak or understand English. However, if I started out in German, which I can pronounce fairly acceptably, although perhaps with a 19th Century bias, they immediately seem very fluent in English. EXCEPT IN FRANCE!! They seemed to have a very long memory there because the question as to whether they spoke German was answered with a vigorous NO! However, on social media German is of little help as Germans of that generation speak, read, and write English with far greater ease than I could do any of that in German. There is no reason to try.1 Despite this handicap, perhaps because of it?, the French set an example for all people of the so-called "free world" when the autocratic Macron simply raised the retirement age two years by fiat. He stole, in other words, the retirement funds contributed by the workers of France, two years' worth. They occupied the streets for at least a month. The controlling parties, next election, will simply find somebody intolerably bad to run against whomever they want to rule and that will be that. But at least they tried. The demonstrations worked much as they did worldwide before the Iraq war. Bush, to some extent tinged by Oedipal concerns, but mainly for oil and at the behest of Israel, went to war anyway. He clownishly landed on a ship with MISSION ACCOMPLISHED written on it and strutted as the greatest patriot since George Washington (who started out as a British Officer). Millions, worldwide, demonstrated against that war, but the will of the people was not as important as profits.2 Of course, all such efforts eventually fail and the people are left in as meager conditions as possible. We know that the Treaty of Versailles was designed to harm and punish the German people and NOT to prevent more conflict. Maynard Keynes and many others at the time brought this out but were never heeded. The result was a populist movement in Germany with a precursor of the MAGA party that was called the NAZI party. There is no secret about this as some of the energetic members of this Republican Party carry such flags, billionaires with signed copies of Mein Kampf, and one-eyed morons with huge tattoos of WE THE PEOPLE on his arm flaunt their support for autocracy. But enough nostalgia. This leader is now sentenced to 18 years in prison, but that's ok, Adolf was in prison when he wrote his battle and when he was a youth (yes, he was one once) kept a poster of Henry Ford on his wall. Both were anti-union. Ford had a plant that manufactured tanks for Adolf and we bombed it. Henry took us to court and won. The Supreme Court is being purchased once again today. This one-eyed leader has an eye patch, but few know how it came about. He just looks tough wearing it. Well, according to his wife, an accomplished stripper, (who at least therefore provides a genuine service), he was cleaning a 22 caliber gun and he shot himself in the eye. Well, you can't have everything. So why are not these obvious details more well-known? They are not more well-known because the media is owned by people who don't want them to be well-known. The media has the right to publish whatever it wants, so long as it does not affect profits. The interview below will tell you all about it. I had intended to trace the history of the entire Soviet Union abandonment, the promises about NATO not moving an inch East, and the overthrow of the earlier Ukrainian government, but that will have to wait. I am, however, deciding that only on Mondays is a rather artificial way to publish a newsletter. So … whenever! Here'e Amy: We look at the largely forgotten 1937 Memorial Day Massacre, when police in Chicago shot at and gassed a peaceful gathering of striking steelworkers and their supporters, killing 10 people, most of them shot in the back. It was a time like today, when unions were growing stronger. The workers were on strike against Republic Steel, and the police attacked them with weapons supplied by the company. The tragic story is told in a new PBS documentary. "The mass media, right up to The New York Times, was supporting the police story that they had no choice but to open fire on this mob," says Greg Mitchell, who directed the new PBS documentary, Memorial Day Massacre: Workers Die, Film Buried, and edited a companion book that is the first oral history on the tragedy. The film can be viewed at PBS.org and was produced by Lyn Goldfarb. Transcript This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form. AMY GOODMAN: As Memorial Day weekend begins here in the United States, we end today's show looking back at the largely forgotten 1937 Memorial Day Massacre, when police in Chicago shot at and gassed a peaceful gathering of striking steelworkers and their supporters, killing 10 people, most of them shot in the back. It was a time like today, when unions were growing stronger. The workers were on strike against Republic Steel. The police attacked them with weapons supplied by the company. The tragic story is told in a new PBS documentary, Memorial Day Massacre: Workers Die, Film Buried. It based on book with oral histories of eyewitnesses of the attack. The film begins with the great radio broadcaster Studs Terkel. STUDS TERKEL: This is 1937, and the labor battles are going on. The CIO is being organized. And the steelworkers and the packing, they're all being organized. And the Big Steel, the big steel companies, finally agreed. They recognized the union. But there's one company in Chicago, Republic Steel, Tom Girdler: "I will not recognize the union." And so there was a strike. Memorial Day 1937. And there was a picnic. Strikers and their wives and kids are on the grounds of Republic Steel in South Chicago. Someone threw a stone, and cops were there at the behest of Girdler. And they shot down 10 people, killed them, in the back. JOSH CHARLES: In the days that followed, newspapers from coast to coast portrayed the incident as a riot provoked by a dangerous mob, which left police no choice but to open fire, with 10 dead within days. However, the key piece of evidence, the only film of the tragedy, remained buried. Paramount News created, then suppressed, a newsreel airing the footage. When the hidden footage was finally screened, the shocking images drew national attention, with vital lessons for today. AMY GOODMAN: That's the opening to the new documentary, Memorial Day Massacre: Workers Die, Film Buried. This is another clip, when an eyewitness describes how the police attack unfolded. We hear from reporter Harold Rossman and Mollie West, who was a teenager when she attended the Memorial Day gathering in support of the striking workers. MOLLIE WEST: We just walked. And people were talking and holding hands, and the children were being carried by their fathers on their shoulders. And everybody was laughing, and it was a joyous thing. And as we came closer to the mill, the walking slowed a bit. It seemed like the entire police force of the city of Chicago was out there. But that didn't deter. We were still going to go over to the mill and just conduct a peaceful mass picket line. HAROLD ROSSMAN: I could see a few objects through the air. I could see some things being thrown. Not much. It wasn't a lot of stuff, maybe a couple of rocks. There was a dry, crackling kind of a noise. It took me a moment to figure out what it was, and I realized it was gunfire. And by that time, the people were falling. And they were turning and trying to run, and the gunfire continued. It was clear that a whole number of these people had been shot in the back. They were trying to flee, and they were still being fired at. MOLLIE WEST: And then a whole number of people were piled up on top of me, and I could barely breathe. Also, there was tear gas. People finally began to get off, get on their feet. And when I finally stood up, and I — total bewilderment. I looked around, and I saw a battlefield. AMY GOODMAN: The new PBS documentary, Memorial Day Massacre: Workers Die, Film Buried, which just aired on PBS, is now online. It's the latest project from longtime author and journalist Greg Mitchell, who's written 12 books and made many films about U.S. politics and history. Greg, welcome back to Democracy Now! This is a devastating documentary about a story very few people today know, what happened 86 years ago in Chicago. Take it from where we have just heard these eyewitness descriptions. How did this happen? GREG MITCHELL: OK. Well, I'm happy to be here. Yes, the police, in fact, shot 40 people, the vast majority in the back or in the side. Ten would die, within days. And then, they — as the film shows, they waded through the crowd, beating people over the head, sometimes with ax handles provided by Republic Steel. And so, there were another 50 people who were injured enough to be hospitalized. And then, again, as the film shows, the injured, instead of getting any medical treatment, were actually arrested and shoved into paddy wagons and taken to jail or taken to distant hospitals. And this is all on the Paramount News footage, which was suppressed. So, we know the step-by-step things that happened. And you can watch — AMY GOODMAN: Greg, your film is so good — GREG MITCHELL: — almost all the Paramount footage. AMY GOODMAN: Greg, your film is so good, I want to go back to another clip from Memorial Day Massacre. JOSH CHARLES: A disturbing new account of the death of one man emerged. A photo of Earl Handley being carried by police, seemingly for medical attention, had appeared in newspapers earlier. Now the full story came out. Handley, a 37-year-old carpenter, had been shot in the thigh, so a worker tied a tourniquet on his leg to stop the bleeding. The Paramount footage showed him being hauled to a worker's car for a quick trip to the hospital. After the camera stopped rolling, however, police yanked him out of the car and carried him to their paddy wagon, as his tourniquet slipped off, and he bled to death. A doctor who treated some of the wounded presented autopsy reports proving that nearly all of the dead had been shot in the back or in the side. AMY GOODMAN: And this is another clip from Memorial Day Massacre about how progressive Senator Robert La Follette subpoenaed the suppressed footage of the attack. This was the first time film was shown as evidence in a Senate hearing. JOSH CHARLES: Senator La Follette announced that the footage would be screened at both regular speed and slow motion. Pointedly, he asked the top Chicago police officials to take a seat to view the film. This was reportedly the first time film footage had ever been introduced as evidence in Congress. The reaction in the hearing room: gasps, some tears, but stony silence from the top police officials. The slow motion revealed a murderous new detail. Much of the press coverage the next day now flipped to blaming the police, although many news outlets now claimed that the camera could indeed lie. NEWSREEL: What happened at South Chicago, Memorial Day, 1937. JOSH CHARLES: Also the following day, Paramount, after burying the first two newsreels, at last released a film based on its footage. NEWSREEL: The following pictures, made before and during the trouble, are shown exactly as they came from the camera, without editing — as presented before the United States Senate committee in Washington. JOSH CHARLES: The newsreel claimed that the footage was not edited, but this was false. Actually, it omitted this crucial footage: the deadly first 15 seconds. So Paramount was still withholding evidence from the public. AMY GOODMAN: Another excerpt of Memorial Day Massacre: Workers Die, Film Buried, the director, Greg Mitchell, with us. I mean, this story of what the public understood happened, with 10 people killed, talk about the role of the media, and the police working with it, whether the camera was shut off, as we saw in that first clip, or Paramount suppressing this, Greg. GREG MITCHELL: Yes. The importance of it was, to me, the mass media, right up to The New York Times, was supporting the police story, that they had no choice but to open fire on this mob. And Paramount had the footage, had the evidence. They created a newsreel, and then they decided not to release it. They created a second newsreel and didn't release that. And it took the being subpoenaed by the La Follette hearing, and the screening on Capitol Hill then forced Paramount to release a third newsreel. And even then, city officials in Chicago, in St. Louis, in Massachusetts banned its showing. So, even in its final form, it was not released in full. AMY GOODMAN: And, Greg, in this last minute, why is Paramount so significant? People might not understand that today. And what is the most important lesson to take of what took place? GREG MITCHELL: Well, you know, as you know, the movies were incredibly popular then. This was before television, so most people got their — certainly their visual news from these newsreels, which were shown in every movie theater at every movie showing. I think the lesson, among other things, is the importance of visual evidence when there's police shootings and police brutality, as we see today. That's why there's such a focus on releasing bodycams and dashboard cams. Of course, another lesson is, with the great labor activity today, that they stand on the shoulders of the people from the past who sacrificed so much. And that's why I'm happy people can watch this film right now on PBS.org, everywhere in the country. And, of course, the book has the oral histories of all eyewitnesses and many of the activists who were wounded. AMY GOODMAN: Greg Mitchell, director of Memorial Day Massacre: Workers Die, Film Buried. And that does it for today's show. Thanks to Tia Potenza Smallwood and Susan Hughes here in Cambridge. Also thanks to Denis Moynihan and Hany Massoud. I'm Amy Goodman. Thanks for joining us. The original content of this program is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. Please attribute legal copies of this work to democracynow.org. Some of the work(s) that this program incorporates, however, may be separately licensed. For further information or additional permissions, contact us.
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Showing posts with label DISNEY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DISNEY. Show all posts
Monday, May 29, 2023
WE AINT WOKISH
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