br00t4c, to random
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar

This SCOTUS case could 'hobble a whole range' of federal government agencies

https://www.alternet.org/jarkesy-sec-supreme-court/

kris_inwood, to history
@kris_inwood@mas.to avatar

Mortgage lenders foreclosed on many home owners in the Great Depression. Richard Harris finds that many Hamilton Ont borrowers defaulted voluntarily, local landlords defaulted more than homeowners & private lenders foreclosed less than lending institutions. Open access in Social Science History
https://doi.org/10.1017/ssh.2023.29
@economics @demography @socialscience @sociology @politicalscience @geography @anthropology @econhist @archaeodons

MikeDunnAuthor, to Cleveland

Today in Labor History March 6, 1930: 100,000 people demonstrated for jobs in New York City. Demonstrations by unemployed workers, demanding unemployment insurance, occurred in virtually every major U.S. city. In New York, police attacked a crowd of 35,000. In Cleveland, 10,000 people battled police. In Detroit, the Communist Party organized an underemployment demonstration. Over 50,000 people showed up. Thousands took to the streets in Toledo, Flint and Pontiac. These demonstrations led to the creation of the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), sponsored by Republican congressman Hamilton Fish, with the support of the American Federation of Labor, to investigate and quash radical activities.

br00t4c, to random
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar
br00t4c, to random
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar
hosford42, to cooperatives
@hosford42@techhub.social avatar

The profit motive drives enshittification. Consumer coops are immune to it.



hosford42,
@hosford42@techhub.social avatar

The stock market is a source of economic instability, market crashes, and, in worst-case scenarios, worldwide economic depressions. Coops don't participate in the stock market and are robust to economic instabilities.







br00t4c, to random
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar
MikeDunnAuthor, to random

Today in Labor History October 31, 1931: Unemployed lumberjack Jesse Jackson led the inauguration of the first Hooverville on vacant land owned by the Port of Seattle near Pioneer Square. Within two days over 50 shacks were erected and by 1934, 600-1000 people were living in them. By 1941, Seattle's “Hooverville” covered 25 blocks. Hoovervilles eventually spread throughout the country.

MikeDunnAuthor, to random

Today in Labor History October 24, 1929: The NY Stock Exchange lost 11% of its value in one of the most devastating stock market crashes in the history of the US. It marked the beginning of the Great Depression, which saw unemployment in the U.S. rise to 25% and as high as 33% in other countries. Farming communities were particularly hard hit, with crop prices falling by 60%. The depression coincided with the Dust Bowl, further exacerbating the loan defaults and suffering in the Midwest. Hundreds of thousands of Americans became homeless, and began congregating in shanty towns that were known as "Hoovervilles." In 1933, Congress passed the Glass–Steagall Act mandating a separation between commercial banks and investment banks, in hopes of averting another similar crash. However, there have since been two stock market crashes worse than Black Thursday: The Black Monday of October 19, 1987, when the Dow Jones fell 22.6%, and the Black Monday of March 16, 2020, when the stock market fell by 12.9%. Both saw bigger percentage drops than any single day of the 1929 crash.

waldenecovillage, to random




A magazine of Black politics and culture

Hammer & Hope is a new magazine of Black politics and culture. It is a project rooted in the power of solidarity, the spirit of struggle and the generative power of debate, all of which are vital parts of our movement toward freedom.

We are inspired by the courageous in Alabama whose lives and struggles to organize against capitalism and white supremacist terror in the 1930s and 1940s are memorialized in Robin D. G. Kelley’s book “Hammer and Hoe,” from which we take our name.

We will envision collectively what a better future might look like and the strategies that could get us there. Such an undertaking compels us to deepen our knowledge of history, politics, culture and our own movements.

Our aim is to build a project whose politics and aesthetics reflects the electric spirit of the protesters who flooded the streets in 2020, a project that breathes life into the transformative ideas pointing us towards the world we deserve.

Come join us. We have a world to win.

https://hammerandhope.org/

Book cover: "Hammer and Hoe", by Robin D G Kelley

ixi, to random
@ixi@mastodon.online avatar

"During the Great Depression, Detroit and its auto-industry suffered an exceptional amount.
After the stock market crash of 1929, around 80 percent of the industry was no longer producing and by 1932 large numbers of citizens were dying of starvation.
The Ford Motor Company, one of the richest employers, had laid off two-thirds of its employees.

On the morning of 7 March 1932, 3,000 former and current Ford workers and other unemployed members of the community gathered on the outskirts.
1/4

ixi,
@ixi@mastodon.online avatar

The police and Ford security began to shoot at the crowds of marchers, killing four marchers and injuring over sixty more.

The Ford Hunger March also became known as the Ford Massacre and sparked an outcry against the police brutality of unemployed protesters."


4/4

DeeGLloyd, to Ukraine
@DeeGLloyd@mastodon.world avatar

🧵I know I mostly toot about #Ukraine here, but the #SCOTUS has got me annoyed. More than they usually irritate me. People in my generation (elder #millennial), #GenX'ers, and #Boomers, mostly grew up with a court that's legacy was in many ways progressive. As a result, most folks respected & trusted the SCOTUS as an institution, especially when compared to the other branches of #government. #Watergate, #Clinton's #impeachment, & various #bribery & #misconduct scandals in #congress 1/n

DeeGLloyd,
@DeeGLloyd@mastodon.world avatar

It is important to keep in mind that the #RobertsCourt is simply a #regressiontothemean for #SCOTUS as an institution. #Progressive causes & expanded #rights, #liberty, & #freedom came not because of SCOTUS, but IN SPITE of it. It took a #CivilWar and three #constitution'al #Amendments to overcome #DredScott. It took a #GreatDepression, two #WorldWars, & four terms of #FDR to give us the #NewDeal & a court that would finally overturn #plessyvferguson with #brownvboard (shout-out to #Kansas) 4/n

garydavidplummer, to photography
rbreich, to random
@rbreich@masto.ai avatar

Fed rate hikes aren't simply a dial that controls inflation.

They're more like a Rube Goldberg machine—slowing the economy so much that workers lose jobs and pay until (maybe, just maybe) prices drop.

This is a bad way to fight inflation that's largely driven by price gouging.

HistoPol, (edited )
@HistoPol@mastodon.social avatar

@Npars01 @rbreich

...and the .

Listening to 's American Origin Stories finally convinced me that all institutions were set up chiefly to protect the "landed gentry." are the new , and they are not benign. In a society, was rewarded by the feudal lord. Today, everyone is just a disposable "input factor."
We live in a virtually global .
This must be remedied.
Back to 70-90% income-tax...

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