#NationalGuards

joe•iuculano :mastodon:iuculano@masto.ai
2025-06-12

#California #NationalGuards troops & #marines deployed 2 #LA 2 help restore order..have told friends & family membrs they r..unhappy abt assignmnt, worry only meaningful role will b as pawns in political battle they do not want 2 join

3 diff advocacy orgs representng military families said they had heard from..service members who expressd discomfrt abt being drawn in2 domestic policing operation outside norml field. Groups said they have heard no countervailing opinions

theguardian.com/us-news/2025/j

🏳️‍🌈Jamez Re!nert🏳️‍🌈jungle-jim78.bsky.social@bsky.brid.gy
2025-06-10
2025-05-14

Today in Labor History May 14, 1970: State police confronted anti-war demonstrators at Jackson State University, Mississippi. Shortly after midnight, they opened fire, killing two African-American students and wounding twelve others. No cops were ever arrested or indicted. This occurred eleven days after the massacre at Kent State. A repeat seems eminent today, with the ongoing pro-Palestinian protests on college campuses and the violent assaults against them by police and Zionist vigilantes, and the calls by several politicians for the National Guards, and Donald Trump’s calls for student protesters to be deported.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #jackson #kentstate #policebrutality #massacre #racism #antiwar #student #protest #studentprotest #univerities #freepalestine #zionism #vigilantes #nationalguards #palestine #deportation

The bullet-riddled windows of Alexander Hall, a women’s dormitory at Jackson State College in Jackson, Miss. Two African American students were killed and 12 injured when police opened fire on the building claiming they were fired upon by snipers, May 15, 1970. (AP Photo)
2025-04-18

Today in Labor History April 18, 1912: The governor of West Virginia called out the National Guard against striking coal miners. As a result, fifty people were killed. His action marked the beginning of the West Virginia Mine Wars, initiating one of the most violent strikes in the nation's history. Because of their isolation and geography, the West Virginia mine owners were able to dominate the miners more than almost any other employer in the nation. They hired gun thugs from the Baldwin-Felts Detective Agency, who routinely murdered miners and evicted their families from the company towns. On April 18, thousands of miners went on strike in Paint Creek, Cabin Creek and in surrounding counties. Many were armed with hunting rifles to defend themselves against the company thugs. Mother Jones and Socialist Party members came to support the miners.

The struggle that began today in 1912 continued for decades and included the Battle of Matewan and the Battle of Blair Mountain, the largest armed insurrection since the Civil War, and the largest labor uprising in U.S. history. 10,000-15,000 coal miners battled 3,000 cops, private cops and vigilantes, who were backed by the coal bosses. Up to 100 miners died in the fighting, along with 10-30 Baldwin-Felts detectives and three national guards. Nearly 1,000 people were arrested. One million rounds were fired. And the government bombed striking coal miners by air, using homemade bombs and poison gas left over from World War I. This was the second time the government had used planes to bomb its own citizens within the U.S. (the first was against African American during the Tulsa pogrom, earlier that same year).

You can read my longer article on the West Virginia Mine Wars and the Battle of Blair Mountain here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

#workingclass #LaborHistory #motherjones #coal #mining #strike #union #socialism #murder #police #nationalguards #massacre #bombing #matewan #blairmountain #insurrection #civilwar

Mother Jones, in black dress, gray hair, speaks to an assembled crowd on a wooden stage in Montgomery, West Virginia in 1912 ahead of the Paint Creek Miners’ Strike.
2024-09-23

Today in Labor History September 23, 1913: The United Mine Workers of America began the first of a series of strikes which would escalate into the Colorado Coalfield War. Miners were fighting the Rockefeller-owned Colorado Fuel and Iron (CF&I) for safer working conditions and better pay. From 1884 and 1912, Colorado miners averaged 6.81 deaths per every 1,000 miners, a fatality rate over double the national average of 3.12. However, two mine explosions in 1910 brought the state mining mortality rate to above 10, triple the national average. Due to jury tampering by the company, Rockefeller was never held accountable and never had to pay out any settlements. CF&I virtually owned the political apparatus of Colorado. The company registered every one of its employees to vote, even non-citizen immigrants and company mules, in a tactic that would make today’s Republicans blush. The Colorado Coalfied War lasted over next two years and resulted in up to 200 deaths, including over 37 soldiers and private cops working for Rockefeller. The war included the Ludlow Massacre, when National Guards massacred at least 19 people living in a tent colony, including 12 children and three women. In retaliation for this unprovoked massacre, armed miners attacked mines, killing scabs, destroying property, and fighting National Guard troops. It was possibly the bloodiest labor dispute in U.S. history. Rockefeller used both Pinkertons and Baldwin-Felts private detectives to protect scabs and intimidate striking miners. They would attack mining camps with machine guns mounted on a car dubbed the “Death Special.” The authorities repeatedly jailed Mother Jones, who had come to support the strike. During one arrest, miners tried to free her but were repelled by National Guards. On the first day of the strike, she said during a speech: "Rise up and strike! If you are too cowardly, there are enough women in this country to come in here and beat the hell out of you."

Read my article on the Ludlow massacre here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

Read my article on the Pinkertons here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

#workingclass #LaborHistory #strike #union #miners #coal #massacre #police #policebrutality #pinkertons #immigrants #colorado #ludlow #rockefeller #nationalguards #motherjones

National Guardsmen with a M1895 machine gun on Water Tank Hill, an elevated position that overlooked the Ludlow tent colony, 1914. By Stuart Mace - Denver Public Library https://digital.denverlibrary.org/digital/collection/p15330coll22/id/29237/rec/55, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=84093668
2024-08-18

While governors have latitude to use their states’ #NationalGuards to respond to #CivilDisorder or major disasters, a post-Civil War #law called the Posse Comitatus Act generally makes it a #crime to use regular federal #troops for domestic #policing purposes.

However, an 1807 law called the #InsurrectionAct creates an exception to that ban. It grants presidents the emergency #power to use federal troops on domestic soil to restore law & order when they believe a situation warrants it.

#Trump

2024-05-14

Today in Labor History May 14, 1970: State police confronted anti-war demonstrators at Jackson State University, Mississippi. Shortly after midnight, they opened fire, killing two African-American students and wounding twelve others. No cops were ever arrested or indicted. This occurred eleven days after the massacre at Kent State. A repeat seems eminent today, with the ongoing pro-Palestinian protests on college campuses and the violent assaults against them by police and Zionist vigilantes, and the calls by several politicians for the National Guards, and Donald Trump’s calls for student protesters to be deported.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #jackson #kentstate #policebrutality #massacre #racism #antiwar #student #protest #studentprotests #univerities #freepalestine #zionism #vigilantes #nationalguards #palestine #deportation

The bullet-riddled windows of Alexander Hall, a women’s dormitory at Jackson State College in Jackson, Miss. Two African American students were killed and 12 injured when police opened fire on the building claiming they were fired upon by snipers, May 15, 1970. (AP Photo)
2024-04-18

Today in Labor History April 18, 1912: The governor of West Virginia called out the National Guard against striking coal miners. As a result, fifty people were killed. His action marked the beginning of the West Virginia Mine Wars, initiating one of the most violent strikes in the nation's history. Because of their isolation and geography, the West Virginia mine owners were able to dominate the miners more than almost any other employer in the nation. They hired gun thugs from the Baldwin-Felts Detective Agency, who routinely murdered miners and evicted their families from the company towns. On April 18, thousands of miners went on strike in Paint Creek, Cabin Creek and in surrounding counties. Many were armed with hunting rifles to defend themselves against the company thugs. Mother Jones and Socialist Party members came to support the miners.

The struggle that began today in 1912 continued for decades and included the Battle of Matewan and the Battle of Blair Mountain, the largest armed insurrection since the Civil War, and the largest labor uprising in U.S. history. 10,000-15,000 coal miners battled 3,000 cops, private cops and vigilantes, who were backed by the coal bosses. Up to 100 miners died in the fighting, along with 10-30 Baldwin-Felts detectives and three national guards. Nearly 1,000 people were arrested. One million rounds were fired. And the government bombed striking coal miners by air, using homemade bombs and poison gas left over from World War I. This was the second time the government had used planes to bomb its own citizens within the U.S. (the first was against African American during the Tulsa pogrom, earlier that same year). You can read my longer article on the West Virginia Mine Wars and the Battle of Blair Mountain here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

#workingclass #LaborHistory #motherjones #coal #mining #strike #union #socialism #murder #police #nationalguards #massacre #bombing #matewan #blairmountain #insurrection #civilwar

Mother Jones, in black dress, gray hair, speaks to an assembled crowd on a wooden stage in Montgomery, West Virginia in 1912 ahead of the Paint Creek Miners’ Strike.
Houston Public Mediahoustonpublicmedia
2024-03-11

Two National Guard soldiers and a Border Patrol agent were on board when a helicopter crashed near the Mexican border. A soldier was seriously injured.

houstonpublicmedia.org/article

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