#mutiny

2025-06-01

Today in Labor History June 1, 1914: 80 U.S. militia men refused to board a train as reinforcements for the U.S. invasion of Veracruz, Mexico. The U.S. ultimately occupied the region for six months because President Huerta refused to provide the U.S. with a 21-gun salute as an apology for arresting nine U.S. sailors. More significantly, Veracruz was an important oil port. Germany and Britain had been battling for its control. The occupation gave the U.S. greater influence on the still unfolding Mexican Revolution, as well as the growing tensions in Europe. 21 US troops died in the invasion and occupation, while slaughtering over 320 Mexicans.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #mexico #Revolution #imperialism #veracruz #occupation #mutiny #invasion #WorldWarOne

John H. Quick raises the American flag over Veracruz. Caption reads "Formal raising of first flag of U.S. / Veracruz 2 P.M. April 27, 1914"  By Photograph by Hadsell taken during the U.S. occupation of Veracruz, 1914. - Taken on 27 April 1914, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=846574
2025-04-28

Today in labor history April 28, 1789: Fletcher Christian led a group of mutineers against the brutal Captain Bligh on the HMS Bounty. Christian began the voyage as the captain’s mate, but Bligh appointed him acting Lieutenant during the voyage. The story of the voyage and mutiny was later retold by Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall in their novel “Mutiny on the Bounty.” After their successful mutiny, Christian, 9 other mutineers, 6 Tahitian men and 11 Tahitian women, started a colony on the South Pacific Island of Pitcairn. However, when the mutineers tried to enslave them, the Tahitians rebelled and killed most of them. But not until after many of the Tahitian women became pregnant. The decedents of the mutineers and the Tahitians continue to live there today. Bligh had previously served on the Resolution, as Master, under Captain Cook, on his second and third voyages to Hawaii. And he was present when the native Hawaiians killed Cook.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #mutiny #slavery #colonialism #hawaii #indigenous #HistoricalFiction #novel #novel #fiction #books #author @bookstadon

Drawing of Fletch Christian, in a blue coat, white trowsers and hat. By Robert Dodd - 1. Mutiny_HMS_Bounty.jpg, derivative work: Emír Balduin Hallef Omar Ali al-Adid bin Abú Sharee al-Kerak (talk)2. Royal Museums Greenwich, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=8040964
2025-04-26

Today in Labor History April 26, 1649: The English authorities sentenced Robert Lockier to be shot for leading a mutiny. Cromwell’s New Model Army had just defeated Charles I in the English Civil War. However, the Army failed to negotiate a settlement with the King. And when Charles I double-crossed them, they executed him. A conflict arose between the monarchists, who wanted another king, and Cromwell, who wanted a plutocratic Parliament. Then there were the Levellers, who wanted a democracy in which every male head of household had a vote, regardless of whether he owned property. And the Diggers (AKA the True Levellers), who wanted universal suffrage AND common ownership of the land. Lockier was a Leveller and a member the New Model Army. On April 24, he and some other soldiers barricaded themselves in a Leveller meeting place in London. They demanded to paid their overdue wages. Cromwell ended the mutiny after a few days and arrested Lockier as the ringleader.

The Diggers originally called themselves the True Levellers, to distinguish themselves from the more moderate Levellers. However, in April, 1649, they began pulling down enclosures (common lands usurped by the landlords) on St. George’s Hill. And when they started planting the land in common, for the benefit of all peasants, people started calling them Diggers. Needless to say, the local landlords were peeved. They asked the New Model Army to come in and remove the Diggers. However, their commander told the landlords to use the courts. So, the landlords organized gangs to beat and burn out the Diggers. Ultimately, the court ruled that the Army could evict the Diggers if they did not leave. So, they left. But they started new commons in neighboring regions.

youtube.com/watch?v=xn31l2idKT

#workingclass #LaborHistory #diggers #Cromwell #mutiny #levellors #CivilWar #england #NewModelArmy #BillyBragg

They're not saying anything about cuts to #medicaid, #foodstamps #ebt and doubling the price of the cuts to give a massive tax deal to the rich and make the defitit way worse with the #taxbreaks for the #onepercenr
Politico: #Trump, #Johnson face a House #Republican #mutiny

politico.com/news/2025/04/08/t

Dozens of House Republicans are undecided or outright opposed to rubber-stamping a Senate-approved budget blueprint for the GOP’s domestic policy megabill...

2025-04-09

Today In Labor History April 9, 1930: The IWW organized the 1700-member crew of the Leviathan, the world’s largest ship. Originally a German passenger ship, the U.S. seized it in 1917, during World War I, when it was docked in New York harbor. The U.S. subsequently used it to transport its troops to Europe. In September, 1918, the Leviathan left New Jersey, filled with men dying from Influenza. Dozens perished from the flu on the passage over.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #iww #WorldWarOne #pandemic #flu #influenza #union #mutiny #strike

USS Leviathan Steaming out of New York Harbor, circa the mid-1920s. This photo is in the public domain via Wikicommons.
Ross Mouncermounce
2025-04-08

Another community of academics fed-up with the publisher Wiley:

“We do not believe that Wiley is currently providing an environment that allows the editors to do their editorial work according to the standards of the academic community and free from the negative influence of commercial and profit-oriented interests,”

retractionwatch.com/2025/04/07

2025-04-06

@xs4me2 @jeffjarvis
Predictive post, the day before :

Did something change after today's protests ? "They talked about it !"

Do you want results ?
Do you want to avoid violence ?
Power of the people doesn't lie in protests. Time for show has ended.

Call for a
Call for
"But... it's illegal !..."
Make it legal !

A General Strike is something no government repression can handle, nowhere, ever, never.

When it begins it becomes instantly legal, and when it ends, you won.

A girl with phone and headphones looking at her phone. 
Under the rain, half immersed in water.
2025-04-05

@AJ_andrew69
Question :
Did something change after today's protests ?

"They talked about it !"

Do you want results ?

Do you want to avoid violence ?

Power of the people doesn't lie in protests.
Time for show has ended.

Call for a
Call for

"But... it's illegal !..."
What a joke.
Make it legal !

A General Strike is something no government or repressive apparatus can handle, nowhere, ever, never.

When it begins it becomes instantly legal, and when it ends, you won.

A girl with phone and headphones looking at her phone. 
Under the rain, half immersed in water.
2025-04-03

@adhdeanasl

Time for all these fucking guns to finally have some use instead of slaughtering schoolkids. If you are not familiar, shotguns have a gud spreaad and recoil doesn't matter.









2025-03-09

Today in Labor History March 9, 1841: The U.S. Supreme Court issued a ruling that freed the remaining 35 survivors of the Amistad mutiny. In 1839, Portuguese slave traders had illegally transported 52 Mende people from west Africa to Cuba, on the Amistad, in violation of European treaties against the slave trade. Joseph Cinque led his fellow captive Africans in a mutiny, killing the cook and captain, and forcing the remaining crew to return them to Africa. The crew tricked them and sailed up the Atlantic coast, presuming they would be intercepted by the U.S. Navy, which captured the ship near Montauk, Long Island. President Martin Van Buren wanted to send the prisoners back to Spanish authorities in Cuba to stand trial for mutiny. However, the Court recognized the mutineers’ rights as free citizens. Abolitionists raised funds for the mutineers’ defense. Former President John Quincy Adams, who opposed slavery, represented them in court.

#LaborHistory #workingclass #slavery #amistad #cinque #mutiny #SCOTUS #abolition #johnquincyadams #BlackMastodon

Portrait of a young Sengbe Pieh (Joseph Cinqué) in 1840. By Nathaniel Jocelyn - Original held by the New Haven Colony Historical Society, New Haven, CT, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=4602632
2025-02-22

⚓️ Mutiny on the Bounty (1962) is the epic which almost bankrupted MGM. It was a box office flop but looks stunning - and Marlon Brando shines as Fletcher Christian. Trevor Howard is ousted Capt Bligh. Richard Harris and Gordon Jackson play mutineers.

www.speckled.band

#mutiny #marlonbrando #brando #filmreview #movies #film #history #1960s #60s

2025-02-18

Today in Labor History February 18, 1946: Sailors in the Royal Indian Navy mutinied in Bombay harbor. Their rebellion spread throughout the Provinces of British India. 20,000 sailors participated on 78 ships and 20 shore establishments. British troops and Royal Navy warships ultimately suppressed the mutiny. The Indian National Congress and Muslim League both condemned the mutiny, while the Communist Party of India supported the rebellion.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #muslim #communism #mutiny #Bombay #rebellion

Naval Uprising Statue, in a shady, tree-filled park in Colaba, Mumbai. Depicts a sailor at the wheel. By Joe Zachs - originally posted to Flickr as Naval uprising, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=5917417
2025-02-10

Today in Labor History February 10, 1930: The Việt Nam Quốc Dân Đảng launched the failed Yên Bái mutiny in hope of overthrowing French control. Vietnamese soldiers in the French colonial army mutinied in collaboration with civilian supporters. They hoped to inspire a wider uprising among the general populace to overthrow the colonial regime and establish independence. No one knows how many died in the fighting. However, the French colonial authorities executed 13 leaders of the mutiny.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #colonialism #france #vietnam #mutiny #uprising #executions

Nguyễn Thái Học, leader of the VNQDĐ, was executed for his role in leading the uprising. By Bảo Ngậu - Monsieur Nguyễn Thái Học, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=60525769

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