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Haymarket: The Struggle Continues
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Monday, May 1, 2006
Subject: Haymarket: The Struggle Continues
Time: 8:04:00 PM EDT
Author:  ibspiccoli4life



Haymarket: The Struggle Continues

It was a 120 years ago that anarchists and labor organizers were joining together to fight for the eight-hour work day. That movement was largely built by immigrants.


On May 1st, 1886, a series of massive strikes were called and hundreds of thousands of workers poured out of the factories demanding shorter working hours.
If we want to learn anything from those who came before us, we'd do well to remember their sacrifice. Workers were locked out of their jobs. Eight anarchists--the Haymarket 8--were sentenced to death largely for things they said, not for what they did. In short it was a violent and dangerous time to stand up to the capitalist system.

On May 4, 1886 a town meeting was called in Chicago's Haymarket Square by anarchists and labor activists. As the peaceful assembly came to a close, 180 police officers stormed the meeting, demanding it disburse. Suddenly an unknown assailant threw a bomb into the crowd killing a police officer and injuring several others. The police responded instantly by shooting and clubbing wildly into the crowd, killing 7 other fellow police officers, injuring 60 more and killing and injuring an unknown number of civillians at the meeting. This event, and the episode that followed in its wake, known as the Haymarket affair, the Haymarket massacre or the Haymarket tragedy, is the single historic event for which Lucy Parsons is best remembered.

While today's boycott is a great step in the right direction, eventually we will have to make sacrifices. We will have to make things uncomfortable for those in power. Thankfull we face far less brutality and oppression than our ancestors did. Si se puede!

Written by ibspiccoli4life Blog about this entry
This entry has 2 comments: (Add your own)
  • #2 Comment from luvmort 
    5/10/06 4:08 AM Permalink
    It's a shame that the police had to be threatened and killed. No wonder they retaliated. They are only human, with families and lives to live.
  • #1 Comment from thesheatons 
    5/1/06 11:03 PM Permalink
    I first learned about Haymarket in Irving Stone's biography of Clarence Darrow. And it still ticks me off.

    Jackie