On this day, 10 April 1919, Emiliano Zapata, peasant leader during the Mexican revolution of Nahua Indigenous and Spanish descent, was assassinated in Chinameca, Ayala, by the “revolutionary” Carranza government.
Early in life, he began to advocate for the rights of Indigenous peoples in Morelos when he saw wealthy landowners continually stealing their land, with no response from the government. So he began taking part in armed land occupations.
With the outbreak of revolution in 1910, Zapata became the leader of the Liberation Army of the South. The force was a peasant militia fighting for “tierra y libertad” (land and freedom), a slogan they adopted from Mexican anarchist Ricardo Flores Magón.
After Francisco Madero took power in 1911, Zapata denounced him for betraying the revolution, and drafted the Ayala Plan: a radical programme of land reform. Madero himself was then overthrown by counter-revolutionary Victoriano Huerta.
Zapata’s southern army allied with the revolutionary armies in the north, led by Pancho Villa and Venustiano Carranza. They soon overthrew Huerta, and called a convention to form the new government, which Zapata declined to participate in as none of the organisers had been elected.
With Carranza in power, he only implemented moderate reforms, which fell well short of the Ayala plan, so the Zapatistas fought on.
Carranza put a bounty on Zapata’s head, hoping that one of his own fighters would betray him, but none of them did. In the end he was lured to a meeting with one of Carranza’s men who pretended to be interested in defecting.
When Zapata arrived for the meeting he was riddled with bullets, and his body photographed for propaganda purposes.
He remains to this day a national hero, and Indigenous rebels in Chiapas who rose up in 1994 and created an autonomous territory named themselves after him.
Learn more in this biography and check out our reproduction of an iconic photo of him: https://shop.workingclasshistory.com/collections/all/emiliano-zapata https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=606761904830362&set=a.602588028581083&type=3
Thousands of professors, part-time lecturers and graduate student workers at New Jersey’s flagship university went on strike Monday — the first such job action in the school’s 257-year history.
Union officials decided Sunday night to go on strike, citing a stalemate in contract talks that have been ongoing since July. Faculty members voted overwhelmingly in favor of authorizing a strike last month.
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La musique est l'un des nombreux moyens de s'évader sans quitter la maison…
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Les livres anciens ont le parfum des mots oubliés.
- Sandra Dulier
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had shallow play/new division on repeat
Motörhead, great live pic, Overkill tour 1979
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The backlash to the end of abortion rights helped fuel Democratic wins in last year’s election cycle, and Republicans are freaking out about the 2024 contest, according to a new report.
The U.S. Supreme Court struck down the landmark Roe v. Wade ruling that guaranteed reproductive rights for nearly a half-century, and suddenly Republicans found themselves defending deeply unpopular abortion bans that many of them support – but few other Americans do, wrote New York Times columnist Michelle Goldberg.
“It’s not surprising that voters have reacted with revulsion to being stripped of rights they’d long taken for granted, and to seeing the health of pregnant women treated so cavalierly,” Goldberg wrote. “But the backlash seems to have caught Republicans off guard.”
Many Republicans assumed voters wouldn’t care about the end of abortion rights, or even turn against those who were outraged by the decision, but that hasn’t been the case.
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