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workingclasshistory:
“On this day, 20 September 1893, New York Yiddish anarchist newspaper Fraye Arbiter Shtime (Free Voice of Labor) sponsored its first Yom Kippur concert, ball and buffet. A mass, 24-hour, anti-religious event, it was met by...

workingclasshistory:

On this day, 20 September 1893, New York Yiddish anarchist newspaper Fraye Arbiter Shtime (Free Voice of Labor) sponsored its first Yom Kippur concert, ball and buffet. A mass, 24-hour, anti-religious event, it was met by several thousand people outside Clarendon Hall with the police intervening and making arrests. The Yom Kippur Ball “tradition” originated in 1888 in London before spreading to New York, Philadelphia, Boston, and Chicago. It made a comeback in New York in 1900, when the Yiddish newspaper invited “all freethinkers to gather in the lovely Clarendon Hall where singing, recitations, and performances fitting for this occasion will be held.” Anti-anarchist repression by the state increased in the following years (partly in response to attacks by the “propaganda by deed” current) and the tradition of the ball weakened, eventually being replaced by a picnic on Long Island.
Pictured: a poster advertising the event https://www.facebook.com/workingclasshistory/photos/a.296224173896073/1215390048646143/?type=3

egypt-museum:
“ Bracelet of Queen Ahhotep This bracelet of Queen Ahhotep is formed with two semicircles. Gold and lapis lazuli were used to create its beautiful two-color decoration.
The right semicircle depicts Geb, the god of earth, wearing the...

egypt-museum:

Bracelet of Queen Ahhotep

This bracelet of Queen Ahhotep is formed with two semicircles. Gold and lapis lazuli were used to create its beautiful two-color decoration.

The right semicircle depicts Geb, the god of earth, wearing the double crown and seated on the throne. His hands rest on a sign of protection that is on the shoulder and arm of the king kneeling before him.

The other half of the bracelet is engraved with a falcon and a jackal-headed figure representing the souls of Pe and Nekhen, the mythical ancestors of the rulers of Egypt before unification.

From Dra’ Abu el-Naga’, West Thebes. Second Intermediate Period, 17th Dynasty, ca. 1560-1530 BC. Now in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo. JE 4684

lev-bronsteins-ghost:
“https://iww.org/
”

artesbw:

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Unknown Pleasures, 1979.

Joy Division

stalinsbeautifultoes:

April 24, 2018

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This morning, nearly 3,000 survivors and supporters — including nurses and doctors who treated victims — gathered at Rana Plaza to mark the anniversary and honor the injured and the dead. Under the blazing noontime sun, they formed human chains across the property, and marched with banners that read “Workers of the World Unite!”

Locals were not surprised when Rana Plaza went down. The day before the accident, the wall on the third floor split open like a fault line; workers fled en masse into the street. An engineer called to inspect the damage recommended the building be immediately condemned. “The crack was so huge I could put my hand in it,” said Ms. Begum, the single mother, who was then a sewing machine operator for Ither Tex Ltd., the fifth-floor tenant. Managers heeded the engineer’s suggestion somewhat: they sent everyone home but ordered them to return in the morning. And they did, hesitantly. “I was scared,” Ms. Begum said. “I was really in a panic.” They came back, she said, because they feared if they didn’t, they would not be paid at the end of the month.

Improvements don’t mean sweatshops no longer exist in Bangladesh. This reporter visited one in Dhaka, three days before the Rana Plaza anniversary. Fire buckets were filled with trash, emergency water bins were cracked and half empty, no one wore safety masks, most workers — some in their early teens — were barefoot, wiring was exposed, bolts of fabric and scraps littered the floors, window panes were broken, and the lone stairwell out of the tenement-like building was obstructed by cartons of finished product destined for Russia. After more than 1,100 people were killed in the horrific building collapse, hundreds of factories in Bangladesh were shuttered. Five years later, the garment industry looks set to return to business as usual.

Corporations that sourced clothes to the Rana Plaza:

  • Wal-Mart, USA
  • Children’s Place, USA
  • Dress Barn, USA
  • Primark, Ireland
  • Matalan, UK
  • Bonmarche, UK
  • Cato Fashions, USA
  • Tex (Carrefour brand), France
  • Benetton, Italy
  • Mango, Spain
  • Joe Fresh (clothing line at Loblaws), Canada
  • Industrias Cristian Lay S. A., Spain
  • Shine (Texman brand), Denmark
  • Jack’s (Texman brand), Denmark
  • M. Corona, Italy
  • Yes Zee, Italy
  • NKD, Germany
Disgust and envy, the desire to inflict shame upon others—all of these are present in all societies, and, very likely, in every individual human life. Unchecked, they can inflict great damage. The damage they do is particularly great when they are relied upon as guides in the process of lawmaking and social formation.
Martha Nussbaum, Political Emotions (via philosophybits)

weirdlandtv:

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Crawling clay: American animator, Bruce Bickford (1947-2019). (That’s Frank Zappa in the second image: Zappa was a fan.)

neillblomkamp:

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) Directed by Tobe Hooper