Roses are red,
violets are blue,
but the iris is the flower
that will mean the end of you!
On Tuesday, a 17-year-old worker in Pennsylvania reportedly suffered a displaced jaw that will require surgery after asking a couple to wear masks. According to NBC News, the teen was working at Sesame Place theme park located near Philadelphia when a couple at the park attacked him for reminding them that they needed to wear masks. Middletown Township police Lt. Steve Forman told NBC “Their employees are trying to convey the message from the governor,” referring to Gov. Tom Wolf’s mask wearing mandate. The suspects are believed to be from New York City, and Pennsylvania authorities are in contact with New York State police.
Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker of Illinois signed a law on Friday that expanded the felony charge of aggravated battery to include attacks against retail workers who are trying to enforce face covering requirements like the incident in Pennsylvania. Pritzker released a statement on the bill saying “It’s clear there is still an even greater need to get people to wear masks – especially to protect front line workers, whether they’re at the front of a store asking you to put on your mask or whether they’re responding to 911 calls to save those in distress.”
While a battery charge can result in up to a year’s worth of prison time and a fine of $2,500, a felony charge carries a much more severe penalty: up to 5 years in prison and up to $25,000 in fines. Illinois’ move comes after numerous examples, across the country, of retail workers being assaulted and terrorized by misguided and anxious anti-mask doodle heads. While right-wing faux-freedom fighters will call this move tyrannical, the reality remains that it is in the public’s best health interests to protect the frontline workers who are trying to save people from themselves. …
On this day, 12 August 1911, a strike of working women and girls in south London began which rapidly spread into a mass walkout. Amidst a wave of strikes of mostly male transport and dockworkers across Britain, a group of mostly non-union women and girls working in factories walked out and began parading through the streets, calling on other workers to join them. Custard, jam, biscuit, tool and tent-making factories were among those shut down, with around 14,000 women from over 20 different employers on strike within a few days. Employers complained of a “reign of terror” by the workers, and the government responded by ordering troops to be stationed in nearby Southwark Park. The strikers got assistance from the National Federation of Women Workers, who raised money and helped the women formulate concrete demands to make of employers. Companies rapidly began to cave in, abolishing piecework and increasing pay in most of the struck enterprises over the next month. While many male unionists had dismissed women workers, like Labour MP and union leader Will Thorne who claimed that women “do not make good trade unionists”, thousands of women joined unions during the dispute and organised themselves.
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