Burma Schave
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 198
- Location
- Glendale, CA
Apparently, the only good radicals are the very old or long-dead ones, especially if they listened to Artie Shaw.
I find far too many "radical" types these days downright oblivious to just how courageous the labor/civil rights/gay rights/etc. organizers and activists of generations past truly were. It's no exaggeration to note that openly advocating for such things could get a person killed. It often cost people their jobs, their housing, their social standing. It was in no way a fashion statement, as so much "activism" is these days.
Watch any commercial today for smart phones/tablets/watches and you'll see lots of people. People flocking around a phone to look at photos, laughing, having a bonding experience together....it's almost like the companies are trying to show how this technology brings people together instead of promoting isolation. And I think for the most part that is true (if not as bright and shiny-happy as the commercials).
Bingo. Remove the rafter from your own generation's eye so you may see clearly to remove the speck from that of your grandparents.
I don't doubt the sincerity of many young social activists these days, but I question if they appreciate the difference between their circumstances and those of their predecessors. Grandpa didn't have a cushion under his rump when he got knocked down. No college account, no savings, no health insurance. It's no exaggeration to say that he was putting his future on the line every time he stood up.
Attending a rally these days is mostly taking in the scenery. And that's true whatever the politics of the event. Waving a flag -- Rainbow, Gadsden, whatever -- isn't likely to result in your teeth being kicked in.
:rofl:If I remember that affair right, it was a Starfleet standard-duty uniform, which was clearly inappropriate. Dress uniform is specified for occasions of state.
Yep. The general textile strike of 1934, the Toledo Auto-Lite strike, the Flint sit-down, and the Little Steel Riots weren't "photo ops."
View attachment 35552
May 30, 1937. Ten unarmed steelworkers picketing at Republic Steel murdered in cold blood by the Chicago Police Department acting in collusion with Republic management. Thirty others injured, nine of them disabled for life. Newsreel images of the assault are suppressed by Paramount News.
October 16, 1945. Labor activist and Briggs Manufacturing Company employee Genora Dollinger is beaten nearly to death in her own bedroom by thugs wielding lead pipes and blackjacks -- thugs hired, as an investigation by the Kefauver Committee will later prove, by operatives of the Briggs Manufacturing Company. Dollinger suffers permanent nerve damage as a result of the assault.
Just a couple of examples, and there's plenty more. Not quite the same thing as camping out in a park or changing your Facebook profile picture to show that you're down with the struggle.
A lot of people today forget, that brave workers died to make our lives easier!
Meanwhile, getting back to the technology angle, I just overheard the following on the street:
Young woman and boyfriend looking into their phones and walking along the sidewalk suddenly breaking into a vocal argument: LISTEN I TOLD YOU -- I CAN'T WALK AND READ A TEXT MESSAGE AT THE SAME TIME!