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YUBNUB.NEWSColorado Lawmakers Move to Cut Homeschool Enrichment Funding Amid Budget ShortfallProposed changes could reduce program hours and funding as families prepare to lobby against cuts at the state capitol.By yourNEWS Media Newsroom Colorado lawmakers are advancing plans to scale back a0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 10 Просмотры -
YUBNUB.NEWSReports Tie Bondi Firing to Supreme Court Losses and Immigration Case SetbacksCoverage across multiple outlets points to courtroom defeats and legal strategy concerns as factors in Trumps decision to remove the attorney general. By yourNEWS Media Newsroom A series of legal challenges0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 11 Просмотры -
YUBNUB.NEWSIts not just Florida and Texas that threaten NYCs sputtering tax base heres the next big worryMayor Zohran Mamdanis plan to tax his way out of the Big Apples self-imposed fiscal crisis is facing a fresh and little-discussed threat, according to well-placed financiers and its coming0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 11 Просмотры -
You can now play Black Ops 7's unique co-op extraction mode for freeYou can now play Black Ops 7's unique co-op extraction mode for free Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 Season 3 has begun, and with it comes the opportunity to try out its most inventive game mode, Endgame, even if you don't own a copy of Treyarch and Activision's latest. BO7 is a vast and unwieldy beast, with Jamie scoring it a 7/10, noting its balance between strong multiplayer and zombies...0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 11 Просмотры
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Apex Legends system requirements 2026Apex Legends system requirements 2026 What are the Apex Legends requirements? We're now six years into Apex Legends, and while players have their fair share of concerns about the direction of the game, it's still one of the standout battle royale games currently still active. We're checking in on the Apex requirements so you can make sure your gaming PC is up to the task of running this...0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 12 Просмотры
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WWW.UNIVERSETODAY.COMThe Habitable Worlds Observatory Will Need Astrometry To Find LifeWere getting closer and closer to finding a real Earth-like exoplanet. But finding one is only half the battle. To truly know if were looking at an Earth analog somewhere else in the galaxy, we have to directly image it too. Thats a job for the Habitable Worlds Observatory (HWO), a planned space-based telescope whose primary job is to do precisely that. But even capturing a picture and a planet and getting spectral readings of its atmospheric chemistry still isnt enough, according to a new paper available in pre-print on arXiv by Kaz Gary of Ohio State and their co-authors. HWO will need to figure out how much a planet weighs first.0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 11 Просмотры -
WWW.IFLSCIENCE.COM"A Rare Example of Exceptional Fossil Preservation": Major Animal Groups Were Living On The Seafloor Millions Of Years Before The Cambrian ExplosionWhen a stunning event appears to come out of nowhere, the mysterious predecessors are usually out there somewhere, and now weve found them.0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 10 Просмотры -
WWW.IFLSCIENCE.COMYou Can Now Track Artemis II As It Flies Towards The Moon And BeyondThe crew has already gone further than any human in 54 years by leaving Earth orbit.0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 10 Просмотры -
WWW.THECOLLECTOR.COMThe 1886 Haymarket Affair That Led to International Workers DayOn May 4, 1886, a strike in Haymarket Square in Chicago turned deadly when an unidentified person threw a bomb at the police, who, in turn, opened fire against the strikers. Known as the Haymarket Affair, the event caused the first red scare in the US and led to the arrest of several foreign-born anarchists, many of whom received the death sentence in a controversial trial. While the Haymarket Affair caused a setback in the American labor movement, it inspired generations of labor activists, leaders, and artists throughout the world.The Haymarket Affair & The Eight-Hour MovementBlockade of Engines at Martinsburg, West Virginia, 1877. Source: Wikimedia Commons/Harpers Weekly, Journal of Civilization, Vol XXL, No. 1076, New York, Saturday, August 11, 1877Were summoning our forces from the shipyard, shop, and mill, sang strikers in the 19th century, eight hours for work, eight hours for rest, eight hours for what we will! Published in 1878 and written by I.G. Blanchard, the song Eight Hours quickly became the official anthem of the Eight-hour Movement that aimed to secure better working conditions for laborers.In the 19th century, the average laborer worked around 12 hours a day in factories and mills, and some even worked up to 100 hours a week. Wages were often so meager that workers could barely afford a basic living. People from low socioeconomic backgrounds and recent immigrants usually started taking up physically demanding jobs in their childhood or teenage years. Working conditions were often unhealthy and dangerous.Eight-hour day parade in Melbourne, Australia, 1907. Source: National Museum Australia, CanberraIn the mid-19th century, the eight-hour workday, first proposed by Robert Owen in 1817 in New Lanark (Scotland), became the key demand of labor unions and movements that were quickly forming and spreading in industrialized countries. In 1856, for example, stonemasons working at a building site at the University of Melbourne, Australia, walked off their job to protest a failed negotiation between their union and building companies. On their banners, they painted a symbol of three intertwined numbers eight. The design was a visual representation of the Eight-hour movements motto: Eight hour Work, Eight hour Recreation, Eight hour Rest. The Australian workers were ultimately successful, and skilled laborers secured an eight-hour workday.In the US, the first national call to shorten the workday was made during the August 1866 meeting of the National Labor Union in Baltimore, Maryland. While the resolution went unheeded at the time, the eight-hour workday remained a key demand of the various local and national labor organizations in America. The following year, the workers unions in Chicago believed to have finally achieved their goal when the Illinois government introduced a law shortening the working day to eight hours. However, a loophole in the decree allowed employers to contract longer working hours. On May 1, the citys labor movement organized a strike that brought all economic activities in Chicago to a halt for a week. However, the protest (and its demands) eventually collapsed.Chicago & the Labor MovementA poster showing the leaders of the Knights of Labor, Kurz & Allison, Chicago, c. 1886. Source: Library of Congress, Washington DCIn the 1880s, the demand for an eight-hour workday resurfaced among unionized workers. At the time, Chicago was the center of the labor movement in the US, embodying the contradictions of the Gilded Age. The 1871 Chicago Fire and subsequent rebuilding had attracted many foreign-born workers (especially from Germany, Scandinavia, and Bohemia) to the city. When the Panic of 1873 triggered the Long Depression and widened the gap between the upper and working classes, many laborers joined the anarchist and socialist groups and trade unions.In particular, the 1877 national railroad strike, when tens of thousands of workers marched through the streets of Chicago, played a crucial role in spreading socialist and anarchist ideals among the working class. German-born George Schilling, a leading figure in the citys labor movement, described the strike as the calcium light that illumined the skies of our social and industrial life. Led by August Spies (also an immigrant from Germany) and Albert Parsons, Chicagos unionism (combined with anarchism) rejected capitalism and envisioned workers directly owning and managing their workplaces, a philosophy known as the Chicago Idea.While the elite felt threatened by the rapid development of what contemporary observers called the labor question, an increasing number of workers joined the ranks of the citys 26 anarchist groups and various labor unions, especially the Knights of Labor, the leading union in America at the time. In 1883, the Pittsburg Congress founded the International Working Peoples Association (IWPA). While the anarchist groups end goal was to replace the wage-slavery with a free society, by 1886, many had shifted their focus on securing higher wages and an eight-hour workday for the working class.What Caused the Haymarket Affair?The first version of the bilingual flier, 1886; with the second version of the flier calling for a mass meeting at Haymarket Square. Source: Wikimedia CommonsOn May 1, 1886, the American labor unions organized a nationwide strike to demand the introduction of the eight-hour workday. In Chicago, about 80,000 people, led by Albert Parsons and his African-American wife, Lucy, walked off their jobs to march through the citys streets. The event ended without violence. Two days later, however, police and workers clashed at a protest at the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company, where a group of policemen opened fire against the demonstrators who were harassing the strikebreakers hired by the firm. Several civilians died in the ensuing shootout.August Spies, the editor of the Arbeiter-Zeitung (Workers Newspaper), the most popular anarchist publication in the US, witnessed the scene. Rushing to the office of his newspaper, Spies wrote a leaflet calling workers to protest police brutality. Revenge! Workingmen, to Arms! read the flyers slogan. However, Spies later testified he asked to remove the word revenge from the text. After reading Spies leaflet, some anarchist groups gathered at Grief Hall decided to organize a rally on the evening of May 4 at Haymarket Square.What Happened During the Haymarket Affair?This engraving is the most widely circulated image of the Haymarket Affair. It shows Samuel Fielden holding his speech as the bomb explodes in the background, Harpers Weekly, May 25, 1886. Source: Wikimedia CommonsOn May 4, 1886, only about 3,000 workers gathered in Haymarket Square to listen to the various speakers. Mayor Carter Harrison was also in attendance to make sure the rally would not turn violent. Before leaving the square, Harrison told Inspector John Bonfield the police were no longer needed, as the meeting was peaceful. At 10 p.m., when Samuel Fielden began the last speech of the gathering, only 300 people remained in the light rain.Alarmed by some heated remarks made by Fielden, a group of policemen returned to Haymarket Square, demanding that the crowd disperse. As Fielden agreed to the request, a never-identified man threw a handmade bomb at the police, who opened fire. In the ensuing chaos, seven police officers and an estimated four to eight workers died. Several other policemen and civilians were wounded. It was later revealed that some officers were killed by the bullets fired by their colleagues.What Happened After the Haymarket Affair?The first dynamite bomb thrown in America May 4th, 1886. The personnel of the great anarchist trial at Chicago. Begun Monday June 21st 1886. Ended Friday, August 20th 1886, published by the Inter Ocean Co. Chicago, 1886. Source: Library of Congress, Washington DCThe Haymarket Affair caused a nationwide wave of hysteria and xenophobia that has been described as the first American Red Scare. In the following days, as the police looked for the man who threw the bomb, several foreign-born anarchists, radicals, and labor leaders were arrested, and the offices of the radical press shut down. Initially, the investigators believed Charles Lingg, an anarchist known for his skills in handling explosives, had made and thrown the bomb. However, no solid evidence was found to confirm this theory.As tensions rose in the city, with workers organizing strikes and demonstrations, the Chicago mayor forbade people to gather in public spaces and hold rallies. Amid the general panic and fear, the press depicted the Haymarket Affair as a conspiracy masterminded by radical immigrants. Let us whip these slavic wolves back to the European dens from which they issue, or in some way exterminate them, urged The Chicago Times. An article published in The New York Times on May 6 put forward a similar narrative of the Haymarket Affair: Everything points to a preconcerted plan on the part of Spies, Parsons, and Fielden to try the effect of one of their bombs. The speeches were planned to rouse the mob gradually to a point where police interference could reasonably be hoped for and then a man was detailed to throw a bomb when the proper time came.On May 27, the Chicago Grand Jury indicted several men for the Haymarket Affair, declaring: We find that the attack on the police of May 4 was the result of a deliberate conspiracy, the full details of which are now in the possession of the officers of the law. Eight of them, known as the Chicago Eight, would eventually stand trial: August Spies, Albert Parsons, Samuel Fielden, George Engel, Adolph Fischer, Michael Schwab, Louis Lingg, and Oscar Neebe.The trial of the anarchists in Chicago, sketch by Louis Gasselin, 1886. Source: Wikimedia Commons/The New York Public Library Digital Gallery; with the Harpers Weekly announces the jurys decision at the end of the trial. Source: Wikimedia CommonsThe Haymarket trial, presided over by Judge Joseph E. Gary, began in June 1886 in the Cook County courtroom. State Attorney Julius Grinnell initially tried to prove that August Spies had been the mastermind behind the violence and the one who threw the dynamite bomb on May 4. As the eyewitness statements brought forward by the prosecution were disputed, Grinnell urged the jury to hold the Chicago Eight morally responsible for the Haymarket Affair: The question for you to determine is, having ascertained that a murder was committed, not only who did it, but who is responsible for it, who abetted it, assisted it, or encouraged it?On August 20, the jury found all defendants guilty. Seven of them received the death penalty. Oscar Neebe was sentenced to 15 years. As the Supreme Court rejected the defenses appeals, even writers such as George Bernard Shaw and Oscar Wilde became involved in the Haymarket Affair, asking the governor to grant clemency to the Chicago Eight. In November, Illinois Governor Oglesby commuted Schwab and Fieldens sentences to life in prison. On November 11, four of the Chicago Eight were hanged. The day before, Louis Lingg had committed suicide. In 1893, Governor John Peter Altgeld pardoned Fielden, Schwab, and Neebe, declaring the trial against them had been biased.The Haymarket Affair & International Workers DayThe Anarchists of Chicago, by Walter Crane, November 1894. Source: Wikimedia Commons/Liberty, LondonIn the US, the Haymarket Affair led to a setback in the labor and eight-hour movements, with employers and businessmen rescinding some rights American workers had previously been granted. In particular, the Knights of Labor, blamed by many for the incident, lost their leadership position in American unionism and dissolved in 1886.While the Haymarket Affair negatively impacted the workers movement in the US, labor leaders around the world hailed the Chicago Eight as martyrs, echoing August Spiess last words: The time will come when our silence will be more powerful than the voices you strangle today. In 1889, when socialist and labor parties met in Paris for the First Congress of the Second International, the delegates attending the meeting decided to organize a great international demonstration to call for the eight-hour workday. The global strike would be held on May 1, 1890, to honor the victims of the Haymarket Affair, at the time widely referred to as a riot.This universal proletarian celebration was supposed to be a one-off event. No one could predict the lightning-like way in which this idea would succeed and how quickly it would be adopted by the working classes, wrote the German philosopher and revolutionary Rosa Luxemburg. Everywhere the Workmen Join in Demands for a Normal Day, commented the New York World on May 2, 1890.Haymarket Martyrs Monument, Forest Home Cemetery, Chicago, photograph by Zol87, 2009. An 1889 memorial of the policemen who died during the Haymarket Affair was repeatedly vandalized in the 1970s and was moved to the Chicago Police Academy. Source: Wikimedia CommonsIn the following years, other violent confrontations between workers and police occurred in the US. In May 1894, federal troops stopped a strike at the Pullman Palace Car Company in Chicago. In the ensuing riot, 30 people died. The event inspired the delegates of the 1904 Sixth Congress of the Second International to turn May First, present-day May Day (or International Workers Day), into an annual event. The Pullman Strike alarmed the American authorities, and President Grover Cleveland officially established Labor Day as a national holiday. However, reputing May Day as too closely associated with radicalism, he set the celebration for the first weekend of September.0 Комментарии 0 Поделились 12 Просмотры