this post was submitted on 07 Jul 2025
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chapotraphouse

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On this day in 1912, a riot broke out in Grabow, Louisiana when gunfire was exchanged between organizing lumber workers and private gunmen hired by the Galloway Lumber Company, just one event in the Louisiana-Texas Lumber War. The clash left three union workers and one company gunman dead, wounding an estimated fifty more.

The event took place in the context of workers in the sawmill town of Grabow joining the Brotherhood of Timber Workers (shown), a branch of the Lumber Workers Industrial Union (LWIU), itself affiliated with the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW).

On July 7th, 1912, the union workers held a series of rallies at several different company towns, including Bon Ami and Carson, alongside Grabow.

The group that went to Grabow, around 200 people, spontaneously decided to hold a rally with several speeches - labor leader Arthur L. Emerson spoke on top of a wagon to roughly 25 non-union men, plus the additional union men who had come with him.

Shots began between these workers and a group of four others, including Galloway Lumber owner John Galloway, in the local mill office, all of whom had later been found to be drinking before the incident. It is not known for certain which group fired first. Three union men were killed alongside one member of the private company security force. Approximately 50 more were wounded.

Over the next few days, more than more than 60 workers were taken into custody by police. Although the mill owner himself was arrested, he was released without charges soon afterward. Sixty-five of the timber workers' group were brought up on charges ranging from inciting a riot to murder.

The IWW worked to aid the incarcerated workers, with "Big Bill" Haywood fundraising for their legal fund. The trial lasted until November 8th, and its jury returned a not guilty verdict for all of the union men. All of those arrested were set free.

Although they had limited success in Louisiana, the LWIU successfully organized later, winning an eight-hour day and vastly improved working conditions in the Pacific Northwest after a 1917 strike. Today, there is a historical marker at the site of the riot, located on what is now the property of DeRidder Airport, Louisiana.

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[โ€“] iridaniotter@hexbear.net 5 points 3 days ago (5 children)

There's something to be said about the nihilism, or maybe just thoughtlessness, of liberal political economy in the modern day

From here:

So we want to revive manufacturing, but the right kindโ€”advanced manufacturing?

The notion that we should be assembling iPhones in the United States, which Trump wants, is insane. Nobody wants to do that work. It's horrible, tedious work. It pays very, very little. And if we actually did it here, it would make the iPhones 20% more expensive or more. Apple may very well decide to pay a 25% tariff rather than make the phones here. If Foxconn started doing iPhone assembly here, people would not be lining up for that job.

But at the same time, we do need new people coming into manufacturing.

But not that manufacturing. Not tedious, mind-numbing, eyestrain-inducing assembly.

We need them to do high-tech work. Manufacturing is a skilled activity. We need to build airplanes better. That takes a ton of expertise. Assembling iPhones does not.

Like, the only way this makes sense is if technology does not advance and low-cost labor is eternal. And yeah, they're liberals, so of course they subconsciously hold the belief that there will always be billions of people of poor people, but they also publish projections about how there will be billions of fewer people in a couple centuries and how poverty will finally be alleviated in just a couple more centuries.

Phones are necessary! It's an economic skill issue if "the greatest country in the world" cannot develop an advanced manufacturing process for them that is cheaper than hiring cheap labor abroad. It just goes to show how undeveloped the entire world is, I guess. There's a lot of talk about how as China moves up the value chain, they've begun to rely on cheaper countries for some manufacturing processes. Yeah, that's unfortunately true in some cases, but in other cases, capital investment has actually kept up domestically and advanced, higher-wage manufacturing in China is able to compete against basic, low-wage manufacturing abroad. That's what should be done, but it necessitates lower profit margins, national industrial policy, taking education seriously, and a society organized around the radical idea of making the future a better place to live in. So, incompatible with capitalism and America.

And American capitalists complain about "stagnation". Give me a break...

[โ€“] glimmer_twin@hexbear.net 5 points 3 days ago (2 children)

These people realise far more iPhones are made per year than planes right? How many highly skilled people do they seriously think will be working in these plane factories lmao

[โ€“] FunkyStuff@hexbear.net 3 points 2 days ago

That's why they make the Boeings keep crashing. They're calling it planed obsolescence.

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