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Messages - Hunter Leptk

#1
General Discussion / Re: *insert crab pun here*
March 06, 2022, 07:59:39 AM
¡¡My support (and my college fund) go out to Bandit!!
#2
Spam / Re: CTRL+V
January 19, 2022, 08:27:19 PM
pinterest is a distraction
#3
Spam / Re: CTRL+V
January 19, 2022, 12:38:28 PM
Labor Movement in the Gilded Age
Analysis

Objective 
What can we learn about the labor movement in the Gilded Age by comparing the Haymarket Riot, the Homestead Strike, the Pullman Strike, and the Ludlow Massacre?


Historical Context: Review the cartoon below and answer the two analysis questions that follow.

Analysis Questions:

Close Reading: Based on the images in the cartoon above, whom do you think would win the tournament created by the illustrator - the monopolies or labor? Why?: The monopolies would win in this case, because it is shown to have richer supporters and is covered in armor. Plus, the worker's horse seems sickly and malnourished.


Analysis: What do you think the illustrator is trying to say about the real life battle between monopolies and laborers?: That the monopolist will always win, due to the fact that they had more money and more investors and the backing of the united states government.


Labor in the Gilded Age - Directions: You have been assigned to read about ONE of four major labor related events in US History from the Gilded Age.  Read about your event, and fill out the table below based on your reading.  When your group is ready, share the information about your Labor Movement event with the group, using the information to complete the table below and the analysis questions that follow. 

Event
Industry 
People Involved
What happened: Cause, Effect, Impact



Haymarket Riot
1886
steel, railways, and lumber
German and Bohemian immigrants; anarchist and socialist parties; union leader August Spies; Police;

Cause: want of higher pays and fewer hours; people onn strike disagree with people not on strike, protest turned bombings; police shoot and kill people

Effects: August Spies, Albert Parsons, and 6 other union leaders were arrested, sentenced to death;  harsh anti-union measures were put into place; spreading an anti-union, anti-socialist sentiment throughout the nation

Impact: unions were weakened, laborers lost their battle for fairer working conditions, and the interests of wealthy industrialists were protected












Homestead Strike
1892


















Pullman Strike
1894
Train car manufacturing
Mr. Pullman and Company
Unions
Railroad companies


Causes: Pullman cuts wages to make more profits.
Effects: Unions band together and workers strike on any train that uses Pullman cars. Pullman and Railroad companies scheme to get the Government involved by putting Pullman cars on Government mail trains.
The Government steps in and union folk go to jail.
Impact: It becomes a precedent for big companies to use the government to protect themselves from unionization. It shows companies that they needn't heed the cries of the working class.












Ludlow Massacre
1914
coal/mining
Miners all of different european origins
Miners striked for better pay, more safety, and recognition. The strike worked until the national guard came in, kidnapped the strike leader and killed a lot of people.












Analysis Questions:

Analysis: What similarities or patterns do you notice among the causes of these events?

The government continuously steps in in favour of big business.








Analysis: What similarities or patterns do you notice among the effects and impacts of these events?
Union movement is more likely to end in failure, with death or jail facing many participants, than to successfully force big business to answer the pleas of the working class.









Based on these four events, write two claims about the causes and/or effects of the labor movement during the Gilded Age.  Support each claim with evidence from at least two of the events examined in this activity.

















Haymarket Riot 1886

Historical Context: Following the Panic of 1873, there was a rapid expansion of industrial production in the United States.  To fuel this, factories and mills such as those found in the steel, railways, and lumber industries, employed many new immigrants from Europe working 60 - 100 hour work weeks over 6 days, with wages as low as $1.50 per day ($37.64 in today's dollars).  In Chicago, German and Bohemian immigrants organized unions to try and demand better working conditions.  Many of these organizers were also members of anarchist and socialist parties that believed that capitalism was ruining America and squeezing the working class into poverty while the rich simply became richer. Employers in Chicago responded to the forming of unions with anti-union measures such as firing and blacklisting union members, locking out workers, and employing spies and private security forces to harass workers.  In 1884, the unions around the nation banded together and had grown strong enough that they were able to lobby for an 8 hour work day.  On May 1st they organized rallies across the United States in support of the 8 hour work day.  Their slogan was: "Eight hours for work, eight hours for rest, and eight hours for what you will."


Events of the Haymarket Riot: On May 3, 1886, at a rally outside of a factory, union leader August Spies gave a speech in which he told striking workers to stay calm and stand by their union, or they would not succeed in their strike for better working conditions and an 8 hour work day. At the end of his speech, the bell for the end of the work day rang out, and striking unionists attacked men who had broken the strike and gone to work.  In trying to calm the fights that followed this attack, police opened fire, killing four demonstrators.  The next day, workers held a vigil and rally at Haymarket Square to protest the police killings.  August Spies and fellow union leader Albert Parsons gave speeches. At the end of the speeches, the police marched towards the protesters and asked them to break up the rally and go home.  As they advanced, gun shots were exchanged between the protesters and the police, when suddenly a bomb exploded killing six police officers. 


Effect and Impact: As a result of the Haymarket Square bombing, August Spies, Albert Parsons, and 6 other union leaders were arrested.  They were charged with inciting violence and sentenced to death.  Additionally, harsh anti-union measures were put into place by the police including raiding and ransacking their offices without a warrant.  The entire German and Bohemian community came under suspicion, fueling an anti-immigrant movement.  Additionally, newspapers persecuted union leaders in the press, spreading an anti-union, anti-socialist sentiment throughout the nation. The unions were weakened, laborers lost their battle for fairer working conditions, and the interests of wealthy industrialists were protected.



Homestead Strike 1892

Historical Context: Owned by Carnegie Steel Company, the Homestead Steel Mill in Pennsylvania became nationally known during the strike of 1892.  Carnegie's corporation was known for cutting costs associated with labor to achieve higher profit margins.  In the early 1880's, the standard work week at a Carnegie Company steel mill was about 85 hours a week; laborers made about an average of $10 a week (about $250 in today's dollar value).  Most of the workers in his steel mills were Eastern European immigrants. In 1889, the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers had won a favorable contract with higher wages.  In 1892, Carnegie's plant manager at the Homestead Mill, Henry Clay Frick, tried to negotiate a new contract with the unionized workers.  In his list of demands, he included increased production demands while also proposing to lower the wages by 22%. On June 29th 1892, the union went on strike. In response, Frick locked the workers out of the plant and sent for 300 Pinkerton Guards (who were from a private detective agency who could be hired to do work on behalf of or protect any private citizen). 


Events of the Homestead Strike: When the Pinkerton Guards arrived on July 6th, they were met by 10,000 striking workers. The two groups battled nearly all day, with the striking laborers winning after approximately 10 - 15 deaths on both sides.  Frick and the Sheriff of the region appealed to the governor who sent in the state militia to force workers to end the strike.  The militia occupied the mill and surrounding areas; meanwhile, the Carnegie Corporation was abe to get production up and running again by convincing some striking members to return to work using threats and intimidation.  Up until mid-July, public support for the striking workers was strong.  This changed on July 23rd when anarchist Alexander Berkman attempted to assassinate Frick.  Unsuccessful, this attempt on Frick's life largely shifted public sympathies to be with the Carnegie Corporation.  Newspapers called the striking workers, mostly Eastern Europeans, horrible names and blamed them for the economic damage to the steel industry and town of Homestead.  The strike didn't last much longer.  The militia occupied Homestead, Pennsylvania until October when workers, feeling overwhelmed, abandoned the strike.


Effect and Impact: The Homestead Strike effectively crushed and collapsed the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers.  With the Amalgamated Association virtually destroyed, Carnegie Steel moved quickly to institute longer hours and lower wages. The Homestead Strike inspired many workers, but it also underscored how difficult it was for any union to prevail against the combined power of a corporation and the government.




Pullman Strike 1894

Historical Context: During and after the Civil War, the railway industry dominated the American economy and was the nation's single largest employer.  In Chicago, George Pullman built a different kind of company for manufacturing railroad cars.  To produce the cars, he built a manufacturing plant in a company-owned town on the outskirts of Chicago.  The company town was touted as a model community filled with content, well paid workers.  During the economic depression of 1893, George Pullman sought to preserve profits by lowering labor costs - so he slashed his workforce by 1,200 workers and cut wages by 25 percent.  Workers were required to live in the company town, which meant they rented and bought household provisions from the Pullman company.  While wages had been slashed, the cost of living in the company town did not change, drastically altering the lives of the Pullman railway workers. 

Events of the Pullman Strike:  The Pullman factory workers went on strike and were joined by the American Railway Union (ARU) and its leader, Eugene Debs.  The ARU supported the strike by refusing to run trains containing Pullman cars.  The plan was to force the railroads to bring Pullman to compromise.  Once on strike, the laborers proceeded to obstruct railroad tracks preventing the transportation of goods and attracting national attention.  The strike affected nearly all of America.  The media coverage was extensive and generally negative.  The editorials and articles depicted the boycotters as foreigners who were Anti-American.  The strike was ended when President Grover Cleveland used the US Marshals and US Army troops to force the workers to resume their duties.  His lawyers also argued that the strike violated the Sherman Antitrust Act and represented a threat to public safety. 



Effect and Impact: The American Railways Union was weakened as a result of their loss in this action.  Eugene Debs was jailed for six months for his part in the strike, but he also gained a national following as a strong leader willing to fight for workers rights.  As a result, he was able to run for preside                  nt five times as the head of the Socialist party.  In 1894, President Cleveland designed Labor Day as a federal holiday to appease workers.  Many Americans were appalled at the class conflict that the strike (and others like it) represented.  The events of the Pullman Strike led to a deepening awareness that there was a "labor problem" in America and a "labor question" in American politics.  As a result of Pullman Strike, reformers energetically began searching for a new way of protecting the "public interest" in the face of the competing interests of labor and capital. 




Ludlow Massacre 1914

Historical Context: The rapid expansion of the railways had made made coal a highly valued commodity, and it was rapidly commercialized.  When coal deposits were found in Colorado, businessmen had literally hit gold, the United States was dependent on coal at this time in history and there was plenty in the foothills of Colorado. At its peak in 1910, the coal mining industry of Colorado employed nearly 10% of the state's population.  Colorado's coal industry was dominated by a handful of operators. The largest was Colorado Fuel and Iron which was purchased by John D. Rockefeller in 1902, who turned his controlling interest in the company to his son, John D. Rockefeller Jr, who managed the company from his office in New York City. Colorado mines were particularly dangerous, as mine safety laws were never really enforced.  There was a constant threat of explosion, suffocation, and collapsing mine walls.  The miners who worked in the Ludlow mines were of all different European backgrounds, intentionally recruited to be a diverse group so that language and cultural barriers would prevent them from unionizing.  The laborer hours were also often long and pay was little.  The families also were required to live in the company town, rent property from the company, and shop at company stores.  In the early 1900's, the United Mine Workers of America attempted to organize against the large mining companies, fighting for better working conditions at mines across the west.  They focused on the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company because of the known harsh tactics of the Rockefeller family.   
Events of the Ludlow Massacre:  In early 1913, the workers in the Ludlow mine went on strike asking for better pay, enforcement of Colorado Mine Safety laws, and recognition of their membership in the United Mine Workers of America.  When the strike began, the miners were immediately evicted from their shacks in the mining towns. Aided by the United Mine Workers Union, they set up tents in the nearby hills and carried on the strike, picketing from these tent colonies.  The strike was effective and halted production of coal for many months.  At the start of the strike, the National Guard was called in to prevent violence.  On April 20, 1914, Colorado National Guard soldiers kidnapped and later killed the main camp leader and some of his fellow miners, and then set the tents in the main camp ablaze with kerosene. As they were engulfed in flames, people inside the tents tried to flee the inferno; many were shot as they tried to escape. Among the dead were not only striking miners, but also many innocent women and children. A day that started off with Orthodox Easter celebrations for the families became known as the Ludlow Massacre.

Effect and Impact: The United Mine Workers of America finally ran out of money, and called off the strike on December 10, 1914.  In the end, the strikers failed to obtain their demands, the union did not obtain recognition, and many striking workers were replaced. Over 400 strikers were arrested, 332 of whom were indicted for murder.  Despite this, the massacre did bring about a congressional investigation that led to the beginnings of child-labor laws, enforcement of an 8 hour work day, and showed the resilience and strength of a union in the face of extreme violence.   













#4
Spam / Re: CTRL+V
January 14, 2022, 04:03:15 PM
 Señor Pequeño (Nolan) mandará tropas chinas terminar el EEUU.

Pepita (Piper) ayudará los elefantes en áfrica.

Emelia será un critica muy competente y rica.

Joshua será un líder con el mundo.

Isabel tendrá felicidad.

Trevon tendrá un buen esposo.
 
Landon no me romperá más huesos (especialidad su piernas).

Drake será un programador con los videojuegos.

Davíd será un profesor del los niños que tienen 9 años. Ellos aprenderán mucho.

Cásador (Hunter) terminará o reparará el mundo.
#5
Spam / Re: CTRL+V
January 14, 2022, 03:37:50 PM
El transportación más común

#6
Spam / Re: CTRL+V
January 13, 2022, 12:17:59 PM
pensar
#7
Spam / Re: Corruption Game
December 01, 2021, 07:14:38 AM
Granted but all you do with said free time is text your mother

I wish I had more wishes
#8
Spam / Re: One Word Storyline
November 18, 2021, 10:22:21 AM
Once upon a star supernova, twenty six legendary cards descended from our tall card tower. Hooray!
Our newfound love Testlandia, wore splendid magenta fursuit, specifically commissioned to contain BEES! It buzzed through rainbow, over walls yonder, and into the sky. At midnight, Gerald Ford erupted from his volcanic lair, overflowing with meritorious service. Both chambers reloaded their legislative shotguns while removing glistering shirts, heated by lava undershirts. Ford devoured the 535 imperial guards, while copper prices skyrocketed, and legislation stalled.

Meanwhile, the legendary crocodile, Crocodile Irwin, initiated CPR for the legislature of New Hartoria. Mercifully, HS wrote textwalls of nonsense which follows:
"Spinning crickets mercifully
#9
Spam / Re: One Word Storyline
November 08, 2021, 06:47:50 AM
Once upon a star supernova, twenty six legendary cards descended from our tall card tower. Hooray!
Our newfound love Testlandia, wore splendid magenta fursuit, specifically commissioned to contain BEES! It buzzed through rainbow, over walls yonder, and into the sky. At midnight, Gerald Ford erupted from his volcanic lair, overflowing with meritorious service. Both chambers reloaded their legislative shotguns while removing glistering shirts, heated by lava undershirts. Ford devoured the 535 imperial guards, while copper prices skyrocketed, and legislation stalled.

Meanwhile, the legendary crocodile, Crocodile Irwin, initiated CPR for the legislature of New Hartoria. Mercifully, HS wrote textwalls of nonsense which follows.
Spinning
#10
Spam / Re: Three Words Only
November 08, 2021, 06:28:19 AM
Milwaukee, so that's
#11
Spam / Re: Corruption Game
October 01, 2021, 09:31:04 AM
Granted, but there is lead

I wish I would never get ill.
#12
WARZONE / Re: Match L: Smitty Werbenjägermanjensen | Ikou
September 29, 2021, 12:15:46 PM
Ikou was hesitant to undergo this assignment.
They had never been to the bottom of the ocean. That was cool!
But raiding a graveyard...
Less cool.
Still, they had to pass their potion ingredient collection class, and that required going on this trip.
The ingredient that they were after was a...#1 soda-dispensing hat!!?
Whatever.
Using the water-breathing potion, donning an anti-pressure charm, grabbing their shovel and putting on their sink boots, large and uncomfortable stone sneakers, Ikou slid from the floating hot air balloon into the (surprisingly) warm water.
Waving goodbye to their instructors, Ikou submerged.

Smitty Werbenjägermanjensen was having a good day. Undesturbed.
When, all of the sudden... Chk! Chk! Chk! Sunlight began streaming into his crypt. A small reptilian hand reached in and grabbed his hat!

Ikou never expected the fish skeleton to animate itself.
To be truthful, they screamed, very loud.
A strange rasping sound emitted from the shambling bones, slowly coalescing into words "Hey man, that's my hat, give it back!"
"I'm sorry" Ikou answered "I need this for a potion"
The bone shamble glared at them. It straightened its (very visible) spine. "Fine. I guess I'm gonna have to take it from you."
Ikou took a step back, frantically glancing around for some sign of a necromancer. There was no way that this skeleton was animated all on its own! There must have been some powerful mischief at hand.
"How exactly would you take it?" They worriedly questioned.
 "Only an army of the living dead."
A strange assortment of undead undersea creatures began rising from their graves.
Ikou gathered their courage. "I am warning you, I am a powerful fire mage!"
"As am I," Smitty replied.*
With a snap of Smitty's skinless fingers, the undead fishlings struck.
Ikou rolled into a crouch, dodging the first of the skeletons, and summoned a ball of glowing green flame. The most powerful trick they had learned yet. Feind fire.
They launched off a stream of the stuff and the air water began to fill the scent of sulfur. The feind fire was hungry, almost living and fed on everything, burning skeletons and water alike.
Enraged by the sudden decimation of his army, Smitty unsheathed his swordfish skeleton blade, Smotey.
Charging at the tiny lizard, Smitty hollered a war cry a drove his weapon strait for the small of their back.
Ikou barely managed to roll out of the way in time, but it had worked. Smitty had fallen into their trap.
The sigils on the ground where Ikou had just been crouched alit with a green glow, activating the lifetap trap, a perfect for catching necromancers.
But Smitty just sighed and disintegrated.
It was an illusion!
The real Smitty was right behind them!
Smitty brought down Smotey apon the startled lizard, but before he could deliver the killing blow, they shot upwards through the water at imagined speed.
Cutting through the surface, Ikou had no regrets. They had escaped the undersea graveyard and had left those uncomfortable sink boots at the bottom of the ocean.
IKOU WINS!!!!










*Minus the fire part
#13
WARZONE / Re: Match G: Iris | The Local Library
September 10, 2021, 09:41:56 AM
A great rumbling sound tore through the city.
Something was awakening.
Something huge.
Something knowledgeable.
Something ancient. (368 is pretty old)
Something, etc. Oh wait that's wrong.
Iris felt it.
The ground shook.
Her dragons hid under the bed of her small 1 room dormitory.
She stepped out onto her balcony and saw it.
Rising from the gloom.
A goliath of unmeasurable massivity.
A great stone structure transformed into a giant humanoid of pure doom.
Her local library.
"Hey!" She shouted into the gloom.
It slowly turned to face her, stones grinding, books flapping.
A slow rumbling sound emitted from deep within.
"You are overdue."
It struck.

Iris dove out of the way, off her balcony, landing safely 40 stories below.
She looked up and saw her room in ruins.
Her dragons were in that room.
The Library would pay.

Tears in her eyes, she pulled out her staff and began to summon a blast of destructive energy.
The local library twisted around, its arm still embedded in Iris's room.
She let loose a torrent of purple, manhole sized triangles, each bursting from her staff and shooting towards The Library.
At first, where they were vaporized by blue lighting before they struck. But the volume of Iris's despair made The Library's own magical defences seem feeble.
The Library's right leg was almost completely covered in a swarm of glowing purple, triangles embedded along almost every centimetre of the great mass.
Then Iris screamed, a horrible wrenching shriek.
And the triangles all exploded, vaporising The Library's leg.
The Library began to topple, slowly falling, and Iris realized her folly.
She had felled the tree unto her path.
The Library would crush her.
She pulled deep into the dregs of her soul and attempted to wrest a bit more mana from it.
Just enough for a wizard's shield.
The Library loomed above.
Just enough.
Cthooom.
The Library crumpled to the ground.
And Iris emerged.
Then she noticed something clutched in The Library's lifeless palm.
A book. One that she forgot she had.
And 3 tea dragons.
She bounded towards them, overcome with joy.
Then noticed something was off.
Her dragons were carrying the book, carefully, through the wreckage.
"Ginger? Aby? Ocha?"
One by one, they turned to face her. Their eyes glowed blue.
Iris realized. She had been outsmarted.
The library never really was alive.
It was just passed by a powerful Spirit.
A very intelligent Spirit.
Who now had her in checkmate.
She could not harm her dragons.
She knew this.
Ginger, Aby, and Ocha dropped their book (carefully) and turned to Iris, bearing their teeth.
"No.., Please."
They lept apon her.
The Local Library WINS!
#14
SOmething, etc. was lounging Somwhere, etc. And talking to SomeBoDy etc. When it saw a bright splash of neon on the horizon. The disgusting affront of colour apon its eyes (if it happened to have eyes at the time) drove it into a blind (pun intended) rage. Roaring (or hooting or something, etc.) Something, etc. walloped closer to the neon humanoid. Who spun around and began reciting a very long and in-depth speech about the complexities of the warrior cat book series. This sort of mindless droning would drive anyone with a brain totally insane, (hey that rhymes) but the walrus, sorry, SomThing, etc. was completely stupid. SomethIng, etc. Then attempted to stomp, squish and bludgeon the Generic Furry Avatar, but was too slow and too blind, and the Generic Furry Avatar was able to roll out of the way. The Generic Furry Avatar then asked SoMetHing, etc. who its favourite undertake character was. Something, etc. replied with "wooooooooooooooaaaaaaaaaaagggggh..." The Generic Furry Avatar was running out of weird and uncomfortable small talk topics and began to panic. Something, etc. began eating a rock. Something, etc. WINS!
#15
WARZONE / Re: WARZONE: The Battle of All Things
August 20, 2021, 09:36:28 AM