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#sabotage

13 messages11 participants2 messages aujourd’hui

Emails show that #IRS chief counsel De Mello said a recent DHS request didn’t comply with the law.

2 days after refusing the demand to turn >7M home addresses, he was pushed out.

DOGE began pushing the IRS to provide the taxpayer data to IMM agents. The WH gave the IRS auth. The system in the IRS is now creating would give ICE automated access, in its current form -it’s likely🚨incorrect addresses wil be given to DHS, & indivs will be wrongly targeted.
#Sabotage #USPol
propublica.org/article/trump-i

ProPublicaThe IRS Is Building a Vast System to Share Millions of Taxpayers’ Data With ICE
Plus via ProPublica
Suite du fil

« À la base je suis une légaliste. Je croyais dans le dialogue social et j’espérais beaucoup des institutions. J’ai perdu une bonne partie de cet espoir et je pense que c’est le cas de pas mal de jeunes militant·es. » Elle ajoute : « Le militantisme de Zad et de sabotage, c’est pas nouveau mais ça se massifie et c’est presque plus une lutte anticapitaliste qu’écologiste »

lempaille.fr/expertises-sabota 🧵

L'Empaillé · L'Empaillé - Expertises, sabotages, affrontements : les lignes bougent chez les écolosEn quelques années, une partie du mouvement écologiste a opéré une mue idéologique et stratégique commencée sur les barricades de Notre-dame-des-Landes. Imprégnés par une culture non-violente et mo…
A répondu dans un fil de discussion

@VQuaschning
Ja, das ist eine niederschmetternde Nachricht mit katastrophalen Inhalt.

Aber es ist auch die klare und eindeutige Ansage unserer derzeitigen Regierung, dass man in keinster Weise gewillt ist, dringend erforderliche Maßnahmen einzuleiten.

Anscheinend steuert die #Klimaschmutzlobby der #Fossiloiden die Bundespolitik in einem nie dagewesenen Ausmaß.
#KKR & Co lassen grüßen.

Wie lange wollen wir diese #Sabotage noch hinnehmen?

#Solar- #Sabotage: Gefahr aus China? – #MONITOR:

Millionen #Solaranlagen versorgen #Deutschlands #Haushalte – doch der Großteil stammt aus China. Genau das birgt laut Fachleuten ein enormes Risiko: Kann das chinesische Regime so unsere #Stromversorgung sabotieren – bis hin zum vollständigen Blackout? Und hat die #Bundesregierung die Gefahr wirklich erkannt?

m.youtube.com/watch?v=AcfUgfFk

"Senate leaders scrap new tax on renewable energy.

The new language would also keep investment and production tax credits for wind and solar through June 2026, & base eligibility on when projects start construction."

I haven't seen anything, recently, that constitutes "good news." But it's a relief that renewable energy in the US, won't be subject to a new tax, & the bill keeps credits for wind & solar thru June 2026.
#Renewables #BBB #Sabotage #Climate #Protest #USPol eenews.net/articles/senate-lea

E&E News by POLITICO · Senate leaders scrap new tax on renewable energyThe chamber's final megabill would also be more lenient on Inflation Reduction Act credit rollbacks for wind and solar.

The #TrumpRegime is building a national ctz #data system.

It's designed for st/loc election officials to give them an easier way to ensure only citizens are voting. But it was developed🚨rapidly w/o public process & some officials are already worrying about what else it could be used for.

A centralized nat database of Americans' personal info has long been considered a 3rd rail.

Democracy dies in darkness.
#Sabotage #Constitution #BigBrother #Elections #Privacy #USPol
npr.org/2025/06/29/nx-s1-54096

We all know the answer to this question. They aren't fooling anyone. And it's not just about the immediate increase in profits they get from automation and downsizing. It also weakens unions. But there is one upside to all this: those angry asshole customers are now more likely to have only an inanimate machine to vent their rage at instead of people. And if you're quick, you can sneak out the automated gate behind another customer without paying.

Today in Labor History June 27, 1905: The Industrial Workers of the World (AKA IWW or the Wobblies) was founded at Brand's Hall, in Chicago, Illinois. The IWW was a radical syndicalist labor union, that advocated industrial unionism, with all workers in a particular industry organized in the same union, as opposed by the trade unions typical today. Founding members included Big Bill Haywood, James Connolly, Eugene V. Debs, Lucy Parsons, and Mother Jones. The IWW was and is a revolutionary union that sought not only better working conditions in the here and now, but the complete abolition of capitalism. The preamble to their constitution states: The working class and the employing class have nothing in common. It also states: Instead of the conservative motto, "A fair day's wage for a fair day's work," we must inscribe on our banner the revolutionary watchword, "Abolition of the wage system."
They advocate the General Strike and sabotage as two of many means to these ends. However, sabotage to the Wobblies does not necessarily mean bombs and destruction. According to Big Bill Haywood, sabotage is any action that gums up the works, slowing down profits for the bosses. Thus, working to rule and sit-down strikes are forms of sabotage. The IWW is the first union known to have utilized the sit-down strike. They were one of the first and only unions of the early 20th century to organize all workers, regardless of ethnicity, gender, nationality, language or type of work (e.g., they organized both skilled and unskilled workers). They also were subjected to extreme persecution by the state and by vigilantes working for the corporations. Hundreds were imprisoned or deported. Dozens were assassinated or executed, including Joe Hill, Frank Little, Wessley Everest and Carlo Tresca. And scores were slaughtered in massacres, like in McKees Rock railway strike, PA (1909); Lawrence Textile Strike, MA (1912); San Diego Free Speech Fight, CA (1912); Grabow, LA Lumber Strike (1912); New Orleans, LA banana strike (1913); Patterson, NJ textile strike (1913); Mesabi Range Strike, MN (1916); Everett, WA massacre (1916); Centralia, WA Armistice Day riot (1919) and the Columbine, CO massacre (1921). There was also the Hopland, CA riot (1913), in which the police killed each other, accidentally, and framed Wobblies for it.

There are lots of great books about the IWW artwork and music. The Little Red Songbook. The IWW, Its First 50 Years, by Fred Thompson. Rebel Voices: An IWW Anthology, by Joyce Kornbluth. But there are also tons of fictional accounts of the Wobblies, too. Lots of references in Dos Passos’, USA Trilogy. Red Harvest, by Dashiell Hammett, was influenced by his experience working as a Pinkerton infiltrator of the Wobblies. The recent novel, The Cold Millions, by Jess Walter, has a wonderful portrayal of Elizabeth Gurly Flynn, during the Spokane free speech fight. And tons of classic folk and protest music composed by Wobbly Bards, like Joe Hill, Ralph Chaplin, Haywire Mac and T-Bone Slim.

To learn more about the IWW and its organizers you can read the following articles I wrote:
michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/03/
michaeldunnauthor.com/2021/03/
michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/
michaeldunnauthor.com/2021/05/
michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/05/
michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

#workingclass #LaborHistory #IWW #union #strike #generalstrike #sabotage #bigbillhaywood #freespeech #scabs #pinkertons #eugenedebs #motherjones #lucyparsons #assassination #prison #deportation #anarchism #socialism #books #fiction #folkmusic #author #write @bookstadon

Today in Labor History June 26, 1894: The American Railway Union (ARU), led by Eugene Debs, called a nationwide boycott in solidarity with their striking members at Pullman, Illinois. The Pullman Railroad Strike began as a wildcat strike in Chicago, when 4,000 railway workers walked off the job. It quickly escalated into the largest industrial strike the U.S. had ever seen, with 260,000 workers participating. Most of the workers lived in the company town of Pullman, just south of Chicago. When George Pullman slashed wages and jobs, he didn’t lower rents. Consequently, the workers called a strike. In addition to fighting for increased wages and union representation, they also wanted democracy in the autocratic company town. When the strike started, the Pullman workers were not yet organized in a union. However, Eugene Debs, who created the ARU in 1893, came in to organize the men and they quickly signed up. He called a boycott which halted much of the rail transport west of the Mississippi. Worker sabotage caused $80 million in damages. The government sent in federal troops to suppress the strike, killing at least 30 strikers. They also arrested Debs for conspiracy to block U.S. mail. Clarence Darrow defended him. However, he still got six months in prison. Debs would go on to cofound the IWW, in 1905, along with Lucy Parsons, Mother Jones, Big Bill Haywood, James Connolly, and others.