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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
Daily US History AnarchoBolshevik 1 month ago 100%
The long-term effects of mass incarceration on Japanese families https://scholar.harvard.edu/sites/scholar.harvard.edu/files/msen/files/internment.pdf

>Figure 4 reports results from a linear model regressing indicators of political engagement on measures of direct exposure and family‐only exposure to incarceration with fixed effects for preevacuation residential locations and generational identifiers. We also control for age and gender. (The full specification is provided in app. C.) The figure shows that those who were incarcerated are about 13% of a scale point (±9% of a scale point)¹¹ less likely to report an interest in American politics than those who were not, a statistically significant difference. > >These patterns are similar among Japanese Americans who themselves were not incarcerated but who had family that were. These individuals are about 18% of a scale point (±9% of a scale point) less likely to express interest in politics. These estimates correspond to a movement of approximately 3% and 4% along a three‐point scale, respectively. For both distrust and political advice, estimates are in the expected direction, but there is considerable uncertainty. > >Additionally, those who had direct exposure to incarceration are about 11% of a scale point (±11% of a scale point) more likely to support a “peaceful and orderly” leadership approach during detainment than one employing protest and dissent, relative to others. Among those who were not incarcerated themselves but had family who were, this difference is approximately 19% of a scale point (±11% of a scale point). These two estimates reflect a 3% and 6% movement across a three‐point scale, respectively. > >Consistent with intergenerational transmission, coefficient estimates for both detainment status measures are strikingly similar across outcomes. Formal tests of differences between the two never reach conventional levels of statistical significance (table 7). > >[…] > >We would suspect, in accordance with the literature on ethnic targeting (Lupu and Peisakhin 2017) and carceral contact in the United States (Weaver and Lerman 2010), that longer interments would more strongly demobilize and depress civic engagement. After all, shorter detainments may have little effect, but longer detainments may expose prisoners to more intragroup conflict, perhaps souring them on future engagement (Weaver and Lerman 2010). > >To analyze this, we subset the data to only those with direct experience with incarceration. We again control for age, gender, and generational cohort. Those incarcerated for longer periods had greater attenuation in political engagement, shown in figure 5. (The full specification is provided in app. sec. C.2.) > >An additional year of being incarcerated is associated with approximately 1.4% of a scale point decrease in political interest (±2.6% of a scale point, so narrowly insignificant), a 4.2 percentage point increase in distrust (±2.2 percentage points), a 3.4 percentage point decrease in the likelihood of being sought out for political advice (±1.6 percentage points), and 4.3% of a scale point (±3.4% of a scale point) increase in supporting a peaceful and orderly leadership approach during the detainment process. > >To put this into context, those who were incarcerated for four years or more (6% of the incarcerated sample) are approximately 4% of a scale point less likely to report an interest in American politics than those who were incarcerated for less than one year (12% of the incarcerated subsample). > >Moreover, they are approximately 17 percentage points more likely to express distrust in government, 14 percentage points less likely to be sought out for political advice, and 17% of a scale point more likely to support a peaceful and orderly leadership strategy. This corresponds to a movement of about 6% across the three‐point scale.

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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
Daily US History AnarchoBolshevik 6 months ago 93%
European colonists frequently compared the American tribes to Amalekites (just like Zionists do with Palestinians)

Quoting John Corrigan in [*Early American Studies: First Prejudice: Religious Tolerance and Intolerance in Early America*](https://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=70871C3A831FA2EF77C3273150024A3B), pages 68–70: >New England thinking about elimination of the [tribes] from the land in the seventeenth century drew upon the Amalek narrative in casting [Native Americans] as evil and the English colonial warriors who battled them as martyrs or prophets. > >So, for example, **the New England Confederation, in typical fashion, declared war on the Narragansett tribe in 1675 by observing of the “Narrohigansetts and their confederates”: “So Sathan may combine and stir up many of his instruments” in the same way that “Amalek and the Philistines did confederate against Israel.”**^44^ > >At other key moments in the English conquest of the northeastern tribes, sermons and speeches focused on the battlefield leadership of specific persons, much in the same way that English rhetoricians had placed figures such as the Duke of Marlborough at the center of their narratives. > >During the [long] eighteenth century, as filiopietistic New England chroniclers were canonizing the heroes of the first generation and bestowing laurels upon the heads of contemporary defenders of the New England way, they also commended [militant colonists] in eulogies and remembrances. **Their memories of such persons were of Moses‐like or Joshua‐like heroes who prevailed over evil Amalekites.** > >And in cases where colonial soldiers died in battle against Native Americans, they were celebrated as martyrs, and in a few instances even though the circumstances of their sacrifice did not immediately suggest heroism, or even competence, in the face of the enemy. > >Thus in relating details of the “fight at Piggwacket” in 1725, **Thomas Symmes sermonized that Captain John Lovewell, who lost his life, the battle, and a majority of his force bounty‐hunting [Native] scalps, resembled Joshua, Moses’s “Renowned general, in his wars with the Aborigines of Canaan,” the Amalekites**.^45^ > >Just how far the colonial imagination had come in picturing the collective future of Native Americans as empty of promise, as already on course to be blotted out, is redolent in Symmes’s preaching. Offered by Symmes as “a very Celebratory Elegy,” the sermon is grounded in a trust that extermination of the [tribes] was only a matter of time.^46^ > >That was the faith likewise of Captain Samuel Appleton, who wrote to a friend regarding his rôle as commander of the colonial forces arrayed against the Narragansett tribe in 1675: “By the prayers of God’s people, **our Israel in his time may prevail over this cursed Amalek; against whom I believe the Lord will have war forever until he have destroyed him.**”^47^ > >Some nineteenth‐century American writers, looking back on the colonial period, wrote forthrightly about New Englanders’ belief that Native Americans were Amalekites deserving of utter annihilation. In so doing, they read back into the colonial period a nineteenth‐century story about conflict between [Native Americans] and whites as a far‐reaching crusade informed by a cosmic view of good versus evil. That story had its roots in colonial America, but was amplified and refined during the first part of the nineteenth century. > >So, the Confederate veteran Robert Lewis Dabney, whose polemical goals were complicated, defended the honor of the South post–Civil War by raising the issue of slavery in the North, that is, “the enslaving of the Indians. **The pious ‘Puritan fathers’ found it convenient to assume that they were God’s chosen Israel, and the pagans about them were Amalek and Amorites. They hence deduced their righteous title to exterminate or enslave the Indians.**”^48^ > >[…] > >*Putnam’s Magazine* observed in 1857 that Christians in colonial North American treated [Natives] “as the Amalekites and Canaanites had been treated by the Hebrews.” George Bancroft, in his monumental *History of the United States*, discerned that **New Englanders assumed that they had “a right to treat the [Natives] on the footing of Canaanites or Amalekites.”** > >The *North American Review*, remarking on seventeenth‐century English encounters with [Natives] in the northeast, concluded: “**Heathen they were in the eyes of the good people of Plymouth Colony, but nations of heathen, without question, as truly were the Amalekites.**” > >Edward Eggleston looked back in 1883 on the “scenes of savage cruelty” at Mystic in 1637, when **a colonial force that had trapped Pequot women and children systematically shot and burned them, a genocide, Eggleston added, that ministers rhetorically justified through “citation of Joshua’s destruction of the Canaanites.” The *Living Age* likewise observed of the event, “As the Israelites slew the Amalekites, so did the Pilgrims slay the Pequot.”** > >Bostonian Frederick D. Huntington, who eventually became a bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church, commented in 1859 that **the military exercises against Native Americans in New England were led by men who were “evidently of an energetic spirit and quite an Old Testament cast of mind.”**^50^ (Emphasis added.) Sectarian Christians made similar remarks about Catholics and Mormons. In fact, Corrigan traces the equation of Natives with Amalekites to sectarians equating Catholics with Amalekites.

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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
Daily US History AnarchoBolshevik 7 months ago 94%
More than three hundred surviving Confederates attained positions of authority and influence in the U.S. https://www.essentialcivilwarcurriculum.com/post-war-treatment-of-high-ranking-confederate-leaders.html

Quoting James W. Loewen’s [*Lies My Teacher Told Me*](https://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=D3DF8E8F274794EE56B1FAC40D26A2BB), pages 158–160 >Today’s textbooks show African Americans striving to better themselves. But authors still soft‐pedal the key problem during Reconstruction, white violence. The figures are astounding. **The victors of the Civil War executed but one Confederate officeholder**, Henry Wirz, notorious commandant of Andersonville prison, while **the losers murdered hundreds of officeholders and other Unionists, white and black**.^65^ > >In Hinds County, Mississippi, alone, **whites killed an average of one African American a day, many of them servicemen, during Confederate Reconstruction—the period from 1865 to 1867 when ex‐Confederates ran the governments of most Southern states. In Louisiana in the summer and fall of 1868, white Democrats killed 1,081 persons, mostly African Americans and white Republicans**.^66^ > >In one judicial district in North Carolina, a Republican judge counted **700 beatings and 12 murders**.^67^ Moreover, violence was only the most visible component of a broader pattern of white resistance to black progress. As good as Loewen’s book is, he didn’t say nearly enough about Imperial America’s failure to exclude the surviving Confederates from positions of power, but I still have to give him credit for introducing me to [this topic](https://archive.is/p3Ddm): >From 1868 to 1872, state courts and Congress both enforced Section 3. The North Carolina Supreme Court barred ex‐Confederates from serving as [county sheriff](https://casetext.com/case/worthy-v-barrett-and-others) and [state solicitor](https://casetext.com/case/in-re-tate-32); the Louisiana Supreme Court removed a [state judge](https://cite.case.law/la-ann/21/631/). The U.S. Senate refused to seat [Zebulon Vance](https://archive.is/IoXNY), a former congressman, wartime North Carolina governor and Confederate colonel. Congress passed a law authorizing [federal prosecutors](https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/proclamation-208-suspension-prosecution-for-violations-the-office-holding-prohibition) to go to court to remove oath‐breaking ex‐Confederates from public offices. > >**Most of this came to an end in 1872, when Congress passed the Amnesty Act. Acting on Section 3’s last line — “Congress may by a vote of two‐thirds of each House, remove such disability” — it lifted the ban on office‐holding for most ex‐Confederates.** Some amnesty supporters [argued](https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/letter-accepting-the-liberal-republican-party-presidential-nomination%23:~:text=long%20estranged%20people%20shall%20reunite%20and%20fraternize%20upon%20the%20broad%20basis%20of%20universal%20amnesty%20with%20impartial%20suffrage.) that it would promote reunion and reconciliation. > >It didn’t. Instead, **White Southerners used [fraud and violence](https://mississippitoday.org/2023/11/02/on-this-day-in-1875-black-voters-terrorized-under-mississippi-plan-whites-prevail) against Black voters to win mid‐1870s elections in several states. Ex‐Confederates, [elected](https://encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/william-calvin-oates-1894-96) as [governors](https://mississippiencyclopedia.org/entries/john-marshall-stone) and [legislators](https://www.scencyclopedia.org/sce/entries/gary-martin-witherspoon), were among those who presided over the end of Reconstruction, [passed Jim Crow laws](https://www.britannica.com/event/Jim-Crow-law) and suppressed Black Southerners’ right to vote.** > >**Among the first ex‐Confederates elected to Congress, in 1873, was Alexander Stephens himself.** The next year, he spoke out against a civil rights bill, claiming that Black Southerners did not want “social rights” — an argument that Robert Brown Elliott, a Black congressman from South Carolina, rebutted the next day. The bill become the [Civil Rights Act of 1875](https://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/common/generic/CivilRightsAct1875.htm%23:~:text=The%20bill%20guaranteed%20all%20citizens,schools,%20churches,%20and%20cemeteries.), which promised equal access to inns, trains and theaters. Southern governors mostly ignored it until the Supreme Court struck it down in 1883. One particular author, Stephen M. Hood ([the descendant of a Confederate](https://wp.me/p354UI-3YL)), put a more positive spin on this in his book [*Patriots Twice: Former Confederates and the Building of America after the Civil War*](https://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=7B6E310B90862196BEBC6B7766F91BDE). While he offers some notable conclusions, I suspect that his friendly and easily forgiving stance towards these surviving Confederates is going to unsettle many (but it isn’t *vastly* different from how easily generic anticommunists overlook the deeply serious flaws in their upper‐class heroes like George Washington, Christopher Columbus, and others either). From the book’s description: >The long and bloody American Civil War claimed the lives of more than 700,000 men. When it ended, former opponents worked to rebuild their reunified nation and moved into the future together. Many people will find that hard to believe—especially in an era witnessing the destruction or removal of Confederate monuments and the desecration of Confederate cemeteries. > >[…] Stephen M. Hood identifies **more than three hundred former Confederate soldiers, sailors, and government officials who reintegrated into American society and attained positions of authority and influence in the federal government, the United States military, academia, science, commerce, and industry.** Their contributions had a long‐lasting and positive influence on the country we have today. > >Many of the facts in Patriots Twice will surprise modern Americans. For example, **ten postwar presidents appointed former Confederates to serve the reunited nation as Supreme Court justices, secretaries of the U.S. Navy, attorneys general, and a secretary of the interior. Dozens of former Southern soldiers were named U.S. ambassadors and consuls, and eight were appointed generals who commanded U.S. Army troops during the Spanish‐American War.** > >**Former Confederates were elected mayors of such unlikely cities as Los Angeles, CA, Minneapolis, MN, Ogden, UT, and Santa Fe, NM, and served as governors of the non‐Confederate states and territories of Colorado, West Virginia, Missouri, Utah, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Alaska, and the Panama Canal Zone.** > >Ex‐Southern soldiers became presidents of national professional societies including the American Bar Association, the American Medical Association, and the American Gynecological and Obstetrical Society, to name only a few. Others paved the way in science and engineering by leading the American Society of Civil Engineers, the American Chemical Society, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the Geological Society of America. One former Confederate co‐founded the environmental and preservation advocacy group Sierra Club, and another intellectual and scholar was president of the Society for Classical Studies. > >Former soldiers in gray founded or co‐founded many of our nation’s colleges and universities—some exclusively for women and newly freed African‐Americans. Other former Rebels served as presidents of prominent institutions, including the University of California, Berkeley, and taught at universities outside the South including Harvard, Yale, the University of Wisconsin–Madison, Johns Hopkins, the University of San Francisco, and Amherst College. **Several others served on the governing boards of the United States Military Academy at West Point and the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland.** (Emphasis added in all cases.) As somebody who studies fascism regularly, I could not help but be reminded of [the Western Allies’ failure to effectively defascistize the states that they occupied.](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/3214818)

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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 7 months ago 100%
Today in History - Feb 29 - The Kerner Commission Report https://www.hud.gov/sites/dfiles/FHEO/documents/kerner_commission_full_report.pdf

February 29 is the anniversary of publishing of [The Kerner Commission Report](https://www.hud.gov/sites/dfiles/FHEO/documents/kerner_commission_full_report.pdf) in 1968. The previous year had seen over 150 riots, and the US president had commissioned the report to determine the causes of the riots, and what could be done to make them stop. The media and the vast majority of white people thought that it was the fault of [communist agitators or young black hooligans](https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/1968-kerner-commission-got-it-right-nobody-listened-180968318/), as could be seen echoed in the earlier [McCone Commission](https://libraryarchives.metro.net/dpgtl/studies/1965-McCone-Commission-Report-Violence-in-the-City-Watts-Neighborhood.pdf). The report released on today's date told a very different story. The report was an absolutely scathing indictment of the racist US society from the top down. Instead of victim blaming, the report described police brutality, a racist justice system, unemployment, racist financial institutions, and suppression of political will. As we've seen time and time again in the US regime, a people pushed to the brink will rebel against their oppressors. Whenever this occurred, a recurring theme was that the regime would send in the military to squash the uprising and issue deadlier weapons to the police, fueling further violence and outrage. The media would then over-report the white casualties and under-report the black casualties, while blaming black agitators for the riots. The report suggested that the solution to the problem would be to treat black people as equals, and increase the amount of opportunities available to them. Of course, this greatly upset the white populace, the president included. A mere [18%](https://news.gallup.com/vault/228206/gallup-vault-public-hopeful-kerner-commission.aspx) of white people believed that black people were discriminated in hiring processes. In the end, the US president had this to say: >“The Johnson administration would not shift resources from the war in Vietnam to social reform, and Congress would not agree to tax increases. Further, state legislatures routinely blunted the local impact of federal actions.” In other words, bombing Vietnam was more important than caring for their own people, and it's too hard anyway. Today we can still this reflected in the [demographics of the US](https://www.statista.com/statistics/200476/us-poverty-rate-by-ethnic-group/). Black people are second only to the native peoples for poverty rates. And over double the rates for white people. [Riots](https://www.cnbc.com/2020/06/01/trump-threatens-to-deploy-military-as-george-floyd-protests-continue-to-shake-the-us.html) over racial inequality are still seen today. The regime's response remains the same, although the current priority is bombing Russians and Palestinians.

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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 9 months ago 100%
Today in History - Dec 13 - Operation Red Dawn www.theguardian.com

December 13 is the anniversary of [Operation Red Dawn](https://www.theguardian.com/world/2003/dec/16/iraq.rorymccarthy) in 2003. An event much celebrated in the US, this operation led to the capture of a foreign leader, where he would be tortured for 3 years, and finally executed after a show trial. The leader of course was Saddam Hussein of Iraq. The US had invaded his country two years prior, because in the words of US President George W Bush, ["He tried to kill my daddy"](https://www.gainesville.com/story/news/2004/05/11/war-is-bushs-vendetta/31664950007/). Those might be the only true words he ever said about the war, although whether Saddam was actually behind the assassination attempt or not is [in question](https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/inatl/longterm/iraq/timeline/062793.htm). It's now known that planning for the war began immediately after the attack on the World Trade Centres in New York, even though none of the attackers had links to Iraq. Eventually, he came up with some [nonsense](https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/mar/14/iraq-war-9-11-george-bush-post-truth) about "Weapons of Mass Destruction", which sufficiently terrified the home of the brave enough to manufacture support for the war. So, on December 13, they finally captured him, after eight months of [unrestricted war crimes](https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2023/03/iraq-20-years-since-the-us-led-coalition-invaded-iraq-impunity-reigns-supreme/) in Iraq. After 3 years of ["enhanced interrogation"](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2996498), they put him on trial without a hint of irony, for war crimes. This wasn't done in an international court of course, but on a US military base in Iraq, with US puppets overseeing the trial. The UN Human Rights Commission stated that it was [a clear violation of human rights law](https://www.ohchr.org/en/statements/2009/10/tragic-mistakes-made-trial-and-execution-saddam-hussein-must-not-be-repeated). But of course, they ensured the results that they wanted, and executed him for killing 148 Shi'ites. Interestingly enough, this is the exact number of [women killed](https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2014/07/civilians-casualties-afghanistan-rise-24-percent-first-half-2014) by NATO forces in Afghanistan in the first six months of 2014. I wouldn't hold your breath on sending US President Obama to Afghanistan to face trial for war crimes.

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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 9 months ago 100%
Today in History - Dec 12 - The Bombing of Piazza Fontana www.theguardian.com

December 12 is the anniversary of [The Bombing of Piazza Fontana](https://www.theguardian.com/world/2000/jun/24/terrorism) in 1969, killing 17 people, and wounding another 88. Although the bombing was initially pinned on Anarchists, eventually it was discovered that the fascist group Ordine Nuovo was behind the bombings. A group with links to the US. Now, I wish to preface this by saying that US involvement in this particular incident has not yet been proven. However, it is known that [Operation Gladio](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2467689) was a very real program ran by the CIA. During the time period in question, Italy had a powerful communist party, and the US was quite eager to prevent them from being elected. According to General Gerardo Serraville, who commanded Gladio for some time, Gladio's role during the 1970s, was to ["Fill the streets, creating a situation of such tension as to require military intervention"](https://archive.org/stream/pdfy-y_8iHigC3Ms5TngF/BLUM%20killing%20hope_djvu.txt), speaking about terrorist attacks that he perpetrated during the 70s and 80s in order to generate fear of the communist party. A 2000 report from the Italian government also claimed that the CIA was at minimum aware of the attack during its planning, and failed to report or act, but also implicates them in funding various fascist terrorist groups in Italy. The BBC has [a great documentary](https://yewtu.be/watch?v=GGHXjO8wHsA) on the subject as a whole. There's also the matter of how quickly the crime scene was cleaned up, and evidence was destroyed. The anarchist they arrested first, "accidentally" died in a fall from the fourth floor of a police station. Over the years, repeated attempts have been made to bring the truth to light. We get glimpses now and then, such as with the Gladio reveal, and some [US officers](https://www.theguardian.com/world/2000/feb/16/terrorism) have gone to trial. As I mentioned at the outset, we still have no hard proof. But it would be in keeping with [state sponsored terrorism](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2242257) that we do know about from that time period, continuing [through the 80s](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2983194) and beyond.

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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 9 months ago 100%
Today in History - Dec 11 - The Largest Mass Execution of US Soldiers eji.org

December 11 is the anniversary of [The Largest Mass Execution of US Soldiers](https://eji.org/news/a-century-after-19-were-executed-army-overturns-racially-biased-convictions-of-110-black-soldiers/) thus far, in 1917. It should be completely unsurprising that these were all black men, and their trials were conducted swiftly with no appeals allowed. In 1917, the US military was segregated down racial lines. The racist officers had the idea that black troops were [inferior to white ones](https://scholarcommons.scu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1270&context=historical-perspectives), and the black units should be tasked with non-combat and menial tasks. In July of that year, one of these units was tasked with guarding white troops that were preparing to leave for the war in Europe. The local police force however, felt that it was a travesty that they were wearing military uniforms at all and could give the local black population [ideas](https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/houston-riot-of-1917). They continuously harassed them. They would arrest them arbitrarily, beat them, and generally make life miserable. The breaking point came on August 23 of 1917. A black soldier who by all accounts was a model soldier, was arrested, shot at, and beaten by the police. Rumours quickly circulated that he had been killed. 150 of the soldiers decided that it was time to do something, and assembled. History is unclear on what their plan was, but modern historians think that the plan was to march into Houston and protest at the police station. But regardless of their intentions, they never even made it into the city. A large group of armed white men met them at the outskirts. A gunfight soon broke out, leaving 4 soldiers, 4 policemen, and 12 white civilians dead. The Army quickly brought charges against 110 of the black soldiers. They were put on three mass trials, represented by an officer with no legal credentials. It took less than 3 days to convict the first group. 13 were murdered on this day. The other two trials were conducted just as swiftly, resulting in death sentences for another 16 soldiers. Due to public outrage, 10 of those were spared, but in total, 22 people were hanged, and 50 were sentenced to life in prison. Eventually, due to the tireless work of the NAACP, their sentences were reduced. The last men were released from prison 21 years later, in 1938. It wasn't until 2023 that the US military [acknowledged their wrongdoing](https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/us-army-overturns-110-black-soldiers-convictions-after-more-than-a-century-180983272/). They gave them all honourable discharges, and the convictions were overturned, perhaps because none of the men were still alive today. The US military continues to [discriminate](https://carnegieendowment.org/2022/09/06/diversity-in-high-brass-pub-87694) against their black troops.

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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 9 months ago 100%
Today in History - Dec 10 - The Treaty of Paris guides.loc.gov

December 10 is the anniversary of the signing of [The Treaty of Paris](https://guides.loc.gov/world-of-1898/treaty-of-paris) in 1898. This formally ended the Spanish-American War, which had been ongoing for 6 months. The treaty transferred control of Guam, Puerto Rico, and The Philippines from Spain to the US. It was not possible to annex Cuba in the treaty, as the war was partially justified by seeking ["Cuban Freedom"](https://guides.loc.gov/world-of-1898/teller-platt-amendments). However, the US would place troops there, and the following century would see much meddling in Cuba's affairs in an effort to bring it to heel. The additions of the Spanish colonies marked the first of the US conquests outside of North America. The US regime now had a significant foothold on the Pacific, which they could use to further their ambitions. Manifest Destiny had now expanded its scope, and more colonies were added in the next decades. Eventually Cuba and the Philippines would slip away, and the US regime would move away from direct colonial administration. They've [laid claim](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2971838) to the entirety of the Americas. Today, the US has over 800 military bases outside of its borders stretching [over the globe](https://installations.militaryonesource.mil/view-all). They dictate terms to the world, and the list of their interventions is [extremely long](https://archive.globalpolicy.org/us-westward-expansion/26024-us-interventions.html) for those who challenge their authority.

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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 9 months ago 100%
Today in History - Dec 9 - The Senate Intelligence Committee report on CIA Interrogations https://archive.ph/VpVLD

December 9 is the anniversary of the partial release of [The Senate Intelligence Committee report on CIA Interrogations](https://archive.ph/VpVLD) in 2014. It detailed the extent of the CIA's crimes against its detainees during their "War on Terror" from 2001-2009. The contents we know about are damning. It details the torture, abuse, and suffering that 119 prisoners of the CIA endured. Nearly a quarter of them were wrongfully detained. People were raped, kept awake for days, beaten, waterboarded, and even froze to death. The mental damage done to the prisoners was immense. Many of them attempted suicide, and many more suffer from debilitating mental problems as a result of their ordeal. As nearly anyone could have predicted, these "enhanced interrogation techniques" didn't provide any useful intelligence. The whole thing was a blatant act of sadism on the part of the regime's secret police, and a clear human rights violation. "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques" were officially banned in 2009. But the crimes still continue. Guantanamo Bay still holds [30 prisoners](https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/us/guantanamo-bay-detainees.html). Nobody ever even faced charges for torturing prisoners.

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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 9 months ago 100%
Today in History - Dec 8 - The First SWAT Attack https://archive.ph/sPqED

December 8 is the anniversary of [The First SWAT Attack](https://archive.ph/sPqED) in 1969. It marked the beginning of a new form of militarised police force. SWAT is an abbreviation for Special Weapons And Tactics. The awkward sounding name is a remnant of their original name "Special Weapons Assault Team", that more accurately conveys the purpose of the unit. It was changed quite early on because it was a little too on-the-nose. The stated purpose of the team is to use military hardware and techniques to overcome heavily armed and dangerous criminals, such as terrorists or hostage takers. The product of the famously racist LA police chief Daryl Gates, who once said casual drug users "ought to be taken out and shot", the real truth behind its creation was made clear on this day. The targets of course, were The Black Panthers, a political group composed of black socialists. The FBI had been [spreading propaganda](https://vault.fbi.gov/cointel-pro) about the Black Panthers, and the police were eager to start raiding them. On this day, over 350 policemen descended upon Black Panther headquarters. There were only 13 Panthers in the building at the time, and in response to a large group of men shooting and tossing grenades at them, they fired back. Thousands of rounds were fired, and the police even brought in a tank. Several people were wounded, but amazingly enough, nobody died. At their trial, the Black Panthers successfully argued that they acted in self defence, and were acquitted of most charges. The whole thing was a farce. They obviously didn't have much reason to raid the Panthers, much less bring in military equipment. But the fact that armed black people existed was terrifying to the whites in power. They had previously enacted [gun control laws](https://abc7news.com/california-gun-control-black-panther-party-laws-nra-mulford-act/13303767/) to disempower the Panthers. When that failed, their raid, resembling the [rifle clubs](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2089683) of the previous century was the beginning of a new era. Today, SWAT teams are employed by nearly two thirds of police departments in the country. In over 95% of cases, they are used against similar targets, rather than the dangerous criminals they are ostensibly for. The military even has a [special program](https://www.dla.mil/Disposition-Services/Offers/Law-Enforcement/Program-FAQs/) to provide military equipment to police departments. They still disproportionately attack [black neighbourhoods](https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1805161115).

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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 9 months ago 100%
Today in History - Dec 7 - The Dos Erres Massacre https://cja.org/where-we-work/guatemala/related-resources/justice-for-the-dos-erres-massacre/

December 7 is the anniversary of [The Dos Erres Massacre](https://cja.org/where-we-work/guatemala/related-resources/justice-for-the-dos-erres-massacre/) in 1982. This was one of the worst atrocities of the [Guatemalan genocide](https://cja.org/what-we-do/litigation/the-guatemala-genocide-case/). This day saw a US supported elite team within the Guatemalan military enter a village of nearly 400 people suspected of supporting leftist guerillas. Males were locked in a school, and the females were locked in a church. After a search of the village produced no communist or guerilla literature, they got to work on the people. Babies were killed first. They cracked their skulls, they threw them against trees, or down wells. They interrogated the villagers, torturing then killing them one by one. Women and girls were raped, then thrown into the well. They filled in the well with the survivors still crying. This was not an isolated incident. Over the course of the genocide of the Mayan people, they would wipe out over 600 villages, totalling more than 200,000 people. Eventually, the war ended, and much like [My Lai](https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/vietnam-my-lai-massacre/), a few select men were chosen to take the fall. Of the 58 men present on that day alone, 4 men received lengthy prison terms. The US and Canada made a big show of extraditing them and declared that justice had prevailed. But the truth of the matter is much more akin to another [famous individual](http://nobsblog.blogspot.com/1996_12_01_archive.html) who received US aid. The truth is that the US knowingly provided [training and funding](https://ghrc-usa.org/Publications/factsheet_kaibiles.pdf) for the Guatemalan military, [through the 80s](https://archive.ph/DrzHU). The implication is clear that the US regime did NOT care about the ongoing genocide, but more on optics: >The point is the rather obvious one that only in time will we and the Guatemalans know whether President Lucas is correct in his conviction that repression will work once again in Guatemala. If he is right and the policy of repression is succeedinq and will result in the extermination of the guerillas, their supporters, and their sympathizers there is no need for the US to implicate itself in the repression by supplying the GOG with security assistance. and how they would spin things after the war: >If the repression does work and the guerillas, their supporters and sympathizers are neutralized, we can in the aftermath of the repression work to restore normal relations with the successors to President Lucas. Which appears to be exactly what they did. They upped the funding from 11 million in 1980 to 104 million to 1986, but they figured that so long as they weren't actively participating in the massacres, they could either enjoy the destruction of communism in Guatemala, or show their morality after the war by saying that they didn't support any genocide. Perhaps by offering up a few of the soldiers as scapegoats and making a big show of their extradition.

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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
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Today in History - Dec 6 - The Banana Massacre hir.harvard.edu

December 6 is the anniversary of [The Banana Massacre](https://hir.harvard.edu/the-dark-side-of-bananas-imperialism-non-state-actors-and-power/) in 1928. The Colombian government, at the demand of the United Fruit Company, sent in the military to break a strike that by the workers on a banana plantation owned by the United Fruit Company, resulting in thousands of deaths. The strike was intended to force the United Fruit Company to submit to these demands: 1. Stop their practice of hiring through sub-contractors 2. Mandatory collective insurance 3. Compensation for work accidents 4. Hygienic dormitories and 6-day work weeks 5. Increase in daily pay for workers who earned less than 100 pesos per month 6. Weekly wage 7. Abolition of office stores 8. Abolition of payment through coupons rather than money 9. Improvement of hospital service The exact involvement of the US regime in this mass murder is still debated, as is the number of casualties, as the regime still denies involvement and downplays the incident to this day. However, we do have [several telegrams](https://web.archive.org/web/20120717004708/http://www.icdc.com/~paulwolf/colombia/santamarta.htm) between officials that tell a different story. The US called the striking workers subversives (communists) as a result of their demands, and [one telegram in particular](https://web.archive.org/web/20120606191051/http://www.icdc.com/~paulwolf/colombia/kellogg8dec1928.jpg) strongly suggests that the US regime had threatened an invasion if the Colombian government did not put down the strike by force. >The Legation at Bogota reports that categorical orders have been given the authorities at Santa Marta to protect all American interests. The Department does not (repeat not) desire to send a warship to Santa Marta. Keep the Department informed of all developments by telegraph This was followed by [another telegram](http://web.archive.org/web/20120606191231/http://www.icdc.com/~paulwolf/colombia/caffery16jan1929.jpg) from the ambassador to the Department of State that said he had the "honor" of reporting "that the total number of strikers killed by the Colombian military exceeded 1000." There could be little doubt about the US regime's stance on the matter. The United Fruit Company continued to enjoy the full support of the US government continuing to commit atrocities, labour violations, and even violent coups. Today they are known as Chiquita, and are [still promoting violence](https://nsarchive2.gwu.edu/NSAEBB/NSAEBB217/index.htm) in South America.

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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
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Today in History - Dec 5 - The California Gold Rush www.pbs.org

December 5th is the anniversary of the true start of [The California Gold Rush](https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/goldrush-california/) in 1848. On this day, the US president officially confirmed the discovery of gold in California, beginning the movement of over 300,000 new settlers to the area. This would ultimately lead to the annexation of California by the US regime, and the estimated deaths of over 120,000 native peoples in the [California Genocide](https://cal170.library.ca.gov/californias-long-war-of-extermination/). California at the time was a lawless place, having just been conquered from Mexico earlier in the year. The prospectors brought by the gold rush were initially of mixed origin, but as claims started to become more scarce, the Anglo-Americans quickly started ramping up their hostility towards races deemed inferior. By this point, [manifest destiny](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2971838) was a commonly held view, having been officially endorsed by the president 3 years earlier. Combined with a devout belief that they were racially superior to the native people, this set the stage for mass murder in the name of racial purity. The first US Governor of California, Peter Burnett, [had this to say](https://governors.library.ca.gov/addresses/s_01-Burnett2.html) about being "forced" to exterminate the Indians: >That a war of extermination will continue to be waged between the races until the Indian race becomes extinct must be expected. While we cannot anticipate this result but with painful regret, the inevitable destiny of the race is beyond the power or wisdom of man to avert. In 1848, nearly a third of the remaining native population in the US was located in California, over 150,000 strong. Over the next 12 years, that would drop to 35,000. By 1900, it was under 16,000, and the settlers numbered over a million. The methods for their extermination were many. The first step of course was to take their land and sell it to white settlers. Left on worthless lands, survival became a struggle. Diseases spread rampantly, and food was difficult to come by. When faced with starvation, tribes would then steal cattle or other food. White settlers would then retaliate with mass murder. The regime funded [death squads](https://fullertonobserver.com/2020/07/07/the-california-native-american-genocide/) to hunt down and kill any Indians they could find. These were not isolated incidents. Although slavery was officially banned, [an exception](https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/goldrush-act-for-government-and-protection-of-indians/) was made for Indians. This of course was running in parallel to the [destruction of the land](https://www.usgs.gov/media/images/hydraulic-mining-techniques-california-1870s) by invasive mining techniques, which further reduced the native tribe's ability to provide for themselves. Eventually, the regime would move on to [kidnapping children](https://www.aclunc.org/sites/goldchains/explore/indian-boarding-schools.html) and [forcibly sterilising women](https://calmatters.org/newsletters/whatmatters/2023/03/forced-sterilization-california/). These policies would run well into the late 20th century. But let's not forget that it wasn't just the native populace affected by the eugenics laws. [Asian immigrants](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2472753) were also outcast from society and freely slaughtered. They were subject to [racial taxes](https://oac.cdlib.org/search?style=oac4;titlesAZ=f;idT=001482545) and [immigration quotas](https://history.state.gov/milestones/1921-1936/immigration-act) not enforced upon white settlers. Today, discrimination is [once again on the rise](https://history.stanford.edu/news/run-them-over-rise-new-sinophobia-and-its-dangers-us-all).

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Today in History - Dec 4 - The Holy Land Foundation www.hrw.org

December 4 is the anniversary of the US regime seizing the assets of [The Holy Land Foundation](https://www.hrw.org/news/2022/03/11/after-israels-designation-human-rights-groups-terrorists-biden-should-release) in 2001. This Palestinian-run charity was the largest Muslim charity in the United States, and its purpose was to provide humanitarian aid to the people of Palestine. The US regime of course did not appreciate this action. They declared the charity a terrorist organisation with the claim that they were providing material support to win the hearts and minds of Palestinian people for Hamas. They provided no evidence to back their claims, and even acknowledged that all of the money went entirely towards humanitarian aid. But an Israeli intelligence officer testified that he "could smell Hamas". That was good enough for the US regime. They sentenced 5 of their directors to very length prison terms for the crime of feeding the hungry. Today of course, the situation isn't much better. Israel continues to label [humanitarian groups as terrorists](https://www.hrw.org/news/2021/10/22/israel/palestine-designation-palestinian-rights-groups-terrorists), and blocks humanitarian efforts in Gaza entirely when they get too upset with the uppity natives. To avoid appearing completely heartless, the US regime has recently promised [$100 million dollars](https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2023/10/18/u-s-announcement-of-humanitarian-assistance-to-the-palestinian-people/) in humanitarian aid to the Palestine people. This is substantially less than the amount that another Palestinian charity was ordered to pay in another [questionable](https://abc7chicago.com/hamas-david-boim-terrorism-american-muslims-for-palestine/14001029/) court decision, not to mention the funds that were seized from the HLF.

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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 9 months ago 100%
Today in History - Dec 3 - The Free Speech Movement https://www.eiu.edu/historia/ruhaak%202003.pdf

December 3 is the anniversary of [The Free Speech Movement](https://www.eiu.edu/historia/ruhaak%202003.pdf) at Berkeley University in 1964. Despite the US regime's claimed commitment to free speech, this day saw nearly 800 students arrested for opposing the US regime. The issue at hand was that the University was cracking down on "political activity" in the University, be it on-campus or off. The political activity of course was civil rights. In the eyes of the students, the US was a racist, imperialist, and brutal regime. With University policy being that only mainstream liberal parties were allowed, and professors who were required to [swear loyalty](https://www.foundsf.org/index.php?title=UC_Berkeley:_The_Loyalty_Oath_Controversy,_1949-51) to the oppressive regime, the stage was set for conflict. The University responded to this activism by persecuting the student leaders. The students responded by having a sit in at the University. A group of a couple thousand students occupied one of the buildings in the University. They sang songs, they watched movies, and they studied. Eventually, the police closed off the exits to the building and arrested everyone inside. They dragged people down as many as [90 steps](https://www.thenation.com/article/archive/december-3-1964-mass-arrests-of-students-at-university-of-california-berkeley/) of marble stairs. Ultimately, after much ado, the students did win this one, and the liberal regime was forced to allow talk of civil rights on campus. Recently, an event happened where right wingers marched into government buildings and threatened to kill US politicians. [Compare the actions](https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/dejected-trump-supporters-leave-washington-create-new-theories-capitol-violence-n1253407).

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 9 months ago 100%
Today in History - Dec 2 - The Monroe Doctrine https://www.gilderlehrman.org/history-resources/spotlight-primary-source/monroe-doctrine-1823

December 2 is the anniversary of [The Monroe Doctrine](https://www.gilderlehrman.org/history-resources/spotlight-primary-source/monroe-doctrine-1823) in 1823. It was an explicit threat and implicit claim to all of the Americas. The Monroe doctrine by US President James Monroe is written in [heavy legalese](https://millercenter.org/the-presidency/presidential-speeches/december-2-1823-seventh-annual-message-monroe-doctrine). But the document makes it clear that the European powers are not to colonise the Americas any longer, and any interventions would be compromising US national security. Of course, at the time the US was a relative backwater on the European stage, and was largely ignored. But the US forged ahead. The US expanded the Monroe Doctrine to include [Hawaii](https://www.lawfaremedia.org/article/tyler-doctrine-and-war-powers) in 1843. This would eventually lead to [Hawaii's annexation](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/1283280) by the US. US President James Polk formally endorsed [Manifest Destiny](https://millercenter.org/the-presidency/presidential-speeches/december-2-1845-first-annual-message) for the first time. Manifest Destiny is a US policy that acknowledged the racial superiority of white Americans, and that it was their destiny to civilise and bring light to the west. Things would [only get worse](https://apnews.com/article/2ded14659982426c9b2552827734be83) from here. The legacy of this has shown two centuries of coups, invasions, mass murders, and colonisation of the Americas from the US regime.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 9 months ago 100%
Today in History - Dec 1 - Rosa Parks https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/rosa-parks

December 1 is the anniversary of the arrest of [Rosa Parks](https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/rosa-parks) in 1955. Her crime was refusing to move rearward in the bus to make room for white people. Under the law, the first 10 seats were reserved for whites only. She sat in the row behind those seats on her way home from work. But as the bus filled up, the bus driver instructed her to move back in order to make room for additional white people. When she refused, the driver called the police. She was arrested, fingerprinted, and briefly imprisoned, thankfully without the customary beating. But what the police didn't know was that the black community was waiting for such a thing to happen. Rosa Parks' character was unassailable, and her "crime" was pretty obviously made up. Nowhere in the bus laws did it state that the bus driver could arbitrarily change which seats had priority white seating. Although she lost in court, and was forced to pay a $14 fine, it did spark a whole new chapter in the fight for equality in the US. The black community boycotted the buses, and staged large protests. It was here that Martin Luther King Jr. first achieved national fame. These protests would eventually lead to the forced desegragation of the US. Minorities still fight for equality in the US, but this day marked a turning point.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 30 - The Battle of Seattle https://ushistoryscene.com/article/the-battle-of-seattle/

November 30 is the anniversary of [The Battle of Seattle](https://ushistoryscene.com/article/the-battle-of-seattle/) in 1999. In the largest protest that Seattle ever saw, 40,000 people protested the World Trade Organisation (WTO), and were assaulted by Seattle police. The WTO was having a summit in Seattle to discuss the ["Millenium Round"](https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/411672?ln=en), which was to discuss plans of liberalising the global south. Plans to disrupt the conference began months earlier by a wide variety of interested groups, ranging from environmentalists, people from the global south, and anarchists. On the morning of November 30, they blocked the roads leading to the convention centre. The police promptly responded with tear gas and pepper spray on the protestors. The protestors responded by throwing things back at the police (Erroneously reported by the capitalist media as [molotov cocktails](https://archive.ph/bxoy)). The anarchists began smashing the windows of particularly heinous corporations. The protests continued for the next few days. Hundreds were arrested indiscriminately, the police ramped up their firepower to include rubber bullets and concussion grenades. The protest ultimately became one against police brutality, but the conference was ended without much being done. The protest was a success. But perhaps the biggest success that came from the protest was that it forced the media to present the protestor's side of the argument. Why would so many groups with little in common all come together and work towards destroying the WTO? Of course the answer to that is nebulous. But the [short of it](https://www.iatp.org/sites/default/files/10_Reasons_to_Dismantle_the_WTO.htm) is that neoliberal reforms often only benefit the rich. In the context of a global economy that the WTO is so eager to establish, the rich in this case become the "western" countries and the corporations that control them. The health of an economy can be thought of as how the [money](https://www.masterclass.com/articles/understanding-the-circular-flow-model-in-economics) is [flowing](https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/CPE-10-2019-0026/full/html) within it. A healthy economy will have currency flowing in a circle, as money is exchanged for goods and services. But the scenario where a worker with minimal tools makes a product by hand has to sell their product at market at the same price as a rich corporation breaks this cycle. The poor worker is forced to sell their product at ever lower prices, or take crippling loans to increase their own efficiency. The currency instead of circulating, starts flowing in one direction... from the poor to the rich. We often see this depicted in liberal media as the [Walmart effect](https://www.businessnewsdaily.com/2405-real-cost-walmart.html). This is the scenario that the WTO created. The poor workers in this case are the global south, and the industrial factories are in the west. In order to make any profit, they are forced to sell off their natural resources at bargain basement prices, or industrialise with massive loans, no matter the cost. This often leads to child labour, disastrous environmental policies, and other exploitative methods. This is why the people of the protest were so diverse. This policy only benefits the rich, increases inequality, and costs us all dearly.

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Today in History - Nov 29 - The Sand Creek Massacre www.smithsonianmag.com

November 29 is the anniversary of [The Sand Creek Massacre](https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/horrific-sand-creek-massacre-will-be-forgotten-no-more-180953403/) in 1864. This day saw the deaths of hundreds of Cheyenne and Arapaho people. Mostly women and children. The story starts in Colorado in June of that year. A white settler family is murdered, and Indians are assumed to be the perpetrators. Ever prone to paranoia, rumours quickly spread amongst the settlers that an Indian uprising with confederate support was brewing that would see them driven back east off of "their" land. So the governor of Colorado puts out an order that any Indians that do not submit themselves to a fort for "protection" and supplies are to be shot on sight. He also told all the white settlers "to go in pursuit of all hostile Indians on the plains", and any organised groups would be supplied with weapons and ammunition. In response to these declarations, Cheyenne led by Chief Black Kettle and Arapaho led by Chief Little Raven surrendered themselves to Fort Lyon. After collecting their weapons and processing them, they were told to camp at Sand Creek, where they would be under the protection of the fort. On November 28, a group of Indian hunting militia, led by Colonel Chivington arrived in Fort Lyon. Despite protests from many of the officers there, he made up plans to attack the camp on the following day. When the Indians saw the attack coming the following morning, they quickly ran up an American flag, and a white flag as instructed. Of course it didn't make much difference. Two officers refused to obey the attack order, but the vast majority of Chivington's army was happy to follow their orders. For the next 7 hours, they were met with little resistance, and did whatever they wanted to do with the people in the camp. This is ordinarily where I would describe what they did. But I'm sorry, I don't think I have it in me to do that today. It's REALLY bad. If you would like to know some of the horrors that they inflicted on the Indians that day, then I encourage you to read [Appendix I](https://www.gutenberg.org/files/50560/50560-h/50560-h.htm#Page_343) from the excellent book "A Century of Dishonour" by Helen Hunt Jackson in 1881. Suffice to say that when the US army re-enacted it in 1968 in [My Lai Village](https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/3/12/survivors-recall-us-massacre-in-my-lai) 100 years later, they were way less creative with their infanticide. But Chivington proudly paraded through Denver afterwards, showing off body parts and other souvenirs from his victory over the Indians. Although the events of the day proved horrifying even to white people of the day, no charges or punishments were ever delivered on Chivington or his men. Although many younger Indians were quite understandably outraged by this event and started raiding, Chief Black Kettle continued to advocate for peace, as he did not believe a war would be winnable. He was killed in [The Washita River Massacre](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2819736) four years later.

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Today in History - Nov 28 - The Ku Klux Klan Trials www.nps.gov

November 28 is the anniversary of the opening of the [The Ku Klux Klan Trials](https://www.nps.gov/articles/000/president-grant-takes-on-the-ku-klux-klan.htm) in 1871. Going to the extraordinary step of declaring martial law, and suspending habeas corpus for white people, the federal government began mass arrests of the Ku Klux Klan in South Carolina. The republican party at the time was abolitionist, and sought to currie favour with black voters at the end of the civil war. Voter suppresion was rampant in the south, with white people [lynching](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2089683) black people when the election didn't go their way, with little being done by the state governments or courts. The main organising force for these racist attacks was the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) terrorist group, who had greatly ramped up their attacks after a Republican election win in 1870. Murder, rape, and beatings for black people were commonplace in South Carolina. Facing the very real prospect of losing his job, the governor asked the federal government to step in. In October of that year, US president Grant ordered the disbanding of the KKK. When they refused, the military was called in and began mass arrests of KKK members. They arrested over 1000 people. Although many of the leaders had fled before they could be arrested, the trials actually went unexpectedly well. A year later, hundreds of convictions were made, and although sentences were light, there were over a thousand more in the works. The juries even had black people serving on them. But the attorney general was forced to resign after a disagreement with the railroad barons. The new attorney general was much less eager to prosecute the KKK, and progress ground to a halt. White Americans and Democrats were horrified by the federal government's overreach and supposed violation of constitutional rights. Evidently feeling that he had made a big enough show of doing something about the KKK, the US president granted pardons for all those convicted and clemency for those in progress. The trials were over. The military was present for the next election to guard against the KKK as a show of face. But the very clear message sent to the KKK was that they were truly above the law. The terrorism only [got worse](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2029680). Less constitutionally problematic of course was taking the freedom of the natives. On this day in 1872, the [Modoc War](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2714929) began, because a group of them had left their reservation to return to their homeland, ending with the hanging of their chief. The KKK is [still active](https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/articles/2017-08-14/the-kkk-is-still-based-in-22-states-in-the-us-in-2017) today, although suffers with membership problems, as there's a much wider variety of fascist groups to join these days.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 27 - The Washita River Massacre https://www.thenational.scot/news/17257248.general-custer-massacre-washita-river/

November 27 is the anniversary of [The Washita River Massacre](https://www.thenational.scot/news/17257248.general-custer-massacre-washita-river/) in 1868. A day much celebrated in the US, Colonel Custer bravely launched a surprise attack on a Cheyenne camp on the move to their new reservation. The trouble started with the [Medicine Lodge Treaty](https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/how-1867-medicine-lodge-treaty-changed-plains-indian-tribes-forever-180965357/) in 1867, that the US regime had forced them into signing. As usual, the regime had already broken their end of the agreement. They withheld treaty payments, they were trying to prevent the Indians from hunting, and were trying to take even more land. Of course, this would be met with armed resistance from the natives. Many young warriors were taking up raiding the invading white settlers in defiance. For the crime of resisting ethnic cleansing, the US regime decided ["punishment must follow crime"](https://www.nps.gov/waba/learn/historyculture/index.htm). They sent in Colonel George Custer. Chief Black Kettle was a Cheyenne chief who had survived the Sand Creek massacre four years earlier, and was doing his best to avoid a repeat of that by being subservient to the invaders. He was camped in the tribe's traditional winter camp along the Washita River, flying a white flag. He had been in contact with Fort Cobb, and had explained that the raids were not done with his knowledge or consent, and was on his way to the reservation. General Sheridan on the other hand, declared "total war", and commanded Colonel Custer to “to destroy villages and ponies, to kill or hang all warriors, and to bring back all woman and children survivors”. He was insistent that every Indian should experience the horrors of war. The Oxford English Dictionary defines terrorism: >The unlawful use of violence and intimidation, especially against civilians, in the pursuit of political aims. So Custer went out searching for Indians and found Black Kettle's village. He decided that the best course of action would be a sneak attack with no reconnaissance at dawn. And so he did. Black Kettle and his wife were shot in the back while attempting to escape. They killed everyone they could, then they slaughtered the band's horses, and razed their village, destroying their winter supplies. Custer took 53 women and children hostage. In his own words: >Indians contemplating a battle, either offensive or defensive, are always anxious to have their women and children removed from all danger. >For this reason I decided to locate our military camp as close as convenient to Chief Black Kettle’s Cheyenne village, knowing that the close proximity of their women and children... would operate as a powerful argument in favour of peace, when the question of peace or war came to be discussed. The Indian Bureau called it cold-blooded butchery, and Colonel Wynkoop, their Indian Agent resigned over the incident. But the military and the public celebrated ["the glorious victory"](https://www.oklahomatoday.com/travel/back-forward-the-washita-massacre) that Custer had achieved. The Cheyenne are still fighting to this day for the regime to recognise it as the massacre that it was.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 26 - California's "Last" Lynching https://www.crimelibrary.org/notorious_murders/classics/brooke_hart/12.html

November 26 is the anniversary of [California's "Last" Lynching](https://www.crimelibrary.org/notorious_murders/classics/brooke_hart/12.html) in 1932. This event was exceptional in two ways by US standards. The victims were white, and it was done with the full support of the governor of California. The story starts on November 9. Two small time crooks by the names of Holmes and Thurmond wanted to make the big times. They kidnapped Brooke Hart, the son of the owner of the Hart Department Store of San Jose and demanded $40,000 cash. Alex Hart, Brooke's father, immediately alerted the police. After feigning or being completely incompetent (history is unsure about this one) for a couple of days, police were able to trace the call to a payphone during what sounded like a [very frustrating](https://www.crimelibrary.org/notorious_murders/classics/brooke_hart/5.html) phone call for the kidnappers. They caught one of them. After 5 hours of interrogation, he confessed to having tossed him into San Francisco bay, and gave up his accomplice. The people of San Jose were upset. The Harts were one of their favourite families of oligarch, and the papers ran headlines calling for the kidnappers' blood, one of whom even called for mob violence. The governor of California announced on the 23rd that he would refuse to dispatch the national guard to protect the culprits. Brooke's body was found on November 26. To nobody's surprise, the first rock was thrown at the police station where they were held. The governor cancelled his travel plans to prevent the lieutenant governor from calling the national guard. So, the lynching commenced at 11PM, as scheduled by the thousands strong mob earlier in the day. Teargas was used, but it didn't do much. The mob broke in and hung both men, while goulishly scrounging for souveniers with which to remember their murder. They hung from a tree in a public park for nearly an hour before they were cut down, as the mob admired their handiwork. Of course, nobody who did the lynching ever saw any punishment. The governor congratulated the lynchers, promised pardons for anyone charged, and even suggested releasing all the kidnappers and murders from prison so that they could all be lynched. He actually called San Quentin prison to see how many kidnappers were being held. Thankfully he died 8 months later of a heart attack. Although a few of the lynchers were arrested, of course no convictions ever came. Two more known lynchings have happened in California since the "last" lynching, but were largely ignored.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 25 - The Dull Knife Fight https://www.wyohistory.org/encyclopedia/dull-knife-fight-1876-troops-attack-cheyenne-village-red-fork-powder-river

November 25 is the anniversary of [The Dull Knife Fight](https://www.wyohistory.org/encyclopedia/dull-knife-fight-1876-troops-attack-cheyenne-village-red-fork-powder-river) in 1876. Occurring five months after the [Battle of Little Bighorn](https://www.nps.gov/libi/learn/historyculture/battle-story.htm), this was the first in a series of attacks to "avenge" their mass murderer, General Custer. Cheyenne War Chief, Dull Knife was reluctant to rise up against the invading settlers. He (rightfully) felt that they could not win the war. But after the [Sand Creek Massacre](https://www.nps.gov/sand/index.htm), he could no longer remain at peace. The US military's incessant hounding eventually came to a halt at the Battle of Little Bighorn, which was the greatest victory of native forces against their oppressors. White settlers of course were shocked and horrified at their defeat, and demanded something be done about the Indians. So they sent in ["Their greatest Indian Fighter"](https://www.americanheritage.com/border-warrior), Ranald Mackenzie to eliminate further resistance to their will. So, he did. He and his native collaborators first found Dull Knife's encampment. He raided them at dawn. He forced everyone to leave the village and their belongings behind. Then he burnt it all. About 200 lodges, all their winter food, and in some cases, even their clothing. He took all of their livestock, and left them with nothing. Many froze to death in the first night, including 11 babies. The general overseeing the massacre had this to say about Mackenzie: >“I can’t commend too highly Mackenzie’s brilliant achievements and the gallantry of the troops of his command. This will be a terrible blow to the hostiles, as those Cheyennes were not only their bravest warriors but have been the head and front of most all the raids and deviltry committed in this country.” The remaining Cheyenne made their way to Crazy Horse's camp, where they spent a hard winter. They surrendered in the spring. They were moved onto a malaria infested reserve in Oklahoma without food. Half of the remaining population died in the first year on the reserve. Dull Knife led two escape attempts from the reserve. Neither of which were all that successful, but Chief Dull Knife was one of the few who managed to get away in the second escape attempt. He died in Montana, where he was born. This act of terrorism was successful. Much of the Cheyenne people's history was destroyed along with the village on this day. It was the end of hope for the native people.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 24 - Agent Orange https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1961-63v01/d275

November 24 is the anniversary of the day in 1961 that the Secretary of State told the US president that the use of [Agent Orange](https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1961-63v01/d275) was not a war crime, and has some precedence, as the British had done it before in Malaya. I have to wonder if the same logic would have been used about gassing the Vietnamese population. Regardless, that's close to what they were doing. Agent Orange is a [particularly nasty](https://www.usip.org/publications/2022/01/addressing-harmful-legacy-agent-orange-vietnam) defoliant. Before the US even started using it in Vietnam, they knew it would cause [birth defects](https://archive.ph/9kfjo), and it was quickly discovered that it also caused many forms of cancer, as well as skin and respiratory problems. They didn't care. The US wanted to use a strong defoliant in Vietnam for two reasons. To destroy crops, and to destroy forests to remove cover from the Viet Cong. They used it fairly indiscriminantly. They destroyed over 31,000 square kilometers of forest with 76 *million* liters of Agent Orange. And not just in Vietnam, but [Laos and Cambodia](https://archive.ph/DcxiY) as well. They exposed more than 4 million Vietnamese, and 2 million of their own soldiers to it. The red cross says that over a million people have health problems as a result. And that's WITH glossing over that a big part of the reason for doing this was to STARVE the Vietnamese people. US veterans of the war were of course quite upset when they found out the chemicals they were dropping on people was also going to affect them. Numerous lawsuits have been filed. The US regime gave [a pittance](https://agentorangerecord.com/the-u-s-veterans-lawsuit/) to their soldiers (about $100 per month for 10 years). They still deny its toxicity and [deny victims](https://www.reuters.com/article/vietnam-usa-agentorange-idUSPEK39498420090304/) of appeals. Of course they gave even less to the Vietnamese who still have to live in it.

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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 23 - Thanksgiving www.smithsonianmag.com

November 23 is the anniversary of the day that Franklin Roosevelt changed the date of [Thanksgiving](https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/thanksgiving-myth-and-what-we-should-be-teaching-kids-180973655/) to be the fourth Thursday in November instead of the last Thursday in 1939. The motivation was that if Thanksgiving were to be held on the 30th, then that wouldn't give businesses enough time to advertise. The decision caused general confusion and mayhem, but it made the businessmen happy. However, what I actually want to talk about today is the holiday itself. What American children are taught is that it celebrates the day that the pilgrims arrived peacefully in North America, and were attended to and cared for by the native Wampanoag tribe, culminating in a grand feast. Of course, this is a massive perversion of history designed to make the colonisers appear grandiose, and the natives to be subservient. [The true story](https://www.potawatomi.org/blog/2020/11/25/the-true-dark-history-of-thanksgiving/) is that the Wampanoags had just recently lost 75% of their population to European diseases, and their traditional enemies, the Narragansett, were doing much better comparatively. In the past decade, [over 90% ](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277379118307261)of the population had already been killed by disease. A Wampanoag man by the name of Tisquantum had been caught by slave traders a few years prior, and had learned English while in captivity. When the pilgrims arrived, he was able to speak with them to gain an alliance with them in order to guard against the Narragansett. After a successful harvest, the pilgrims celebrated by firing their guns in the air. The Wampanoags thought that fighting was breaking out, and showed up for battle. They ended up having a feast instead. The pilgrims believed that the widespread death and devastation brought by the European diseases was a sign from their god that it was their destiny to take the land. Their desire for more and more native land eventually [led to war](https://connecticuthistory.org/americas-most-devastating-conflict-king-philips-war/). The Wampanoag and the Narragansett actually ended up fighting together against the pilgrim threat after the pilgrims burned a Narragansett village, killing hundreds of women, children, and elders. But by then it was too late. The pilgrims were too numerous, and the natives had never recovered from the plague. 40% of the remaining tribe would be killed, and many of the survivors sold into slavery. Today the Wampanoag number less than 4000. After a member was uninvited to speak at a Thanksgiving address after he announced his intentions to tell the truth, [The National Day of Mourning](http://www.uaine.org/) was established. Thanksgiving first became a national holiday in 1863. Thanksgiving was entirely a propaganda move to encourage "unity" after a messy civil war. The year prior, he had ordered the largest [mass execution](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/1351150) in US history. 38 Dakota men were hung for stealing food from white people after not being given the food promised in their treaty. The holiday seems more like twisting the knife to me.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 22 - The Battle of Wild Cat Creek https://www.warof1812.ca/spurdefeat.htm

November 22 is the anniversary of [The Battle of Wild Cat Creek](https://www.warof1812.ca/spurdefeat.htm) in 1812. This day saw a brilliantly led ambush against the marauding US military that left 17 dead. Tecumseh was a great Shawnee war chief and prophet who had sought to organise a confederacy of tribes in the great lake region. The previous year had seen [a massive defeat](https://www.battlefields.org/learn/war-1812/battles/tippecanoe) for the tribes. But when war broke out between Britain and the US in the war of 1812, he sided with the British in the hopes that things would work out better this time around. Tecumseh did quite well. He led successful attacks against several US forts and managed to take Detroit without a fight. This forced the US to divide their forces, and prevent them from successfully invading Canada. The US of course couldn't tolerate being beaten by an Indian. So they acted as they normally do, by burning villages and killing women and children. Tecumseh scattered his people for safety, and came up with a plan for dealing with these marauders. He killed a sentry over the night, and stuck his head on a pole a ways from their camp. He left a lone warrior to attempt to make them give chase. It worked, probably in no small part due to their belief of being racially superior. The soldiers were blinded by their bloodthirst and chased the warrior into a canyon. When they entered the canyon, the trap was sprung, and they were taking fire. In less than two minutes, 17 men were killed, and 3 more were wounded. The battle became known as "Spur's defeat" due to the American soldiers spurring their horses hard enough to draw blood in their eagerness to run away. The general in charge of the operation was forced to retreat, and resigned in shame. The terror campaign was over for now. Of course, they would always be back. Tecumseh was killed the following year and the confederation collapsed. Eventually the tribes were forcibly relocated and scattered to the winds. The Shawnee were even lumped in with the Cherokee upon their removal to Indian Territory. Not regaining their tribal status until [the year 2000](https://www.govinfo.gov/app/details/BILLS-106s3019is).

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 21 - The First Seminole War https://seminolewars.org/index.php/history/

November 21 is thought to be the anniversary of the start of [The First Seminole War](https://seminolewars.org/index.php/history/) in 1817. For the Seminoles, this was considered to be a war already [5 years on](https://www.jaxhistory.org/patriot-war-1812/), and would go on for another half century. But for the US regime, this was the start of a new war with the Seminoles. It starts when the US built a fort near the Creek village of [Fowltown](https://www.exploresouthernhistory.com/fowltown.html). The American soldiers insisted that it was their land and that the Creeks had to relocate elsewhere due to a [forced treaty](https://encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/treaty-of-fort-jackson/) with other Creek tribes. The chief of the village refused, saying he had nothing to do with the treaty. The US sent in soldiers, and were promptly attacked. They weathered two attacks before retreating into the Florida swamps. Florida was controlled by Spain, and had granted freedom to everyone in Florida. This made it a safe haven for people fleeing the US regime be they slave or native resistance. But of course, the US regime would not tolerate these things. So incursions into Spanish territory began ramping up to attack the natives and re-enslave black people. Under the command of the infamous mass murderer Andrew Jackson, the Seminole were driven into Southern Florida. Two years later, Spain would cede Florida to the US, and things would only get worse, as Andrew Jackson first became governor, then president. The resulting ethnic cleansing would consume the lives of thousands.

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Daily US History AnarchoBolshevik 10 months ago 100%
The U.S. intentionally starved numerous Native Americans

In addition to faster methods, food deprivation was another tactic that the colonists used against the Natives. Quoting Carroll P. Kakel’s [*The American West and the Nazi East*](https://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=671A68ABF4A3DCC2B3858609B81A7A4A), pages 190–1: >In Early America, the policy of ‘concentrating’ [the] survivors of genocidal war and forced ‘removal’ on ‘reservations’ was an unplanned policy of attrition and slow death, aimed at breaking the[ir] will to resist continued settler expansion and to further the dispossession of Native Americans. On these barren reservations, [they] were subject to repeated cycles of mass epidemics and starvation. > >Early in the nineteenth century, isolated attempts were made to vaccinate certain tribes against smallpox, but these early efforts failed, due mostly to lack of interest on the part of U.S. officials. Vaccination had some effects in reducing mortality during the late 1800s and was used to induce [Native] to stay on the reservations.^32^ While ‘treaties’ often promised that [Native Americans] would be provided with the minimum necessities of life, [the] tribes frequently did not receive what was promised, and became unable to feed their populations. > >Wretched living conditions on these reservations meant only ‘slow death’ for Native Americans. As instanced above, in the Annual Report of the commissioner of Indian affairs, in 1853, U.S. Indian [*sic*] Agent Thomas Fitzpatrick described the reservation system as ‘the legalized murder of a whole nation’.^33^ Almost 40 years later, *The New York Times* would accuse the U.S. government of ‘starv[ing] those whom we pretend to feed’.^34^ > >Between 1870 and 1883, commercial hunters, aided at times by soldiers, slaughtered millions of American bison (commonly known as the American buffalo) in an extermination effort, supported by the federal government, to force the starving Plains Indians to submit to the reservation system. Aided by drought, blizzards, and other environmental factors, the hunters brought the [Natives’] primary resource — a source of food, clothing, and shelter — to the point of destruction and near‐extinction. > >Like the bison, the Plains Indian [*sic*] was brought to the point of near extinction. White settlers took the droughts, blizzards, and grass fires of the 1870s and 1880s that aided the bisons’ demise, as evidence of the ‘providential extinction of the herds’; just as their ‘superior’ domestic livestock were ‘destined’ to replace the ‘inferior’ bison, the ‘superior’ ‘white’ settlers were ‘destined’ to replace the ‘inferior’ Indians [*sic*]. As one of the buffalo hunters expressed it, ‘kill every buffalo you can ... [for] every buffalo dead is an Indian gone’. > >In the end, this strategy spared the army from having to fight the large‐scale ‘exterminationist’ ‘Indian war’ that many had predicted (and some had wanted).^35^ Dorothy Lippert’s and Stephen J. Spignesi’s *Native American History For Dummies*, [page 305](https://books.google.com/books?id=FuUfEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA305), puts it more informally: >Forcing Indians [*sic*] onto reservations and away from their hunting grounds and proven growing lands resulted in a great many deaths by starvation. > >Also, the deliberate extermination by Europeans of the life‐giving buffalo caused [the] tribes to starve and disintegrate. By 1895, the buffalo was essentailyl extinct. The Plains Indians [*sic*] suffered most from loss of the buffalo. And, again, if we follow the money, we’ll see why the animal was exploited to the point of “almost” extinction: >>✓ Their hides were worth a lot of money. >>✓ They were in the way. > >How did the tribes of the Plains Indians [*sic*] replace the meat [that] they got from the buffalo? > >They didn’t. You may be wondering how many Natives perished as a consequence of this food deprivation. Unfortunately, I have been unable to find any calculations. The number could be in the dozens, hundreds, or even thousands. I don’t know.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 20 - The Invasion of Canton www.historynet.com

November 20 is the anniversary of [The Invasion of Canton](https://www.historynet.com/red-white-blue-china/) in 1856. During the second Opium War, the US officially declared neutrality, but still managed to invade China and kill hundreds. At the outbreak of the war, the US sent in a pair of navy ships loaded with marines to "protect Americans". In late October, they landed in Canton and started waving their flags and pointing guns. Miraculously, the peace was kept for weeks, and Commander Foote managed to get the flag waving to cease. Trouble started on November 15th. While pulling out from Canton, the commander rowed his boat a little too close to one of the Chinese forts, and drew a few shots. Nobody was hurt, but Foote was very angry about the "gross insult to the flag", and vowed to destroy all four forts guarding the entrance to Canton. He spent the next day shelling the forts and preparing for a ground invasion. The attacks finally came on November 20. After days of fighting, they were successful in taking all four forts, and destroying them as best they could. They once again waved their flag on Chinese land in blatant violation of the US' stated policy at the end of a completely needless battle that killed hundreds. The Secretary of the Navy had this to say for the crime of committing an act of war against a neutral nation: > This trifling with our flag would probably have been repeated and led to still more serious consequences.…I approve, therefore, of the course pursued by you and those under your command. The brave and energetic manner in which the wrong was avenged is worthy of all praise. The gallantry, good order and intelligent subordination displayed by all engaged in the various conflicts with the enemy; the precision and admirable success with which the guns were managed, are highly creditable to the service. The US would however, manage to stay out of the war for another 3 years, until they attacked another fort in support of the British. Still officially neutral.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 19 - The Impeachment of Jack Walton theconversation.com

November 19 is the anniversary of [The Impeachment of Jack Walton](https://theconversation.com/a-forgotten-coup-in-the-american-heartland-echoes-trump-151188) in 1923. 100 years ago today. As the governor of Oklahoma, he issued a surprisingly fiery response to the [Tulsa Massacre](https://www.tulsahistory.org/exhibit/1921-tulsa-race-massacre/) and the violence following it. As mentioned [previously](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2714929) Oklahoma was recently made into a US state, annexing Indian Territory, and making it a white ethnostate. The KKK was a [very powerful force](https://shareok.org/bitstream/handle/11244/4165/7701815.PDF?sequence=1) in the new state, and their presence was everywhere, including spread throughout the high ranks of the regime. Believable reports say that Walton himself had ties to the KKK. The Tulsa Massacre was still very much in public memory at the time Walton took office. The KKK were emboldened, and violence was commonplace. A black police officer had his ear cut off, a Jewish man was beaten and had his genitals flayed. Walton felt he had to do something. History is unsure of whether morality had anything to do with it, as opposed to wanting to appeal to the anti-KKK people outside of Oklahoma for a national bid. But one thing is clear; he wanted to stop the KKK. He declared martial law in Tulsa county following the incident with the Jewish man, much to the dismay of the white residents who argued that it was not appropriate for a sophisticated city like Tulsa. Ignoring the fact that they had recently destroyed an entire black district and lynched hundreds of residents, their complaints were of course sympathised with by the media and the government at large. Walton called in the national guard and set up military tribunals. He censored the newspapers after one of them printed a KKK ad calling for people to oust him. Of course, that's what eventually happened. Most of the white residents considered him to be a dictator and far overreached his authority. The state legislature was eventually able to hold a session and voted for his removal. Despite promising to do something about the KKK after he was removed, they of course did very little. Walton was held up as a dictator and a crook. It's doubted by the modern lens that Walton was truly as moral as he claimed. There's some hand wringing that he was colluding with wealthy capitalists and lining his own pockets. I would argue that punishment for such things is *extremely* selective, and is business as usual for most. I would further argue that his real crime was treating white people the way that minorities are treated in the US. It's more than a little hypocritical to complain about suspension of habeas corpus when you are literally kidnapping/beating/murdering black people in the streets. Where is the outrage against [suspending habeas corpus and torturing](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2546895) brown people today? Things aren't much better today. A rogue governor sending in the tanks against the fascists for once is at least entertaining though.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 18 - Invasion of Nicaragua libcom.org

November 18 is the anniversary of the [Invasion of Nicaragua](https://libcom.org/article/us-orchestrated-overthrow-nicaraguan-government-1910) in 1909. Warships were sent off the coast in preparations for an invasion to remove the elected leader of Nicaragua, José Zelaya. Zelaya was a liberal president with big dreams. He sought to achieve economic independence from the US, and possibly even reunite the nation of Central America, which had broken up over 50 years earlier. These policies were of course not well received by the US. To make matters worse, rumours were spreading that Zelaya had intended to build a Nicaraguan Canal, which would compete with the American Panama Canal. Clashes between Zelaya and American oligarchs had been occuring with regularity for years. The American capitalists would make grand deals with the government, but refuse to hold up their end of the bargain. Zelaya was beginning to crack down on them. The capitalists would invariably complain to the US state department, who would then react angrily towards Nicaragua. Eventually, the US regime decided that something had to be done. They launched a propaganda campaign to drum up support for a war. Every time a misbehaving American oligarch was punished, the media would write over the top stories about Zelaya's "reign of terror". The US president said that the US "would no longer tolerate and deal with such a medieval despot". So they began planning a coup. They provided funding to the conservative opposition leader and conspired to organise a coup against Zelaya. An army was quickly assembled, and set out to depose Zelaya. It was mired in mud and incompetence, and quickly collapsed. During the fighting, two American mercenaries were captured. They were executed for attempting to overthrow the government. This provided the US with the flimsy excuse to invade that they so desperately wanted. Claiming that they needed to protect American lives, they invaded and installed a new leader of their choice. Two years later, the US fully occupied the country. They wouldn't leave until 1933, but of course they'll never stop meddling. Today Nicaragua is one of the poorest countries in the Americas, and the political situation is a mess. Which of course was the goal.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 17 - The Panama Canal hbswk.hbs.edu

November 17 is the anniversary of the first ship sailing through [The Panama Canal](https://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/panama-canal-troubled-history-astounding-turnaround) in 1914. One of the clearest cuts of American imperialism, the canal bridging the Pacific and Atlantic oceans took the US 10 years to build, and remains in operation today (when climate change doesn't make it [dry up](https://www.imf.org/en/Blogs/Articles/2023/11/15/climate-change-is-disrupting-global-trade)). Our story begins in 1903. France had thrown in the towel on constructing it after an 8 year attempt. Dangerous working conditions had drawn out the construction, and in the end over 20,000 workers had been killed, and the project was bankrupt. The US had an extreme interest in having such a canal, so decided to pick up where the French left off. They entered into negotiations with Colombia to lease the land on which the canal was to be built. But the Colombian government was stalling for time. The French canal company was scheduled to revert to Colombian ownership in 1904, and if they were able to draw the process out, they would get the payout for the French assets instead of the French shareholders. But the US regime saw this as a great opportunity to get an even better deal for the canal's land. They knew that there was a Panamanian independence movement. On November 3 of 1903, they supported that movement, and sent their navy to prevent Colombia from responding. The US had formally recognised Panama as independent and had troops on the ground in Panama before Colombia could even finish mobilising. Four days later, Panama had signed the lease, literally at gunpoint. 10 years later, and at the cost of another 5,600 worker lives, the canal was finished. Panamanians were never pleased with the deal. Eventually in 1964, Panamanians [rose up](https://adst.org/2016/07/panama-riots-1964-beginning-end-canal/) against their oppressors. Although unsuccessful at removing them from their country, it opened up the door to serious talks about handing the canal back to Panama. It would be another 36 years, but eventually Panama would win the fight. US infrastructure improvements had rendered the canal largely unimportant to the regime, and their policy of keeping the tolls low in order to aid the rich was ending up costing them more than it was earning. In essence, they lost interest in owning the canal, and surrendered it back to Panama at the turn of the millenium.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 88%
Today in History - Nov 16 - The Annexation of Indian Territory humanities.utulsa.edu

November 16 is the anniversary of [The Annexation of Indian Territory](https://humanities.utulsa.edu/remembering-the-state-that-never-was/) in 1907. Indian Territory was where all the tribes from the east coast were forcibly relocated to. This day marks the end of their sovereignty. We all know the story of [The Trail of Tears](https://www.history.com/topics/native-american-history/trail-of-tears). 60,000 people were evicted from their homes to make room for white settlers. They were told to relocate to Indian Territory on the other side of the Mississippi. There they would be able to live life as they saw fit, away from the settlers. Of course this was [a lie](https://www.britannica.com/event/Manifest-Destiny), but for a time, the survivors of the journey did enjoy some freedom and autonomy. But eventually of course, the US came to claim the land back. First they [took control](https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=CU006) over the tribal governments in 1898. Then they expanded the borders of nearby Oklahoma to include all of Indian Territory, and admitted it as a state. The tribes had wanted to be admitted as their own state (The state of Sequoia), but the US had long since bothered making any [pretense of negotiations](https://www.encyclopedia.com/history/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/indian-appropriations-act). The land was taken and Jim Crow laws were quickly passed. Any equality that [black people](https://www.americanindianmagazine.org/story/1871-end-indian-treaty-making) had felt under tribal rule was quickly swept away. The new state of Oklahoma would then become the racist cesspit that it is today. The tribes were relegated to their reservations and ceased to wield any political power. The US had won their fight for white "democracy".

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 15 - The Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam www.ritadragonette.com

November 15 is the anniversary of the 2nd event of [The Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam](https://www.ritadragonette.com/blog-content/2019/11/12/november-15-1969-moratorium-march-on-washington-a-million-reasons-to-end-the-war-or-so-we-thought) in 1969. The first one happened on October 15, and was the largest protest in US history, with over two million people demanding the end of the war. Although a smaller number of people showed up in Washington for the second protest at a "mere" 500,000 people, the second event was nationwide and drew even more attention. While this protest was happening, the US president stayed safe in his palace, watching a football game. Earlier in the month, he had given a speech where he had implied that the "silent majority" of the population supported the war, and that "North Vietnam cannot defeat or humiliate the United States". Of course this was all lies. North Vietnam did indeed defeat and humiliate the US, and polls at the time showed the 68% of the population did [not support the war](https://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/active_learning/explorations/vietnam/vietnam_pubopinion.cfm). (Oddly, this is the same number that currently want a [ceasefire in Gaza](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2701339)). The war continued for several more years before the US threw in the towel and went home. I was going to write about how things got worse instead of better after this protest. If I might break tradition a bit... I try to stick to purely factual and/or liberal sources on this comm, but I came across [this article](https://www.foreignexchanges.news/p/the-end-of-mass-politics) by Daniel Bessner in the process of writing this post. I defer the remainder of my post to him.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 14 - The Battle of La Drang billofrightsinstitute.org

November 14 is the anniversary of the start of [The Battle of La Drang](https://billofrightsinstitute.org/essays/the-vietnam-war-ia-drang-valley) in 1965. This was the first major battle that the US took part in of the Vietnam War, and set the tone for the next 8 years. The US was eager to get into the war, and to test their new tactics (air cavalry). So they had planned an attack on La Drang, which was a strategically important location that was being threatened by the North Vietnamese army. The fighting was intense. The new American tactics involved transporting infantry to the battlefield using helicopters, and continuing to reinforce and supply using air power and artillery. This worked well, and would be a commonly used tactic throughout the war. But in this battle, North Vietnam realised that if they engaged the American units at close range, they would have the advantage, as the American forces would not be able to call in artillery or air support. This would also prove to be an effective strategy going forward. In the end, the battle was basically a draw. North Vietnam had taken significantly more casualties, but they had withstood the full might of the US forces. The US president was reportedly shocked at the US military's casualties. Roughly half of their attacking force was destroyed. It was obvious that for all their proclaimed might, Vietnam would not be won easily. A mere three years later, November 14 1968 became known as ["National Turn in Your Draft Card Day"](https://www.nytimes.com/1968/11/16/archives/draft-cards-and-others-burned-torn-and-returned-in-protests.html). In the wake of a sea of bodies returning home, the American people had lost interest in fighting a war halfway around the world that wasn't any of their business. But the US being a beacon of democracy, kept the war going for as long as they could. Millions died, and they lost the war anyway.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 13 - The Fort Snelling Concentration Camp https://usdakotawarmncountybycounty.com/county/hennepin-county-us-dakota-war-fort-snelling-internment.pdf

November 13 is the anniversary of the opening of [The Fort Snelling Concentration Camp](https://usdakotawarmncountybycounty.com/county/hennepin-county-us-dakota-war-fort-snelling-internment.pdf) in 1862. Of the 1700 Dakotas imprisoned there, one in six of them didn't make it out. Most of them were women and children. Back in August, I wrote about [the Dakota War](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/1351150). With the war still ongoing, the US regime felt it best to imprison all the Dakota, whether they were involved in the war or not. There were four concentration camps set up for the Dakota, but Fort Snelling was the largest. The six day march to the camp claimed the lives of dozens. The white settlers were so interested in Indian blood that one woman was reported to have ripped a baby from their mother's hands and [throw it to the ground](https://www.twincities.com/2016/06/24/u-s-dakota-wars-aftermath-a-dark-moment-in-fort-snelling-history/) killing the baby. The Dakota imprisoned there endured harassment, rape, physical abuse, rampant disease and hunger, and generally terrible living conditions, all under the watch of Christian missionaries eager to convert them. Even the dead weren't spared. The Dakota were forced to bury their dead inside their teepees in order to keep their graves from being defiled. Eventually, the US solution to the "Dakota problem" was to relocate them to a small reservation in South Dakota that was apparently a "drought stricken wasteland" by contemporary reports. Today the Dakota still re-enact the march every two years and leave stakes in the ground with the names of their ancestors who were imprisoned there. They want the camp torn down, as it is a symbol for genocide. The US made it a [National Historic Landmark](https://www.mnhs.org/fortsnelling).

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"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearDA
Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 12 - Ellis Island www.pbs.org

November 12 is the anniversary of the closure of the [Ellis Island](https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/goldman-immigration-and-deportation-ellis-island/) Immigrant Detention Centre in 1954. It's [last inmate](https://archive.ph/oszjt) was a Norwegian merchant seaman who had overstayed his shore leave. Originally designed as an immigrant processing facility, it was opened in 1892 next to the statue of liberty. At the time the US was very interested in accepting new white settlers from Europe, and the optics of entering the country in sight of the statue of liberty was a great propaganda move. But of course, when the US speaks of liberty, it should be noted that it was not meant for all. If immigrants failed a medical test due to physical disabilities or disease, they would be detained or deported. Women without escort would be detained or deported. People deemed "immoral" by the US regime would be detained or deported. Over 120,000 people were deported from this facility. One in five immigrants spent at least some time in detention. Half of those for political reasons. By 1919, a mere 27 years after it was opened, all pretenses of it being a welcoming place were erased. Americans had become increasingly alarmed about the perceived [ethnically inferior](https://archive.ph/5afIc) quality of immigrants, and were in the process of drafting [laws](https://history.state.gov/milestones/1921-1936/immigration-act) to deal with the problem. That year saw [the palmer raids](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2619225) begin mass deportation of the regime's political enemies. Detention and deportation of these people was done on Ellis Island. The centre thus spent the last 35 years of its life as a prison. Today, it's been restored and re-opened as an [Immigration Museum](https://www.statueofliberty.org/ellis-island/national-immigration-museum/) despite spending most of its life as a prison. The US currently has over 200 immigrant prisons which hold [tens of thousands](https://trac.syr.edu/immigration/quickfacts/) of racially undesirable people enslaved [under terrible conditions](https://www.freedomforimmigrants.org/detention-statistics). The optics of doing this in the shadow of the statue of liberty was probably deemed as undesirable as their skin colour.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 11 - The Centralia Tragedy https://content.lib.washington.edu/iwwweb/read.html

November 11 is the anniversary of [The Centralia Tragedy](https://content.lib.washington.edu/iwwweb/read.html) in 1919. Our friends at the [International Workers of the World](https://www.iww.org/) were under attack once again, slightly more than a year after the [massacre in Everett](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2611426). Largely homeless, the IWW kept a hall in Centralia, WA, which was a very conservative lumber town. Being progressive and anti-war during the Great War did not mesh well with the townsfolk, who tried to run them out of town on several occasions. The largest of which was when their hall was burnt down during a red cross parade. Known for their tenacity however, they would always return. It soon became apparent that another raid on their hall was planned by the American Legion for the first armistice day parade. The police were asked to help protect them, but of course refused. So the IWW bought guns and prepared themselves for the attack. As expected, it came. The defence was successful. Four of the attackers were killed, and several more wounded. The townspeople were shocked. The story spread that the IWW had fired into a peaceful parade. IWW members were arrested. Mobs formed and lynched Wesley Everest, the IWW member who they suspected of being their leader. The mobs even managed to kill one of their own, who couldn't remember the countersign. Of course, the resulting trial was an absolute farce. 8 IWW members were convicted of 2nd degree murder, and one of them declared insane. They got sentences of 25-40 years. Although the court of public opinion eventually realised that the men were innocent, the last man wasn't released until 1939. No legionnaire was ever prosecuted. In a move heavily opposed by the American Legion, [a mural](https://creativeresistance.org/the-resurrection-of-wesley-everest/) dedicated to the lynched Wesley Everest was completed in 1997. Today the four men killed while attempting to attack the IWW are still memorialised by [a statue](https://www.historylink.org/file/20975) in Centralia. The IWW was subject to even heavier persecution in the [Palmer Raids](https://lemmygrad.ml/post/2619225).

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 87%
Today in History - Nov 10 - The Wilmington Coup www.bbc.com

November 10 is the anniversary of [The Wilmington Coup](https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-55648011) in 1898. Wilmington, North Carolina was the largest city in the state, and had a majority black population, who were starting to prosper. This did not go unnoticed by the white populace. Calls for lynching were made openly. 1898 was an election year. White people did their best to intimidate black people into not voting. The white gun store owners would not sell black people weapons. The newspapers [villified](https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-news-and-observer-negro-v-white-govt/13581075/) and [scare mongered](https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-news-and-observer-negroes-buying-gun/13581193/) the black population. Roving gangs of white people would harass black people. US Democrat Alfred Moore Waddell gave a speech the day before the election calling for white people to do their "duty", and look for black people voting: >"tell him to leave the polls and if he refuses kill, shoot him down in his tracks. We shall win tomorrow if we have to do it with guns." The Democrats of course won big time in the state. But Wilmington retained a majority black city government. Waddell, a man of his word, rode into town with hundreds of white men and even a gatling gun. They killed as many black people as they could find, and destroyed their businesses. They replaced elected politicians with their own picks. The ethnic cleansing was a success. The day left hundreds dead. Black people left the city in droves. New laws were put in place to make sure that black people would never again hold power in the state. The number of black voters in the next election had dropped from 125,000 to 6,000. The coup was swept under the rug and forgotten about for 100 years. Today, we once again see white supremacists attempting [a coup](https://apnews.com/article/jan-6-hearings-key-moments-b374e48ab5a1a0a597fd5b6ec69048c2). This time it's not even at the threat of a black person in power. It's that the man with a [quite racist](https://www.npr.org/2020/10/14/920385802/biden-vows-to-ease-racial-divisions-heres-his-record) history and would go on to [speak for genocide](https://www.reuters.com/world/us-representative-tlaib-accuses-biden-supporting-genocide-against-palestinians-2023-11-04/) wasn't quite racist enough.

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Daily US History WhatWouldKarlDo 10 months ago 100%
Today in History - Nov 9 - Massachusetts v. Laird https://ttu-ir.tdl.org/bitstream/handle/10601/96/schoen3.pdf

November 9 is the anniversary of the US Supreme Court's decision to not hear [Massachusetts v. Laird](https://ttu-ir.tdl.org/bitstream/handle/10601/96/schoen3.pdf) in 1970. The case was concerning the legal status of the Vietnam War, and although several legal challenges had been brought forth about it in the past, this one was special. The lawsuit was brought by the state of Massachusetts against the Secretary of Defence, Melvin Laird. The Vietnam War had been started by what turned out to be a [false flag](https://www.usni.org/magazines/naval-history-magazine/2008/february/truth-about-tonkin) incident, which congress issued authorisation [to protect American forces](https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/tonkin-gulf-resolution) in the area. Massachusetts felt that since no declaration of war was ever given, and congress had never authorised a war that had been going on for 7 years at that point, the war in and of itself was illegal. They passed a law that said that no inhabitant of Massachusetts shall be required to serve abroad in an armed hostility that has not been declared a war by Congress, under [Article I, Section 8, clause 11](https://constitution.congress.gov/browse/article-1/section-8/clause-11/) of the US Constitution. Then they sued the Secretary of Defence to escalate the matter to the Supreme Court. [The court declined](https://www.courtlistener.com/opinion/108247/commonwealth-of-massachusetts-v-melvin-r-laird-secretary-of-defense/) to hear the case (6-3 vote) based on lack of jurisdiction, as it was a political matter. The dissenting argument said: >We have never ruled, I believe, that when the Federal Government takes a person by the neck and submits him to punishment, imprisonment, taxation, or to some ordeal, the complaining person may not be heard in court. The rationale in cases such as the present is that government cannot take life, liberty, or property of the individual and escape adjudication by the courts of the legality of its action. I take issue with much of this statement, and the fact that this is the dissenting view should illustrate why. The US regime routinely takes life, liberty, AND property of the individual and escapes judication. One look through this comm should be proof of this. And if it's not the Supreme Court's job to judge on constitutional matters, then what is its job? Today it seems that the supreme court is perfectly willing to [write its own legislation](https://www.bu.edu/sph/news/articles/2018/supreme-court-justices-do-make-the-law/). The war was unpopular with the people, was based upon a lie, and was against domestic and international law. As the dissenting opinion wrote, the regime entirely escaped adjudication by the courts. Is this the democracy and freedom that the US claimed it was fighting for in Vietnam?

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