• cogman@lemmy.world
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        11 days ago

        It mostly started with Reagan in the 80s and was continued by Clinton in the 90s. Both republicans and democrats abandoned unions almost in lock step.

  • PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat
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    12 days ago

    The strikes were illegal back then, too. They didn’t start out armed, and then people started shooting them for striking, and they figured over time that they better arm themselves.

  • N0body@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    12 days ago

    The coming depression and reality of impossible economic conditions will test the limits of propaganda.

    Outage and infotainment are the new bread and circuses, but all distractions have their limits in the face of not being able to afford basic necessities.

    • thevoidzero@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      If the distraction was only to nake them docile then maybe, but the distraction here is using their unease and anger towards the wrong people and it seems to be working. By the time they “do something” and realize it didn’t work and it was a distraction there’ll already be a lot of irreparable damage.

    • alexfun1@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      Hey everyone! I just discovered this really interesting website - https://rice-purity-test.org/. It’s the Rice Purity Test, a self-graded survey that measures your level of “purity” or innocence related to different life experiences. Originated from Rice University in the 1960s, it’s now a popular social activity among college students and fun to share on various platforms. Check it out!

  • Sam_Bass@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    The lesson there is that it will take workers armed to the teeth to take back their rights. Learn or burn kids

    • slampisko@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      Well when you put it like that, I’d rather learn. I’m not particularly keen on burning kids

  • theangryseal@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    As a West Virginian, this rips my heart out.

    They’ve done a damn good job making the right the “Christian” side.

    People take their damn religion seriously (usually the leaders, not the text), and when you’re told every single day in an ultra religious community that being accepting of and protecting other religions is the same as a deal with the devil, it is easy to make you serve any master using your indoctrination against you. Every advance for the gays was an advance for Satan too and further solidified the demonization of the left to these people. Not long after 1921, deeply religious rural communities were introduced to an explosion of evangelical leaders and tent revivals whose preachers were all influenced by right wing Christian radio and that shit spread like wildfire. Any social advance was an advance for communism and therefore the devil.

    I love my people, and you won’t find a more giving and loving people, but my god are they indoctrinated.

    When driving through West “by God” Virginia, you will encounter 15 churches for every dollar general. No shit.

    Around 2016 I went to several churches with my uncle, and all but one of them was politicking in the pulpit. ONLY ONE focused on the love of Christ and spiritual growth.

    According the people who went to his little church, he just wasn’t “fired up” enough. To me he was the only worthwhile leader there.

    I don’t know. I tell people all the time around home that their ancestors fought and died for their rights as workers. They’d all willingly walk into fire before forsaking the religious leaders in the community though.

    Another big part of it is that their only source of income is coal. The left wants to end coal use. In all honesty it has starved and destroyed the place because it is so engrained in the culture that no one bothered to look for alternatives. It could have been manufacturing, and West Virginia would gladly accept lower wages than the rest of the US for such work, but it ain’t China cheap. So we’re doomed here. Everyone believes that the only hope is coal because it’s the only place to make a living.

    My brother was making 30 bucks and hour when minimum wage was 5.15 (what the rest of us were making with no hope of anything better).

    I don’t know. I get worked up thinking about all of this. Especially right now with my hometown under water likely due to climate change. The current flooding is the worst on record, but you can’t convince folks even while they’re drowning.

    • Dogiedog64@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      Damn dude, that’s fucked. I loved going to WV for summer camps as a kid, the wilderness in that state is incredible, but you’re absolutely right about the church density and lack of infrastructure.

      Every time I pass through that state, it’s always small Americana towns loaded with beautiful architecture and small businesses on the verge of collapse, while the town churches look like new. It’s a truly baffling phenomenon until you recognize that Churches provide a lot of the social structure and safety nets for people there.

      And while a lot of their issues can be traced back to the coal-dependence of the state, a lot of it can be traced to regional policy that just left the state behind. WV isn’t near dead last in the nation in every category because it wants to be, but damn it all if they aren’t doing anything that could help change that. Louisiana is like that too; dead last in everything, with so much squandered potential.

      • Venator@lemmy.nz
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        11 days ago

        (j/k) the joke being it’s a satire of the more common saying that makes even less sense: “people don’t want to work anymore”. Nobody has ever wanted to work. That’s kind of the point.

  • BenLeMan@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    Oh, THAT armed rebellion for “their rights”. Yeah. Yeah. That was a good one.