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LaborFest

LaborFest

LaborFest was established in 1994 to institutionalize the history and culture of working people in an annual labor cultural, film and arts festival.

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1 day ago
LaborFest

Trump, The Rise Of Fascism & The Fascist Government
youtu.be/Xfqay_z2B70
The rise of fascism in the US and internationally has a long history and the role and history of Trump are critical to its success. WorkWeek interviews Russ Bellant, a long time researcher and writer on the fascist movement in the United States.
He reports on the organization and funding of the fascist movement by fascist billionaires, the ideology and methods of organizing and how this movement was able to come to power
in the United States. He also discusses the religious fundamentalist ideology that these forces have propagated.
This interview was done on 5/7/2025.
Additional Media:
The Coming Fascist Government, Trump, The Nazis and Their New "Min Kampf”
youtu.be/F7LYC9qKzGI
If Trump Wins, Fascism, Project 2025, The Unions & Democracy
youtu.be/tIJ5TwVwdJ8
WorkWeek
ttps://soundcloud.com/workweek-radio
Production of Labor Video Project
www.labormedia.net
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1 week ago
LaborFest

Watsonville On Strike See MoreSee Less

Watsonville On Strike
1 week ago
LaborFest

MAY DAY HISTORY FILM
“We Mean To Make Things Over: A History Of May Day"
www.cft.org/post/we-mean-make-things-over-history-may-day#:~:text=Video&text=NEW!,inspired%20the%….

NEW! Half-hour documentary video looks at how May Day became the workers’ holiday all over the world except in the United States, despite the fact that the events that inspired the holiday occurred here. Using historical images, contemporary illustrations, and animation, We Mean to Make Things Over is an educational and entertaining tour of a long-suppressed story from American working class history. For more information and background on the video, go to the We Mean To Make Things

In the 19th century, it was common for American workers to labor for 10 or more hours a day, six or even seven days a week. The struggle for the eight-hour day began in earnest in the 1860s, slowly winning the goal workplace by workplace, state by state, but always prone to reversal during economic depressions. Employers were dead set against it, claiming, as they continue to do today whenever workers call for a better deal, that should it prevail, it would be the permanent ruin of business, and all the jobs will disappear. Instead of the eight-hour day, in the words of railroad baron George Baer:

“The rights of the laboring man will be protected, and cared for, not by the labor agitator, but by the Christian men to whom God has given control of the property interests in this country.”

The battle for the eight-hour day built to a call for a general strike on May 1, 1886 answered by a third of a million workers across the country. But after the infamous events in Haymarket Square in Chicago — involving a bomb, an unknown perpetrator, and a police riot — the city’s employers and government unleashed a red scare, targeting the most effective immigrant worker organizers. It ended in the kangaroo court conviction and hanging of four men and continued imprisonment of three others. Illinois governor John Peter Altgeld, after examining the matter, pardoned and freed the prisoners, declaring their trial a miscarriage of justice.

The Haymarket martyrs’ cause was taken up by the newly formed Socialist International, which among its first orders of business designated May Day as a day of remembrance and called for its establishment as a workers’ holiday the world over. In one country after another, workers’ movements pushed employers and governments to recognize May 1 as a paid holiday and to establish the eight-hour workday as the standard. At times, the May 1 movement was met with bloody repression. In some places, it took a general strike to win the holiday and the eight-hour workday.

In the US, Labor Day in September was viewed as a safe alternative, a non-radical day of rest for workers, untainted with association with anarchism, socialism, and the Haymarket bombing. It took another half-century before the eight-hour day was made the standard workday in the United States with passage of the Fair Labor Standards Act in 1938.

Today, International Workers Day, or Labor Day as it is simply called in many places, is celebrated in close to 100 countries. Despite May Day’s lack of official recognition in the United States, the idea has been making a surprising comeback against traditional Cold War–era disapproval over the past few years. As a new generation becomes radicalized by the continuing failure of neoliberal capitalism to offer a viable future, perhaps the egalitarian ideas behind May Day will resonate with young people fighting against systemic racism, economic inequality and climate change, and for a better world.
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