Minnesota lawmakers are supporting a strike on Jan. 23, urging people to skip work, stay home from school and not go shopping for the day. More on why they support the strike here:
A scheduled, one-day strike is not “general” strike unless it’s combined with a lot of very serious actions. Seriously, the way people treat the terms “general strike” and “civil war” and “literally” and “gaslight” you would think language has lost all meaning.
There is no chance of Americans broadly coordinating an actual General Strike, it entails the shut-down of all services, logistics and GDP in an entire country for as long as it takes for the ruling government to collapse.
I can find maybe five or six examples of this actually happening in the last century in places under totalitarian/authoritarian rule, like Cuba, Philippines, Chile and Zaire, and in most of those cases it was combined with actual insurrection/rebellion that included fighting in the streets and rebel groups actually working out deals with the country’s military leadership. We are so very far from this kind of action it might as well be fan-fiction.
In most of the places where this has been employed, the country was already basically at a stand-still, and if anyone out there thinks we’re close to that, you really, really need to turn off your feed and stop scrolling.
I mean, it’s fine as a demonstration or protest, it DOES send a signal, but the term loses weight when it’s used to describe non-disruptive actions.
There is a bigger coordination for a mass general strike on May 1st 2028 headed by the UAW. Being 2 years out sucks, and it was planned before trump won the election, but it’s a concrete date that all unions can plan for.
I find it telling and sadly predictable that despite being well-informed and in-touch with labor and politics, that this is the first I’ve seen of this.
Curious how we don’t realize how filtered our information feed is until we actually talk to each other.
Anyway, we should be pushing and sharing this a lot more, having union involvement is the only way we punch capital in the snotlocker and make them listen even for a moment.
A scheduled, one-day strike is not “general” strike unless it’s combined with a lot of very serious actions. Seriously, the way people treat the terms “general strike” and “civil war” and “literally” and “gaslight” you would think language has lost all meaning.
There is no chance of Americans broadly coordinating an actual General Strike, it entails the shut-down of all services, logistics and GDP in an entire country for as long as it takes for the ruling government to collapse.
I can find maybe five or six examples of this actually happening in the last century in places under totalitarian/authoritarian rule, like Cuba, Philippines, Chile and Zaire, and in most of those cases it was combined with actual insurrection/rebellion that included fighting in the streets and rebel groups actually working out deals with the country’s military leadership. We are so very far from this kind of action it might as well be fan-fiction.
In most of the places where this has been employed, the country was already basically at a stand-still, and if anyone out there thinks we’re close to that, you really, really need to turn off your feed and stop scrolling.
I mean, it’s fine as a demonstration or protest, it DOES send a signal, but the term loses weight when it’s used to describe non-disruptive actions.
There is a bigger coordination for a mass general strike on May 1st 2028 headed by the UAW. Being 2 years out sucks, and it was planned before trump won the election, but it’s a concrete date that all unions can plan for.
I find it telling and sadly predictable that despite being well-informed and in-touch with labor and politics, that this is the first I’ve seen of this.
Curious how we don’t realize how filtered our information feed is until we actually talk to each other.
Anyway, we should be pushing and sharing this a lot more, having union involvement is the only way we punch capital in the snotlocker and make them listen even for a moment.