From Workers World | workers.org <[email protected]>
Subject Seattle’s 60,000-strong march propels anti-racist struggle in Washington state + more from Workers World
Date June 16, 2020 1:01 PM
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** Seattle’s 60,000-strong march propels anti-racist struggle in Washington state ([link removed] )
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Seattle June 13 — Some 60,000 people, propelled by the ongoing global struggle against racist police repression, took part in Seattle’s June 12 march and statewide general strike. The march, called and led by Black Lives Matter of Seattle and Martin Luther King County (BLMSKC), followed two weeks of protests . . .

Continue reading Seattle’s 60,000-strong march propels anti-racist struggle in Washington state at Workers.org ([link removed])



** 35 years after MOVE bombing, communities denounce police terror ([link removed] )
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Philadelphia A protest against Philadelphia Police Terror on June 13 drew around 1,500 demonstrators to the Osage Avenue site where Philadelphia police dropped a military-grade bomb on the MOVE organization on May 13, 1985. Eleven Black men, women and children were murdered after police and city officials ordered fire fighters . . .

Continue reading 35 years after MOVE bombing, communities denounce police terror at Workers.org ([link removed])



** Black Lives Matter in Alpine, Texas ([link removed] )
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This protest march and rally, in the small town of Alpine, Texas, might have been a common scene in the tumultuous summer of 1968, but this was June 6, 2020. Not Dallas or Houston or San Antonio, but in Alpine. Hundreds mobilized in solidarity with Black Lives Matter and against . . .

Continue reading Black Lives Matter in Alpine, Texas at Workers.org ([link removed])



** Racism, lack of jobs as workers face social pandemic ([link removed] )
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June 12 — On June 5, President Donald Trump was over the moon with joy. The numbers were “stupendous,” “AMAZING” and “INCREDIBLE.” The Dow Jones stock index was up by 829 points, or 3.2 percent, so speculators who bet right made billions. It didn’t last. June 11 saw a decline . . .

Continue reading Racism, lack of jobs as workers face social pandemic at Workers.org ([link removed])



** Woman veteran of Long March, Wang Dingguo ¡presente! ([link removed] )
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Wang Dingguo, the oldest female veteran of the Chinese Red Army’s Long March, died at the age of 107 on June 9. (China Daily, June 11) When Wang was 20 years old in 1933, she joined the Chinese Communist Party after running away from a five-year marriage she had been . . .

Continue reading Woman veteran of Long March, Wang Dingguo ¡presente! at Workers.org ([link removed])

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