5 • 930 Ratings
🗓️ 15 May 2025
⏱️ 111 minutes
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0:00.0 | The President |
0:02.0 | The Water is with the |
0:05.0 | The water Biggie Jack Bigger This is hell. |
0:50.5 | Live from United States where capitalism is the virus, this is hell, when whatever left is left in the United States, or for that matter, whatever left there ever was, when there is any waxing nostalgic about some now long ago past radical successes or victories? |
1:15.6 | A make America left again moment, if you will. |
1:19.6 | Supporters often look back to the New Deal as inspiration for what is possible when times are tough, |
1:26.6 | when tremendous economic losses are socialized and imposed upon all. |
1:32.1 | Following generations of greed, when profits created by everyone else are hoarded by the wealthy few, |
1:39.9 | as they always are, like we are witnessing in this new gilded age after not learning our lessons from the inequalities of an earlier time of premeditated cruelty. |
1:51.2 | When these nightmares return, many turn to the era of the New Deal |
1:54.9 | and the hope for all that it allegedly promised. |
1:59.3 | But there's the problem that the new era hope was not necessarily meant |
2:06.7 | for everybody. In fact, black labor had to fight hard to be accepted into labor unions, which were, |
2:13.9 | as everything was and much still is today, dominated by white races. |
2:20.8 | What those union leaders who were excluding black workers from having equal standing |
2:26.0 | within their ranks did not realize, and history rarely acknowledges, is that black labor |
2:32.7 | power did not come from big labor organizing from the biggest unions. |
2:39.0 | Just like the civil rights movement did not originate within major rights organizations. |
2:46.0 | Instead, it had a more organic origin, developing throughout many aspects of black culture and society, |
2:52.7 | forcing its way into a labor movement that would be rejuvenated and benefit all, no matter |
2:59.3 | their race. When considering black labor, much of 20th century history can be understood |
3:05.0 | as a time of black activism having a far greater impact on that time |
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