• TheFriar@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Hey, I mean…now might be a great time for a general strike. Solve a few problems, huh?

    • InputZero@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Serious question, how does a general strike start? How do you organize that many people quickly?

      • Notyou@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        Social media. It has been used for quick grass roots organizing in many countries.

        I have my own conspiracy theories on why X/Twitter and the like have been crashed the way they did.

      • Phoenix3875@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The Russian general strike of 1905 is mainly a result of defeat in a foreign war combined with the bloody Sunday. So people spontaneously started to strike, with little to none organization.

        In fact, at the start of the general strike, most socialist parties were taken by surprise, and only after they realized that the revolution was happening, did they try to enter the scene and steer the movement.

            • uis@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Hey! Hey! Hey! Bloody Sunday!

              Bullet-dummy, brothers, won’t take us.

              Is “life for tsar” our concern?

              Tell me mother about fifth year.

              - ELYSYUM, 1905

            • nickwitha_k (he/him)@lemmy.sdf.org
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              1 year ago

              There were a few in Ireland. The one generally referred to in recent times was a 1972 massacre in Derry’s Bogside district (the city has the Waterside, historically inhabited but unionists and descendents of English-backed colonists, and the Bogside, historically inhabited by native Irish). During a march to protest the internment without trial of Irish Republicans, British paratroopers opened fire, killing 13 (another later died of wounds) and injuring another 12.

              This was an inflection point in the history of The Troubles, escalating the conflict. Despite multiple investigations showing the actions to be unjustified and unjustifiable, none of those implicated have yet stood trial, though one is set to, after years of prosecutors trying to avoid it, additionally, all of the soldiers’ names remain redacted.

              There were at least 3 others in Ireland as well. One of the others with major conflict implications being the 1920 massacre of civilians at Croke Park in Dublin. In reaction to a morning assassination of British Army intelligence officers by the IRA, the Black and Tans (Royal Irish Constabulary; British occupational force) drove armored cars to the football pitch and opened fire, without provocation, on the 5,000 spectators and players of a Gaelic football match, killing 15, including three children and a young woman (the latter I mention primarily as it was even more impactful at the time), and wounding 80, all civilians.

              This significantly damaged the perception of British authority intentionally and with the indigenous population of Ireland, and garnered increased increased support for the IRA.