Anonymous ID: 0dc4a1 July 12, 2021, 11:33 p.m. No.14111807   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14111752

The human form, among many others, is endemic to every part of the Unicos. A hybrid form of Human-Reptilian came to earth and genetically engineered the Earth Humans to be stupider with shorter life spans in order to be their slaves.

Anonymous ID: 0dc4a1 July 13, 2021, 12:36 a.m. No.14112025   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2038 >>2045

>>14111968

https://speccoll.library.arizona.edu/news/remembering-bisbee-deportation-1917

 

Perhaps the most infamous event in Arizona labor history is the Bisbee Deportation of 1917, an illegal vigilante action taken against striking copper workers and the residents of Bisbee. The outbreak of the First World War drove copper prices up and turned the Bisbee mine into a 24/7 operation. On June 24, 1917 workers represented by the Industrial Workers of the World (I.W.W.) presented a list of demands to the mine owners that included increased safety measures, and a wage system that did not discriminate by race and was not tied to the market price of copper. The demands were rejected and three days later about half of the labor force went on strike. Rumors of sabotage by striking workers helped fuel fears among local businessmen and workers loyal to the mine. Vigilante groups were formed and controlled by Cochise County Sheriff Harry Wheeler. On July 12 about 2,000 “deputies” assembled and began rounding up workers. By 11:00am 1,186 men, many of whom weren’t on strike or even mine workers, were loaded on boxcars and shipped east to New Mexico. The train stopped in Hermanas, N.M. where the men were abandoned without shelter in the desert. Another boxcar eventually brought them food and water. Two days later federal troops would arrive to provide shelter and assistance. President Wilson set up an investigative commission that concluded there was no federal law that applied to prosecute the vigilantes. The state of Arizona took no legal action against the copper companies or vigilantes. A number of lawsuits were filed by the exiled workers. Most of these were dismissed or settled out of court. One did go to trial which ended in a “not guilty” verdict. The event helped crush the labor movement in Arizona, but was influential on the labor movement around the country.