
Articles
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Aug 8, 2024 |
progressivehub.net | Tadhg Larabee |Eva Rosenfeld
Georgia’s sweeping and political application of conspiracy law echoes a tactic that shattered the left roughly a hundred years ago, when the U.S. government targeted socialist parties and militant unions with laws against criminal syndicalism, espionage, and sedition. By Tadhg Larabee and Eva Rosenfeld, DissentJust after sunrise on November 13, 2023, hundreds of protesters gathered in Gresham Park on Atlanta’s outskirts. As they zipped up painted jumpsuits, a police helicopter circled overhead.
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Jun 6, 2024 |
portside.org | Tadhg Larabee |Eva Rosenfeld
The Criminalization of Solidarity: The Stop Cop City Prosecutions Published June 6, 2024 Just after sunrise on November 13, 2023, hundreds of protesters gathered in Gresham Park on Atlanta’s outskirts. As they zipped up painted jumpsuits, a police helicopter circled overhead. It was the start of the latest action in a sprawling, decentralized campaign to stop construction of the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center, better known as Cop City.
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May 22, 2024 |
dissentmagazine.org | Tadhg Larabee |Eva Rosenfeld |Amna Akbar |Daniel Boguslaw
The Criminalization of Solidarity: The Stop Cop City Prosecutions Georgia’s sweeping and political application of conspiracy law echoes a tactic that shattered the left roughly a hundred years ago, when the U.S. government targeted socialist parties and militant unions with laws against criminal syndicalism, espionage, and sedition. and ▪ Spring 2024 Just after sunrise on November 13, 2023, hundreds of protesters gathered in Gresham Park on Atlanta’s outskirts.
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Dec 24, 2023 |
jacobin.com | Tadhg Larabee
Christmas came bitterly in 1894, amid the gloom of an exceptionally harsh winter and the nation’s worst-ever economic depression. That year, crops froze across the South, President Grover Cleveland suppressed the Pullman Strike, and, as unemployment rose to nearly 20 percent, an Ohio man named Jacob Coxey led the jobless in a massive march on Washington.
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Oct 5, 2023 |
portside.org | Tadhg Larabee
A Newly Translated Novel Captures the Tragedy of Greek Communism Published October 5, 2023 Greece’s communists began the mid-twentieth century on the battlefield, moved from there to the prisons and then, if they were lucky, exile. The less fortunate found themselves in front of firing squads. During World War II, the Communist Party of Greece (KKE) led the resistance against the Nazis, and at the end of the war, it controlled most of the country.
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