We Aren’t Headed Toward #Authoritarianism. We’re Here

The U.S. has a long, dark history of deploying troops to attack #protestors that dates back to the 19th century. What can we learn from it to counter #Trump’s latest attacks?

Zeb Larson Jun 11, 2025

"On Saturday evening, Donald Trump announced that he was deploying 2,000 California National Guard troops to quell anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles. He did so using a rarely used law that allows the president to take control of a National Guard if there is a “a rebellion or danger of a rebellion against the authority of the Government of the United States.” This is against the wishes of Governor Gavin Newsom, who has said that the troops will only inflame tensions. Protests continued throughout Sunday night and seem likely to escalate on Monday.

"This is a calculated attempt by the Trump administration to provoke a conflict. They hope to show cities in chaos in order to justify accelerating 'deportations.' Even though deportations remain stubbornly popular, approval over their methods is slipping, and the images of ICE agents raiding restaurants, immigration hearings, and schools undercuts the narrative about deporting criminals. #StephenMiller is reportedly angry at the 'slow' pace of arresting immigrants without due process and sending them off to brutal prison camps in foreign countries to which they have no association, like El Salvador, Libya, and South Sudan, and wants to speed them up to reach a quota of 3,000 a day. But to do that, they need to demonstrate greater urgency. They likely picked California because of the state’s size and prominence, and to undercut any attempt at states bucking or resisting immigration enforcement.

"This is an incredibly worrying step in the country’s march toward authoritarianism. The fact that the police are shooting rubber bullets at reporters is equally disturbing, as it seems clear that law enforcement will side with the federal authorities. We can’t rest complacently and assume that 'it can’t happen here.' It can and it is. And U.S. history offers plenty of past examples, with state militia and federal troops having been deployed against protesters as early as the 19th century. Back then, both were used to put down labor disputes and force striking workers back to work. Major strikes such as the #StrikeOf1877, the #GreatSouthwestStrike of 1886, and the #PullmanStrike in 1894 all ended by either federal troops’ or state militias’ force.

"At the turn of the 20th century came the massacres of African Americans. In 1917, strikes and labor disputes in East St. Louis, Illinois, erupted into one of the most violent race riots in U.S. history. African Americans fought back against white attackers, and the Illinois National Guard was called in to restore peace—but they chose in most cases to join in on the attacks or at the least, just stood back and allowed them to happen. Anywhere between 40 and 150 Black people died, and thousands more were left homeless. During the #TulsaMassacre in 1921, the Oklahoma National Guard disarmed Black citizens trying to defend themselves and marched them into detention camps, even after white rioters had commandeered planes from the local airfield and dropped bombs on their homes—an unprecedented act."

Read more:
https://www.damemagazine.com/2025/06/11/we-arent-headed-toward-authoritarianism-were-here/

#USPol #NoKings #Protest #Solidarity
#Immigrants #MassDeportation
#EndICE #StopICE #Project2025 #Trump #MAGA #ThisIsFascism
#ThisIsWhatYouVotedFor
#ElectionsHaveConsequences
#TrumpParade #SaveDemocracy
#USConstitution #DueProcess #FirstAid #JustFollowingOrders
#NationalGuard #Resistance #OathToDefendTheConstitution #FashPatel #TrumpIsANazi #StephenMillerIsANazi

We Aren’t Headed Toward Authoritarianism. We’re Here - Dame Magazine

On Saturday evening, Donald Trump announced that he was deploying 2,000 California National Guard troops to quell anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles. He did so using a rarely used law that allows the president to take control of a National Guard if there is a “a rebellion or danger of a rebellion against the authority

Dame Magazine -
On #ThisDayInHistory in 1894, ARU launched the #PullmanStrike. Before its end in July, the #strike involved 250,000 workers in 27 states refusing to attach Pullman cars. It was caused by massive rent increases and wage reductions. Its leader, #EugeneDebs, was imprisoned for it.

"One of the first-ever uses of aerial-dropped bombs was against the miners' army in West Virginia. The Italians had done it a few years earlier in Ethiopia."

#LettersAndPolitics welcomes #RobertOvetz, author of #WhenWorkersShotBack: #ClassConflict from 1877 to 1921

https://kpfa.org/episode/letters-and-politics-april-30-2025/

#labor #labour #laborHistory #labourHistory #USlaborHistory #UShistory #AmericanHistory #GreatRailroadStrikeOf1877 #WestVirginiaCoalWars #PullmanStrike #books @bookstodon @histodons

When Workers Shot Back | KPFA

Guest: Robert Ovetz is a lecturer in Political Science and Public Administration at San José State University. He writes about the politics of the labor movement, work, and the crisis of capitalism at the turn of the 20th century. He is the author of the book When Workers Shot Back: Class Conflict from 1877 to … Continued

KPFA
On #ThisDayInHistory in 1894, the #PullmanStrike turned into a boycott. The #AFL refused to honour calls for a #GeneralStrike in support of #EugeneDebs's #ARU and Democratic President Cleveland used force and troops to put #railroads back into operation. #Solidarity matters.
In 1867, the city's Trades Assembly called a general strike to protest the state's new eight-hour day law, which allowed employers to contract ...
Yesterday’s Radicals Have Become Today’s Establishment
Yesterday’s Radicals Have Become Today’s Establishment

Community organizing was born in Chicago, so it's a surprise that it took so long for an organizer to become mayor.

Chicago Magazine