Researching mines in northern Spain I came across this curious object. It's a canary cage designed to keep the canary alive in the event of a gas leak. If a miner saw the canary laying at the bottom of the cage it was time to abandon everything and leave the mine, but not without first closing the latched glass door and opening the valve of the oxygen bottle to save the bird. A miner would do that on their way out and take the bird with them. It's a signifier of the miner's legendary sense of solidarity, no lives lost to the mine on a miners watch. A solidarity that was also crucial in the fight for workers rights, creating safer and more humane working conditions, achievements of unionization and solidarity that some of us still enjoy today.
@zilog A few months ago I was reading Amitav Ghosh's _The Great Derangement_. The book points toward Timothy Mitchell for thinking about the different influences of coal and oil. It is beautiful to see this sort of safety net of the bird peers too!
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bs2 (@[email protected])

> There’s often thought to be a negative relationship between oil and democracy. If you have a lot of oil, if you’re a state that produces a lot of oil, you seem to be undemocratic. What I try to show in the book is there’s a much longer and more interesting history of this relationship between oil and democracy, and that it involves us as much as the countries that depend on the production of oil. https://www.democracynow.org/2013/10/8/from_caspian_sea_to_arctic_to #CarbonDemocracy by #TimothyMitchell is quoted in #GreatDerangement

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@bsmall2 that's a great reference, thanks for sharing