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submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

November 11 is the anniversary of The Centralia Tragedy in 1919. Our friends at the International Workers of the World were under attack once again, slightly more than a year after the massacre in Everett.

Largely homeless, the IWW kept a hall in Centralia, WA, which was a very conservative lumber town. Being progressive and anti-war during the Great War did not mesh well with the townsfolk, who tried to run them out of town on several occasions. The largest of which was when their hall was burnt down during a red cross parade. Known for their tenacity however, they would always return.

It soon became apparent that another raid on their hall was planned by the American Legion for the first armistice day parade. The police were asked to help protect them, but of course refused. So the IWW bought guns and prepared themselves for the attack. As expected, it came.

The defence was successful. Four of the attackers were killed, and several more wounded. The townspeople were shocked. The story spread that the IWW had fired into a peaceful parade. IWW members were arrested. Mobs formed and lynched Wesley Everest, the IWW member who they suspected of being their leader. The mobs even managed to kill one of their own, who couldn't remember the countersign.

Of course, the resulting trial was an absolute farce. 8 IWW members were convicted of 2nd degree murder, and one of them declared insane. They got sentences of 25-40 years. Although the court of public opinion eventually realised that the men were innocent, the last man wasn't released until 1939. No legionnaire was ever prosecuted.

In a move heavily opposed by the American Legion, a mural dedicated to the lynched Wesley Everest was completed in 1997. Today the four men killed while attempting to attack the IWW are still memorialised by a statue in Centralia. The IWW was subject to even heavier persecution in the Palmer Raids.

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[-] [email protected] 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Owsley followed this statement with something perhaps less anticipated: ‘Should the day ever come when they menace the freedom of our representative government, the Legion would not hesitate to take things into its own hands — to fight the “reds” as the Fascisti of Italy fought them.’ Here the head of the American Legion, the defender of American democracy, seemed to be suggesting that the anti‐democratic squadristi of Italian Fascism offered solutions to the potential of worker unrest in America.

Could Owsley simply have been speaking in hyperbole? Was it possible he was unaware of Fascism’s true political meaning? It would seem, in fact, that he knew the import of his words: ‘Do not forget’, he went on, ‘that the Fascisti are to Italy what the American Legion is to the United States. And that Mussolini, the new premier, was the commander of the Legion — the ex‐servicemen of Italy…’ He concluded on an ominous note: ‘The Legion is not in politics […] But there is plenty of politics in the Legion — potential power, I mean.’^2^

Owsley’s words were not merely idle: he sent an invitation to Mussolini to deliver the principal address that year at the American Legion’s San Francisco convention. Nor was Owsley an isolated individual in the Legion: invitations to speak at their conventions continued to be extended to Mussolini by the Legion.

At the 1931 convention, national commander Ralph O’Neill presented the [Fascist] ambassador de Martino with a resolution of the National Executive of the Legion expressing support for Mussolini. In 1935, Colonel William Esterwood, national vice‐commander of the Legion, made Mussolini an honorary member of the American Legion and visited him to present him with a medal.^3^

(Emphasis added. Source.)

[-] [email protected] 1 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Honourable mentions to:

Iceland launches an investigation in 2010 into the US embassy after it was discovered that US embassies were spying on allied countries. (Spoiler: they totally were, but it's now normalised. Chinese spy balloons still alarming though).

In a move shockingly unfit for Armistice Day, the US Regime lowered the conscription age to eighteen in 1942. ~~Drinking age still 21.~~

this post was submitted on 12 Nov 2023
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