Forwarded from Ministry of good ideas
Good Idea: listen to radio stations from across the globe
http://radio.garden
Using a real globe you can select radiostations based on location, which makes for some nice discoveries and lets you learn about different cultures without leaving your chair.
http://radio.garden
Using a real globe you can select radiostations based on location, which makes for some nice discoveries and lets you learn about different cultures without leaving your chair.
radio.garden
Explore live radio by rotating the globe
Explore live radio by rotating the globe.
Forwarded from Radical Graffiti
"Refugees are our brothers. Let's deport the fascists"
Graffiti in Athens by Panathinaikos football fans
Graffiti in Athens by Panathinaikos football fans
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Forwarded from 🎓 TIL - Today I Learned but no 🐝
Forwarded from Hüseyin Dogru Journalist / red. media founder
The lesser-known but no less dirty CIA covert war in Colombia, known as “Plan Colombia,” was launched 24 years ago today by former US President Bill Clinton. What followed was over a decade of brutal counterinsurgency warfare aimed at revolutionary forces, most notably the communist FARC guerrillas, in Colombia. The Colombian government was the most significant ally of US imperialism in Latin America at the time.
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🟡 Join @theredstream 🟡 Boost our channel 🟡 YouTube 🟡 Instagram 🟡 Patreon
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Forwarded from Working Class History
Media
On this day, 13 July 1977, a two-day blackout began in New York City, during which many residents took advantage of the situation to expropriate goods from shops.Following multiple lightning strikes on power lines, the lights went out in all five boroughs by 9:40 PM. Amidst a financial crisis, and widespread cuts and layoffs, unrest broke out especially in working-class Black neighbourhoods like Bushwick and Harlem.Residents looted supermarkets, using the shopping trolleys to fill with food, while elsewhere people broke windows of closed stores to steal goods. Arson attacks also occurred.One young teenager, Jalil Muhammad, recalled to Ramsey Khalifeh and Amanda Rozon of Gothamist:"What tends to happen, especially in an economic depressed area, you live among the 'have-nots'... You see things and you want it, and this is the opportunity to go and get it."Before the power came back on on July 15, over 1600 shops had been damaged, over 1000 fires had broken out and around 4000 people arrested.More information, sources and map: https://stories.workingclasshistory.com/article/12574/new-york-blackout * If you enjoy our social media posts be sure to check out our podcasts. In our flagship longform podcast, Working Class History, we speak with participants in social movements about their experiences, and our daily mini podcast, On This Day in Working Class History, has one of our anniversaries each day. We also have a website and map containing thousands of our stories with full sources. All of our work is funded by you, our readers and listeners, on Patreon. To learn more and support us check out our links in our bio.
On this day, 13 July 1977, a two-day blackout began in New York City, during which many residents took advantage of the situation to expropriate goods from shops.Following multiple lightning strikes on power lines, the lights went out in all five boroughs by 9:40 PM. Amidst a financial crisis, and widespread cuts and layoffs, unrest broke out especially in working-class Black neighbourhoods like Bushwick and Harlem.Residents looted supermarkets, using the shopping trolleys to fill with food, while elsewhere people broke windows of closed stores to steal goods. Arson attacks also occurred.One young teenager, Jalil Muhammad, recalled to Ramsey Khalifeh and Amanda Rozon of Gothamist:"What tends to happen, especially in an economic depressed area, you live among the 'have-nots'... You see things and you want it, and this is the opportunity to go and get it."Before the power came back on on July 15, over 1600 shops had been damaged, over 1000 fires had broken out and around 4000 people arrested.More information, sources and map: https://stories.workingclasshistory.com/article/12574/new-york-blackout * If you enjoy our social media posts be sure to check out our podcasts. In our flagship longform podcast, Working Class History, we speak with participants in social movements about their experiences, and our daily mini podcast, On This Day in Working Class History, has one of our anniversaries each day. We also have a website and map containing thousands of our stories with full sources. All of our work is funded by you, our readers and listeners, on Patreon. To learn more and support us check out our links in our bio.