On this day we remember the Battle of Lake Okeechobee in 1837, an important, anti-colonial struggle against Manifest Destiny and the genocide of African and Native peoples. Seminole fighters were victorious in what was the worst defeat for the U.S. in 40+ years of Florida warfare
The Seminole people lived freely on the southern Atlantic coast before U.S. and European colonial powers brutally pushed them out of their homes and into Florida.
The U.S. slave owning elites passed racist laws that broke all treaties, igniting warfare and forced removal of Native people. Seminoles fled south to seek independence. Africans who had earlier escaped bondage welcomed them to Florida and offered them a safe haven.
The two groups forged a prosperous multicultural nation + military alliance to defend against European invaders and slave catchers. This alliance angered U.S. slaveholders who saw this unity between oppressed peoples as a direct threat to the white supremacist plantation system.
The U.S. Constitution of 1789 embraced slavery and protected slaveholder interests, as many slave owners were elected into legislative positions.
In 1816, General Andrew Jackson ordered a major U.S. assault on Seminole land, authorizing slave-catching "Patriots" and massacres on Seminole fields.
On Christmas Day 1837, hundreds of Seminole fighters gathered at Lake Okeechobee ready to halt the armies of Colonel Zachary Taylor, a Louisiana slaveholder and ambitious career soldier, known by many as an “Indian killer.”
Lake Okeechobee was the worst U.S. defeat in more than 40 years of Florida warfare. Despite their losses and forced retreat, Taylor declared victory anyway, bragging that “the Indians were driven in every direction.”
Taylor was promoted and later became the 12th U.S. president.
Seminole death counts were not recorded.
On Christmas Day 183 years later, we remember the Battle as an important, anti-colonial struggle against Manifest Destiny and the genocide of African and Native peoples on stolen land.
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Thirty-one years ago, the socialist government of Romania was overthrown in a military coup d’etat.
Industrialization had transformed the lives of millions of Romanians during the country’s socialist period. But the later years were marked by strict rationing and frequent shortages as the government sought to pay off its foreign debt.
Romanian people hoped that their lives would improve after 1989. But life today is much worse than even the most economically-deprived times of the 1980s. A 2010 poll revealed that 63 percent of Romanians say that life was better under socialism.
Since the Venezuelan people elected Cmdte Hugo Chávez President of the Republic on Dec 6, 1998, the U.S. empire defined a strategic doctrine, a plan that has since dominated the relations between the U.S. & Venezuela: the doctrine of regime change.
This ideology states that the United States will not allow consolidation in Venezuela of a political project and a democracy governed by the principles of independence, self-determination, sovereignty and equality between States.
Boston's historic Harriet Tubman House sold by @UnitedSouthEnd and demolished... for LUXURY CONDOS.
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Since 1908, the Boston Harriet Tubman House was the historic community hub for Black and working class people in the South End — until it was demolished to make way for luxury condos.
In 1904, six Black women — including one of Tubman’s friends Julia O. Henson — rented the first Harriet Tubman House at 37 Holyoke Street in the South End to provide shelter to other Black women who had just moved from the South.
Today the world is celebrating the 200th anniversary of the birth of Friedrich Engles, renowned across the globe as one of the greatest revolutionaries and theorists to ever live.
Engels, who along with Karl Marx founded the modern communist movement, was born on November 28, 1820 in what was then the Kingdom of Prussia. He dedicated his life to the revolutionary struggle of the proletariat to free itself from capitalism and usher in a new era of history.
Beyond the key documents he co-authored with Marx, Engels’ work has stood the test of time as an essential guide for successive generations of revolutionaries who want to understand the world in order to change it.
Statement last year from renowned Native leader and political prisoner Leonard Peltier, who has been unjustly incarcerated for more than 44 years: "The year is coming to a close, and with it comes the day most Americans set aside as a day for Thanksgiving."
"I try to imagine what the people who live outside the prison gates are doing, and what they are thinking. Do they ever think of the Indigenous people who were forced from their homelands?"
"Do they understand that with every step they take, no matter the direction, that they are walking on stolen land?"