On this day in 1914, the Colorado National Guard torched a tent encampment of 1,200 coal miners & their families, then opened fire on them as they ran for their lives. Twenty-six men, women & children were killed in the incident, known as the #LudlowMassacre.
When the strike started, the mining companies evicted the miners from the shacks they had been forced to live in, as a result, the strikers created a tent encampment. For more than a year, the strikers fought off strike breakers & violent attacks.
The owner of one of the mines was the celebrated, capitalist Rockefeller family, who tried to destroy the strike by hiring a militia, which opened fire w/ a machine gun on the strikers. After that didn’t crush them, the Rockefellers paid for the deployment of Colorado’s NTL Guard
The massacre started when the National Guard troops fired their machine guns on the tents & the miners fired back. The National Guard lured the strikers’ leader away saying they wanted to negotiate a truce, but then murdered him. At dusk, the massacre began.
When the strike was finally crushed, the union had not won recognition, sixty-six men, women, and children had been killed (in over a year of striking) & not one militiaman or mine guard had been indicted for a crime.
Read more: zinnedproject.org/materials/ludl…
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On this day in 1863, US Federal troops committed one of the deadliest massacres of Native Americans in US history when they shot, beat, ran down and stabbed, at least 250 starving Shoshone people in what is now Idaho. #BearRiverMassacre
The Bear River Massacre was a surprise attack. The leaders of the Shoshone had failed to properly prepare for the attack because they believed they could negotiate a truce with the troops led Col. Patrick Edward Connor.
The massacre began at 6:00am on a frigid morning. Connor’s 200 men attacked without mercy for over four hours, charging and shooting at every one alive: men, women, and children, all were slaughtered.
On this day in 2017, US SEALs killed 8-year-old American citizen “Nora” Nawar Al-Awlaki along with 24 other civilians, (incl. 9 young children) in a raid on a village in Yemen village. US Apache gunships destroyed entire homes & fired on villagers as they fled.
"Nawar was shot several times, with one bullet piercing her neck. She was bleeding for two hours because it was not possible to get her medical attention,“ Nawar's uncle Ammar Al-Aulaqi said.
Ammar wrote that Nawar’s last words were, “Don't cry mama, I'm fine, I'm fine.”
Nawar's grandfather, told Reuters, "Why kill children? This is the new [US] administration – it's very sad, a big crime."
This Week in 2001: US Military Bombed an Afghan Village, Killing 23 Civilians (Mostly Young Children) open.substack.com/pub/americanva…
Villagers who rushed to assist those injured by the bombing were injured when the US resumed bombing the village once again. Survivors say the US bombed the village a total of three separate times.
Maroof, aged thirty-eight, lived on a farm near the village of Thori. When he rushed to the village the next day, he found villagers digging through the ruble of his relatives’ home. Twelve bodies of his relatives were recovered from the debris of the family compound.
On this day in 1988, the US Navy shot down an Iranian civilian airliner, killing all 290 people on board (including 66 children). The US attempted to cover-up its responsibility for the atrocity & has never apologized or admitted wrongdoing. Many of the bodies were never found.
Capt. Will Rogers III, who commanded the USS Vincenees, which attacked the airliner was described by others Navy officers as “aggressive”, “trigger happy”, and looking to gain combat experience, even if it meant committing war crimes.
Rogers illegally chased Iranian Navy vessels into Iranian waters, when the electronics on his ship detected a plane, in Iranian airspace, on a regular airline route, leaving at a regularly scheduled time. Capt. Rogers ordered the airline shot down, killing 290 civilians.
On this day in 1991, the U.S. bombed the Amiriya civilian air raid shelter in Iraq, which was sheltering a thousand sleeping civilians, massacring 408 Iraqi civilians (261 women and 52 children).
At 4am on Feb. 13, two US F-117s dropped 2 laser-guided “smart bombs” on the shelter. The 1st, pierced the fortified concrete wall of the shelter, jamming its thick steel doors & trapping everyone inside. The 2nd bomb followed through first hole & exploded deep inside the shelter
The youngest victim was seven days old. Most of the victims were incinerated by the heat of the explosion. The bodies taken out by rescue workers later were charred, unrecognizable, and some were still smoldering. The smell of burned flesh stayed in the neighborhood for days.
On this day in 2017, US SEALs killed 8-year-old American citizen “Nora” Nawar Al-Awlaki along with 24 other civilians, (incl. 9 young children) in a raid on a village in Yemen. U.S. Apache gunships destroyed entire homes and fired on villagers as they fled.
"Nawar was shot several times, with one bullet piercing her neck. She was bleeding for two hours because it was not possible to get her medical attention,“ Nawar's uncle, Ammar Al-Aulaqi said.
Ammar wrote that Nawar’s last words were, “'Don't cry mama, I'm fine, I'm fine.”
Nawar's grandfather, told Reuters, "Why kill children? This is the new [US] administration – it's very sad, a big crime."