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March 28, 2024: Supply Chains, Immigrants and Baltimore

Heather Cox Richardson Letters from an American
The workers who died in the bridge collapse on Tuesday “were not ‘poisoning the blood of our country they were replenishing it…. They may have been born all over the continent, but when these men plunged into our waters, they died as Americans."

This Week in People’s History, Apr 2–8

Portside
The cover of the book "Look for Me in the Whirlwind: From the Panther 21 to 21st-Century Revolutions"
A Jury Frees the Panther 21 (in 1969), 8 Hours a Day is Long Enough to Work (1919), When You're Hot, You're Hot (1964), Take Your War and Shove It! (1969), You CAN Fight City Hall (1934), Inventing Email Wasn't Easy (1969), Jim Crow Must Go! (1964)

Do It Yourself, Brother: Cultural Autonomy and the New Thing

Christian Noakes Monthly Review
The story of the struggle to liberate jazz from the exploitative, white-controlled music industry in 1950s, the seminal events of the movement and backlash from white civil society and the legacy of Black cultural autonomy and resistance.

30,000 Reasons: Argentines Uphold Memory in the Streets

Daniel Cholakian NACLA
March 24 commemorates the victims of state terrorism in Argentina. As President Javier Milei defends perpetrators of genocide, remembering becomes a form of resisting far-right and denialist policies.