Request an Invite » Login

Pinterest is an online pinboard.
Organize and share things you love.

Politics and People's History

645 followers, 27 pins

Jailing Americans for Profit: The Rise of the Prison Industrial Complex (by John W. Whitehead). Qt. "In truth, there are more black men in the grip of the criminal-justice system -- in prison, on probation, or on parole -- than were in slavery then. Over all, there are now more people under 'correctional supervision' in America -- more than six million -- than were in the Gulag Archipelago under Stalin at its height."

Howard Zinn "Protest beyond the law... is absolutely essential..."

2 likes 1 repin

Support Literacy

5 likes 3 repins

Great Depression, tent city

Inside a factory, great depression.

1 comment

Profile picture of Tom Butler

Tom Butler Yea but the factories were still there even if mostly empty, now they are gone and not likely to come back.

Dear Republican women:

2 likes 4 repins

Pinterest, you have yet to respond to my simple request for upgrades (letting us have folders for our boards so the content is easier to manage), even though I have emailed support about it three times. But this? This is more important. You know full well that users are pinning things that they themselves did not create. You cannot own this content nor can you really sell it. And if you do sell it, you cannot hold pinners responsible for YOUR legal fees.

1 comment 1 repin

Profile picture of Susan Kirk

Susan Kirk I repinned this with your note. I hope everyone shares!

The commercialization of childhood in the US

Black Friday, or as I call it, Buy Nothing Day

Why we need real sex ed in the US

1 like 2 repins

'You shouldn't be arrested for stealing a free education. It's just wrong.'

sacred space altar @ Occupy Wall Street

1 repin

Why you should be in passionate horny love with Elizabeth ‘Nellie Bly’ Cochrane Born in 1864/65, Elizabeth, one of 15 children, was always ‘the rebellious one’. Fierce as fuck from an early age, she testified against her abusive stepfather in her mother’s divorce trial. In 1880 she enrolled in a teacher-training college but had to leave after her first semester due to lack of funding - then moved to Pittsburgh to help run a goddamn boarding school. This is where we get to the good shit. Age 18, she wrote a letter-to-the-editor of the Pittsburgh Dispatch bitchslapping the everloving fuck out of a sexist ballsack of an article entitled ‘What Girls Are Good For’. The editor was so goddamn wooed by her razor-sharp tongue that he RAN AN AD asking her to identify herself. Elizabeth owned up, and was hired instantaneously, her badassery radiating from her pores and intoxicating all within a twenty mile radius. Working under the pen-name Nellie Bly, Elizabeth kicked the butts of morons everywhere, writing articles aimed at social justice, particularly labour laws to protect working ‘girls’ and reform of Pennsylvania’s divorce law, which greatly favoured men. Not content with changing the world from behind her desk, Elizabeth became a founding mother of investigative journalism. She was expelled from Mexico for exposing political corruption, and henceforth wrapped in cotton wool by her editors. Infuriated by their mollycoddling, Lizzie left them a note essentially telling them to fuck themselves and hot footed it to NYC. She was still only 23. Within six months she was hired by Joseph fucking Pulitzer himself, and continued her batshit crazy investigations uninhibited. Her very first assingment had her feigning mental illness to expose repulsive conditions in Blackwell’s Island Insane Asylum. Her cutting report was so fucking horrifying, compelling and persuasive that it triggered public and political action, leading to reform of the institution. In the next couple of years she had herself thrown in jail and hired by a sweatshop, all for shits and giggles. Oh, and to uncover incomprehensible injustice, cruelty, poverty, and the concealed, heinous treatment of the vulnerable and voiceless. But was pioneering journalism, social revolution and batshit badassery enough for our Liz? Like fuck it was. On a whim Nellie did what any self-respecting 25 year old woman in the 1800s would do - she emulated Jules Verne’s Around the World in Eighty Days, and did it in 72. Millions followed her journey, and its appeal to a semi-literate populace resulted in greatly increased newspaper readership. So while travelling the entire globe (IN THE 1800s, AS A WOMAN) by ship, train, burro and balloon, she helped the world to read. Having essentially conquered the entire goddamn universe before hitting 30, Nellie retired, and wed 72 year old industrialist Robert Seaman. Their marriage was a happy one, and after his death she took over Iron Clad Manufacturing Co. But Lizzie was a writer, what would she know about the metal industry? Well, she INVENTED the steel barrel that became the model for the widely used 55-gallon drum and turned her inherited businesses into multimillion-dollar companies, so apparently a fuck ton. Furthermore, she set a precedent for working conditions, ensuring her workers had good pay, gymnasiums, staffed libraries, and health care, all completely unheard of at the time, while still writing to further the plight of the Suffragette movement. Nellie may have died age 58 of pneumonia, but HBICs live on forever.

1 like 1 repin

Thank you to whoever made this!! Every time I see that original pin I feel sad that people actually think that way!

1 like 3 repins

London: National Women's Social and Political Union, ca. 1909. Torturing the suffragettes

Um, yeah.

3 likes 1 repin

Pin Loader ImageFetching pins…