Attended: Blood on the Mountain, February 21, 2017
On February 21, 2017, I attended the documentary film: Blood on the Mountain. This documentary film described the lives of coal miners in West Virginia, it showed the hardships coal miners went through to keep their jobs and their health safe from mining corporations. In relation to my class: Appalachia Studies I understood these hardships, it also made me aware of how these hardships affect the Appalachia region and the families of the coal miners. Despite understanding some of these hardships I will never be able to describe these hardships fully in their entirety, but I can relate these hardships to the course, Appalachia Studies to the best of my abilities.
Therefore, some of the hardships
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The coal miners also went on strike because of their health problems from coal mining because a lot of coal miners got Black Lung disease from mining in the coal mines. I remember in my Appalachia Studies class talking about this disease and the health problems of the coal miners and how mining corporations wouldn’t give the coal miners compensation for their health issues. Having prior knowledge of this issue made me wonder if the mining corporations really cared for their employees the answer is no. I discovered this answer from the documentary film, Blood on the Mountain in one segment were one of the owners from the mining corporation Massey, was interviewed he claimed that his employees got fair compensation, but the answer is no according to my Appalachia Studies class and the documentary …show more content…
Coal miners will always continue to fight for their rights to fair wages and health benefits. However, its apparent from the readings in class and this documentary that because coal miners were of a low social class often called hillbilly’s the mining corporations thought they could use them without giving them their full rights to fair wages and health compensation.
In conclusion, the documentary film: Blood on the Mountain brought me to some new perspective on what coal miners had to go through, but I was also able to relate to this film because I had prior knowledge of these hardships. It was interesting on what these coal miners went through and I am glad I got to be able to hear from two different informative
Instead of negotiating with the workers the employers simply replaced them. The workers retaliated by completely destroying houses: "rails and mine carts [were] torn apart, and a host of other equipment in and around the mine [were] set alight" (23). Furthermore the miners chased many families to the forests of Vancouver Island due to their outrage at the men who replaced their positions on the mines. The government reciprocated by forming a militia.
The workers were requesting unionization of the work place. In my opinion, the most persuasive argument is that of the workers and their request to have the factory unionized, which would create a contractual relationship that covers all workers in the factory with respect to wages, hours and work conditions. It would diminish Harris and Blanck’s authority. Harris and Blanck used private detective agencies to provide replacement workers. They even hired prostitutes to start fights with the workers on strike and paid off local
For this week, I was assigned to read the chapter, Cravat Coal in Confessions of a Union Buster, were written by Marty Jay Levitt and Terry Conrow and the article was published in 1993. In the article, Levitt and Conrow talked about a lot of things but mostly Wagner Act and what the employers can do or not to the workers. The question for this assignment—“Based on details in the article, “Cravat Coal”, how does the Wagner Act favor the employer?” The authors talked about delaying time showed the workers that union is not a quick fix.
The workers gather to listen to several speakers over the five days near the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company among those giving the speaks there was both a pled from those who discouraged violence and encourage the crowd to join together against the companies; however, this was also a pled from those who urge worked to take action of violent revolution. The Haymarket Riot turned into a violent event resulting in a controversy trial that supported the discrimination against union members. Perhaps the greatest lasting effect of the riot was that it created a widespread revulsion against union, which caused membership to decline and reduce union influence; because unions became lined to radical ideas and violence in the popular mind. (Avial,2011)
Miners had to go through many struggles whether it be being paid so little it results in poverty and hunger, working through dangerous conditions that cause accidents and miners being seriously injured and killed, when protesting for these rights for decent pay and better safety they were beaten by company thugs or even the police, they lived in company towns that helped little and made debts go up which resulted in families being forced out of their company houses, and when finally getting these basic rights many miners fell ill due to breathing in the coal dust for many years and no protection from it. Coal mining may have created jobs for poor men and immigrants, and earned the government money yet miners and their families for many years were ignored and looked after so terribly that many lives were lost too prematurely. " The company couldn 't be loved as it many times in the past proved, it didn 't love us." -James
Hardship is an endeavor no person yearns for, and logically it’s fathomable why we’d steer away from difficulties. However, one can only value what they have when they’ve survived the unimaginable, because without hardships we’d be oblivious to the triumphs in life. History is an abyss of unfortunate events, nevertheless we have conquered every setback. The civil war, for example, was one of the United States most traumatic times. Much can be said about the bloodiest four years in american history, but overall in order to find harmony between the divided sides, we had to fight battle by battle for a cause that, with all the gruesome sacrifices no longer seemed worth it.
The organized labor of 1875-1900 was unsuccessful in proving the position of workers because of the future strikes, and the intrinsical feeling of preponderation of employers over employees and the lack of regime support. In 1877, railroad work across the country took part in a cyclopean strike that resulted in mass violence and very few reforms. An editorial, from the Incipient York Time verbalized: "the strike is ostensibly hopeless, and must be regarded as nothing more than a rash and splenetic demonstration of resentment by men too incognizant or too temerarious to understand their own interest" (Document B). In 1892, workers at the Homestead steel plant near Pittsburg ambulated out on strike and mass chaos the lives of at least two Pinkerton detectives and one civilian, among many other laborers death (Document G).
In Braddock the work day went from eight hours to twelve hours, and in Homestead workers had to agree to the mills terms to return to work. Kratcha did not like the strikes, but Andrej approved of them saying, “While you’re losing a dollar, Carnegie will be losing thousands… Take a penny from [the millionaires] and they will bleed” (40). Although many workers, mostly those in support or in unions, approved of the strikes, they still made it difficult for many workers to support themselves when they were receiving no pay due to a shutdown mill. With the strain that strikes put on low income workers, Unions made it difficult for laborers, like Kratcha, to earn a steady income,
The work was also dangerous with not much supervising by the government. Workers, on the other hand, had little or even no bargaining power to leave the unsafe conditions. Nowadays, When Americans only pay attention when extreme work strike, levels of abuse are the norm hidden in the factories around the globe. Although the condition seems much improved, consumers don’t know the true fact- “Today, American citizens simply cannot know the working conditions of the factories that make the products they buy.
Andrew Carnegie was one of the most famous and wealthiest American industrialist during the Industrial Age. He was a robber baron who made a fortune in the steel industry and applied vertical integration to his business. Carnegie contradicted his views as a robber baron because he supported, but destroyed many unions. This made many of his views unethical.
In the United States there are many people that suffer without cause and by situations not of their own making. Consider, by way of illustration, the plight and suffering found on Native American reservations. With many reservations located in harsh, dry deserts far from thriving metropolitan areas, tribespeople are essentially surrounded by their unforgiving conditions and are subjected to lives of neglect, drunkenness, and poverty. The natives are suffering without cause and by circumstances not of their own creation. Native American reservations suffer from a lack of economic stimulation.
He refused to make any fair agreements, wanting to keep his money to himself. And this resulted in 125,000 workers losing their job. In other words, Pullman did not care about the workers. The question is, How can a “fair response” be made by someone who does not care about the victims of the economic
The story starts with a famous poet Li Bo and his faithful friend Ah Wu, a legendary crossbowman, traveling along the Long River to Yunnan to serve sentence Li Bo to exile in Yunnan, silencing his poetic gift. The two companions end up following a mysterious mist in the woods, leading them to the Dream Temple. After spending a night in the temple, the two awake from their dreams to find that the temple is gone. All that is left is what appears to be an ancient Han grave and an all-powerful sword that was described to Li Bo in his dream: The Dragon Pool Sword that he must take to the Rain Goddess on Mount Wu.
SUMMARY Thinking Like a Mountain is a phase used in he book “A Sand County Almanac” by the famous author Aldo Leopold. Aldo Leopold is considered to be a renowned ecologist and a forester who taught Wildlife Management at the University of Wisconsin. He was considered to be one of the foremost writers in America. Thinking Like a Mountain is a narration of the Leopold when he first time watched a wolf die and he wonders what the mountains might know which the other people never realized.
50 Cent: Blood on the Sand is an arcade-styled third-person, cover-based shooter developed by Swordfish Studios and published by THQ. Blood on the Sand stars 50 Cent as he rampages through a non-specified Middle-Eastern country seeking recompense for a performance. Is Blood on the Sand solely the purview of masochists intent on satisfying their morbid curiosities or is it a hidden gem on the last generation of consoles? 50 Cent's Narcissistic Power Fantasy Simulator 50 Cent soaks in the unconditional adoration showered upon him by the captivated audience for a brief moment before he drops the microphone onto the floor and exits the stage together with his G-Unit compatriots. Once the rappers are backstage, Fifty receives a troubling phone call: someone has neglected to honor the agreed upon remuneration of $10 million.