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#deathpenalty

3 postitusega3 osalejaga1 postitust täna

#China has executed four #Canadians over #drug-related convictions, #Canada’s foreign affairs minister said Wednesday, a development that threatens to worsen an already tense relationship between the countries.

Mélanie Joly, the Canadian minister, told reporters that she condemned the #executions, & that the government would still seek clemency for others.

#geopolitics #insanity #DeathPenalty #law #InternationalLaw #HumanRights
nytimes.com/2025/03/19/world/a

Canada’s foreign affairs minister, Mélanie Joly, during a news conference last week.
The New York Times · Canada Condemns China’s Execution of 4 Canadians on Drug ConvictionsMeaghan Tobin poolt

Today in Labor History March 15, 1917: The U.S. Supreme Court approved the 8-hour workday under the threat of a rail strike. Philadelphia carpenters struck for the 10-hour day in 1791 and by the 1830s, it had become a general demand of workers. In 1835, Philadelphia workers organized the first general strike in North America, led by Irish coal heavers, in the struggle for a 10-hour day. However, by 1836, labor movement publications were calling for an 8-hour day. In 1864, the 8-hour day became a central demand of the Chicago labor movement. In 1867, a citywide strike for the 8-hour day shut down the city's economy for a week before falling apart. During the 1870s, eight hours became a central demand of the U.S. labor movement, with a network of 8-Hour Leagues forming across the nation.

In 1872, 100,000 workers in New York City struck and won the eight-hour day. On May 1, 1886 Albert Parsons, head of the Chicago Knights of Labor, led 80,000 people down Michigan Avenue in the first modern May Day Parade, with workers chanting, "Eight-hour day with no cut in pay." Within days, 350,000 workers went on strike nationwide for the 8-hour day. On 3 May 1886, anarchist August Spies, editor of the Arbeiter-Zeitung (Workers Newspaper), spoke to 6,000 workers. Afterwards, they marched to the McCormick plant in Chicago to harass scab workers. The police arrived and opened fire, killing four and wounding many more. On May 4, workers protested this police violence at a meeting in Haymarket Square. An unknown assailant hurled a bomb at the police. The authorities rounded up hundreds of labor activists and anarchists. They convicted 8 in a kangaroo court and executed four of them, including Parsons and Spies.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average American currently works 8.8 hours every day. This, of course, does not include commute time which, for many Americans, can add another two or more hours a day to the time they give away for free to their bosses. Nor does it include work we take home. The scam of being a “salaried” employee is commonly exploited by bosses, who argue that we are paid based on the responsibilities completed, regardless of how long it takes to complete them.

Read my full article on Lucy Parsons, which goes deeper into the Haymarket affair and the struggle for the 8 hour day: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/03/

Heute vor 50 Jahren starb die #Schauspielerin #SusanHayward in #Hollywood. 1959 hatte sie den #Oscar als beste Hauptdarstellerin für ihre Rolle in »Laßt mich leben« gewonnen. Mehr zum #Film:

▶ Ulrike Weckel, Mit Mitteln des Spielfilms gegen die #Todesstrafe. I Want to Live! (1958), #WerkstattGeschichte 85/2022, werkstattgeschichte.de/alle_au

@histodons @historikerinnen

Even if you accept the death penaly as 'just and right' (which I do not), the evidence of prosecution fraud and a refusal to reconsider evidence in the light of modern forensics (basic DNA analysis for crying out loud) - this is a stain on America. I won't say humanity just yet, there are a lot of unplesent people out there - they just seem to have a lot more power to abuse and lie in a country that considers itself modern.

theguardian.com/us-news/2025/m

The Guardian · America’s next killing spree: 10 days, five states, six death-row prisoners set to dieEd Pilkington poolt

Brad Sigmon, 67, was put to death by firing squad at 6.05pm this evening at the Broad River Correctional Institution in Columbia, South Carolina.

In 2001, he brutally murdered his ex girlfriend’s parents and kidnapped her, although she was fortunately able to escape. He immediately admitted to police that he had snapped and didn’t know why he did it, but he did it. He was never evaluated for mental healthiness.

In the years he’s been in prison, he was a model prisoner, with no infractions. He expressed deep remorse for his crime.

None the less, McMasters, the governor of South Carolina, who couldn’t even be bothered to be there to see his execution orders performed, did not stay the execution, and at 6:03pm, three high caliber shots were fired into Brad Sigmon’s chest.

Because somehow the state committing murder is acceptable. It’s the 21st damn century, I think it’s time to move past the death penalty now.

Jätkatud lõim

„Sigmon chose to be executed by firing squad due to concerns about South Carolina’s lethal injection drugs. The return of such an antiquated — and to critics, barbaric — method underscores the complex nature of the American death penalty system in the modern era, where safety and availability issues with lethal injection have prompted some states to devise new methods, like nitrogen gas, or re-embrace old ones.“
#capitalPunishment #deathPenalty #udhr #fundamentalRights

Jailhouse snitch testimony is considered a red flag by many legal experts. According to the National Registry of Exonerations, 256 people who have been exonerated of felonies in the United States since 1989 were convicted in a case using jailhouse informant testimony. Sixteen were from #Texas. texasobserver.org/david-wood-e

The Texas Observer · David Wood, Set for Execution, Says He Was Never the 'Desert Killer'Wood’s attorneys have requested that more than 100 additional pieces of evidence be tested for DNA, but the state has opposed the request for over a decade. 

Today in Labor History February 28, 1887: Clément Duval had his death sentence commuted to life in prison. He was a French anarchist and criminal whose ideas influenced the illegalist movement of the 1910s. The most famous illegalist was Jules Bonot, who orchestrated one of the world’s first bank heist utilizing a getaway car. According to Paul Albert, Duval’s story was the basis for the bestseller Papillon, about multiple escape attempts from Devil’s Island. In October 1886, Duval broke into the mansion of a Parisian socialite, stole 15,000 francs, and accidentally setting the house on fire. His trial drew crowds of supporters and ended in chaos when he was dragged from the court, shouting "Long live anarchy!"

#workingclass #LaborHistory #prison #anarchism #illegalism #papillon #devilsisland #clémentduval #DeathPenalty #julesbonot #bankrobbery #books #novel #fiction #author #writer @bookstadon

#SCOTUS ordered a new trial for #Oklahoma #DeathRow inmate Richard Glossip, whose long-running appeal attracted support from a broad coalition after investigations revealed prosecutorial misconduct.

Glossip’s request was backed by OK’s top #law enforcement ofcl, who agreed… he did not receive a #fair trial for a 1997 killing. Both sides say prosecutors suppressed #evidence & elicited #false #testimony from a key witness also implicated in the murder.

#law #DeathPenalty
washingtonpost.com/politics/20

The Washington Post · Supreme Court orders new trial for Oklahoma death row inmateAnn E. Marimow poolt