this post was submitted on 05 Sep 2025
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the Cork Transport Workers' Union took possession of the Harbour Board's offices and assumed complete control of the local port, forming a workers' soviet until negotiations could be resolved.

The Cork Harbour Strike was a labor dispute that lasted from September 2nd to September 7th, 1921. It was the result of the refusal of the Cork Harbor Board to increase the wages of its workers to a minimum of 70s a week.

On September 6th, 1921, the Cork Transport Workers' Union took possession of the Harbour Board's offices and assumed complete control of the port.

According to the New York Times, "when the strikers took possession of the Harbour Board offices, they hoisted a red flag as a token of Soviet control and the strikers' leaders announced their intention of collecting dues from shipping agents and using them to pay members of the union."

The rebellion was short-lived, however, as negotiations between the Harbour Board and the strikers were reopened soon after, which came to a successful resolution. The revolt was not well-taken in the press.

The Irish Times wrote "To-day Irish Labour is permeated with a spirit of revolt against all the principles and conventions of ordered society. The country's lawless state in recent months is partly responsible for this sinister development, and the wild teachings of the Russian Revolution have fallen on willing ears."

The Cork harbour strike of 1921 libcom trouble

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[–] vegeta1@hexbear.net 5 points 1 day ago (1 children)

https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2025/9/3/us-and-eu-sanctions-have-killed-38-million-people-since-1970 this study talks about how many people sanctions from the west has killed. I still gotta read more into this though

[–] AernaLingus@hexbear.net 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Horrifying statistic. For a more lib-friendly source, I found an LA Times opinion piece that covers the same study. Its analysis of how it can be stopped is hopelessly lib-brained and idealistic, and it also doesn't emphasize that this is the intended result, so you'd need to supplement that aspect by making the kinds of points made in the article you linked. I mainly posted it because I can see a lot of people going, "Al Jazeera? Aren't they terrorists or something?" and either not reading the article or dismissing its points, although for a receptive audience I think the Al Jazeera article is superior. I guess one positive thing I can say about the LA Times piece is that it goes into a bit more detail about Venezuela in particular:

Damage to the economy can sometimes be even more deadly than just the blocking of critical, life-sustaining imports. Venezuela is an example of a country that suffered all of these impacts, and the case is far more well-documented than for most of the now 25% of countries under sanctions (up from 8% in the 1960s). In Venezuela, the first year of sanctions under the first Trump administration took tens of thousands of lives. Then things got even worse, as the U.S. cut off the country from the international financial system and oil exports, froze billions of dollars of assets and imposed "secondary sanctions" on countries that tried to do business with Venezuela.

Venezuela experienced the worst depression, without a war, in world history. This was from 2012 to 2020, with the economy contracting by 71% β€” more than three times the severity of the Great Depression in the U.S. in the 1930s. Most of this was found to be the result of the sanctions.

[–] vegeta1@hexbear.net 2 points 1 day ago

I knew the sanctions in Venezuela were horrible but the great depression statistic really puts into perspective how devastating it is. And people act like just because there wasn't a great war this end of history time is some neolib utopia.