Mayday, Mayday: The Return of the American Strike Fantasy

The roots go back to the late 19th century, when American labor was less “9 to 5” and more “sunup to collapse.” The rallying cry was simple: eight hours for work, eight for rest, eight for life. In 1886, that demand erupted into nationwide strikes, culminating in the infamous Haymarket Affair in Chicago. A bomb, gunfire, dead police, dead civilians, and a trial that still sparks debate today. It was messy, chaotic, and deeply human—exactly the kind of event that leaves a permanent scar on history.

Welcome to Fifth-Generation Politics: When Revolutions Don’t Need Guns

A color revolution isn’t primarily about violence. Violence is sloppy. It scares donors and ruins the optics. The real weapon is narrative. The objective is to convince enough people that the existing authority has morally expired. Once that belief spreads, the government doesn’t collapse from force — it collapses from ridicule and doubt.

The Purple-Haired Warrior: Manufactured Rage, Disposable Foot Soldier

There she is again. The Purple-Haired Warrior Activist. Posted up in the wild like a brightly colored poison dart frog—small, loud, highly visible, and absolutely convinced she’s saving the planet by screaming at strangers in public while someone films it for Instagram. You’ve seen her. Big glasses. Septum ring. Hair the color of a microwaved …

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Deranged Protests Fizzled

Deranged Protests Fizzled

Are the deranged Trump haters getting tired? It appears so. As President Trump’s poll ratings soar, has it dawned on them that screaming in the streets is not accomplishing anything? The laughably named “Good Trouble” protests last Thursday, in the heart of sanctuary city Portland, fizzled.