this post was submitted on 22 Aug 2023
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The Pressed Steel Car Strike of 1909 was an American labor dispute which ran from July to September in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The strike was triggered on July 10th, a payday on which many workers were shorted by the Pressed Steel Car Company.

The strike began on July 13th, and grew to include more than 8,000 workers, 3,000 of whom were also from the Standard Steel Car Company. By the next day, 500 cops began working to protect strikebreakers and evict strikers from company houses. The New York Times called the immigrant workforce "savages" and "illiterate foreigners".

Management refused to speak with the workers' representatives and James Rider, manager of the Pressed Steel Car Company, responded to their strike by hiring Pearl Bergoff, a notorious owner of a strike-breaking paramilitary force.

The workers were joined by members of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), including founders William Trautmann and "Big Bill" Haywood, as well as "Smiling Joe" Ettor.

The walkout drew national attention when, on this day in 1909, a bloody battle took place between strikers, private security agents, and the Pennsylvania State Police. The violence began after strikers boarded a trolley to search for scabs and they were confronted by an armed deputy, who opened fire. In the fighting that followed, between 12 and 26 people were killed.

The strike was settled on September 8th when Pressed Steel Car agreed to a wage increase, the posting of wage rates, and ended abuses in company housing practices. This labor dispute would be a precursor to the Great Steel Strike of 1919.

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[–] Babs@hexbear.net 19 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Anybody know what's up with Naomi Wu (Sexy Cyborg)? All the worst people are saying the government disappeared her, which is ridiculous, but also her twitter implies she got in trouble for something and is being careful about what she says on social media. Last I remember, she was very pro-China and pro-CPC so I was wondering what happened.

[–] heartheartbreak@hexbear.net 17 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

I had followed her for a while so I knew she was really trying to rep China on the global Internet but didnt hear about this so I did my best digging. It seems like a combination of a few factors.

It looks like she had uncovered a possible exploit in the sogou keyboard that could record keyboard inputs in 2019 and was trying to publicize it a bit. The exploit was recently announced in a paper where it was covered up a bit by authorities, forcing the keyboard manufacturer and authorities to take it seriously.

Secondly, it looks like they cited Signal and probably other opsec stuff she was using (as she is a tech YouTuber so kinda naturally) as suspicious (which unfortunately makes sense as signal is well known to be what the CIA uses for assets).

Thirdly, while obviously doing her best to represent China and Chinese people as people, she is also pretty openly and explicitly critical about homophobia in China (although she is also definitely critical about homophobia elsewhere especially in regards to how the west treats the Chinese lgbtq community). These types of tweets were probably cited in the investigation.

So it was probably some combination of these three factors that caused whatever bureaucrat that's in charge of investigating spies to come down on her. Really unfortunate too since I think she had some really great and interesting content, although it does look like she is still focused on putting out content just not posting as much. This counts as her second strike where a third strike is a year in prison.

[–] Frank@hexbear.net 13 points 1 year ago

This sucks. Pardon me for assuming that a gay woman in tech with an outlandish personal style is not being investigated in good faith.