Thirty Thousand Locked Out: The Great Strike of the Building Trades in Chicago

Thirty Thousand Locked Out: The Great Strike of the Building Trades in Chicago

30,000 Locked Out: The Great Strike of the Building Trades in ChicagoThe attention of the world has...
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SKU: gb-35275-ebook
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Author: Beeks, James C.
Format: eBook
Language: English
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Thirty Thousand Locked Out: The Great Strike of the Building Trades in Chicago

Thirty Thousand Locked Out: The Great Strike of the Building Trades in Chicago

$19.99 $9.99

Thirty Thousand Locked Out: The Great Strike of the Building Trades in Chicago

$19.99 $9.99
Author: Beeks, James C.
Format: eBook
Language: English

30,000 Locked Out: The Great Strike of the Building Trades in Chicago

The attention of the world has been called to the great strike and lockout in the building trades in Chicago because it rested upon the question of individual libertya question which is not only vital alike to the employer and the employe, but which affects every industry, every class of people, every city, state and country. It is a principle which antagonizes no motive which has been honestly conceived, but upon which restsor should restthe entire social, political and industrial fabric of a nation. It underlies the very foundation of free institutions. To antagonize it is to thrust at the beginning point of that freedom for which brave men have laid down their lives in every land since the formation of society. With this question prominently in the fight, and considering the magnitude of the interests affected, it is not at all surprising that the public has manifested interest in the agitation of questions which have affected the pockets of thirty thousand artisans and laborers, hundreds of employers, scores of manufacturers and dealers in building materials, stopped the erection of thousands of structures of all classes, and driven into the vaults of a great city capital amounting to not less than $20,000,000. The labor problem is not new. Neither is it without its perplexities and its grievances. Its entanglements have puzzled the brightest intellects, and its grievances have, on many occasions, called loudly for changes [Pg 4]which have been made for the purpose of removing fetters that have bound men in a system of oppression that resembled the worst form of slavery. These changes have come none too soon. And, no doubt, there yet remain cases in which the oppressed should be speedily relieved of burdens which have been put upon working men and women in every country under the sun. But, because these conditions exist with one class of people, it is no justification for an unreasonable, or exacting demand by another class; or, that they should be permitted to reverse the order of things and inaugurate a system of oppression that partakes of a spirit of revenge, and that one burden after another should be piled up until the exactions of an element of labor become so oppressive that they are unbearable. When this is the case, the individual who has been advocating the cause of freedomand who has been striving for the release and the elevation of the laboring classesbecomes, in turn, an oppressor of the worst kind. He stamps upon the very foundation on which he first rested his cause. He tramples upon the great cause of individual liberty and becomes a tyrant whose remorseless system of oppression would crush out of existence not only the grand superstructure of freedom, but would bury beneath his iron heel the very germ of his free existence. ......Buy Now (To Read More)

Product details

Ebook Number: 35275
Author: Beeks, James C.
Release Date: Feb 14, 2011
Format: eBook
Language: English

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