this post was submitted on 31 Aug 2025
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The strike began on May 16, 1934. The strike was remarkably effective, shutting down most commercial transport in the city with the exception of certain farmers, who were allowed to bring their produce into town, but delivering directly to grocers, rather than to the market area, which the union had shut down.

The market was to be the scene of the fiercest fighting during the earliest part of the strike. On Saturday, May 19, 1934, Minneapolis Police and private guards beat a number of strikers trying to prevent strikebreakers from unloading a truck in that area and waylaid several strikers who had responded to a report that scab drivers were unloading newsprint at the two major dailies' (newspapers) loading docks. Police followed injured strikers to the strikers headquarters. The strikers refused to let the police into the headquarters, leading to more violence between police and strikers.

Fighting intensified the following Monday, May 21, when the police, augmented by several hundred newly deputized members of the Citizens Alliance, an employer organization, attempted to open up the market for trucking. Fighting began when a loaded truck began leaving a loading dock. The battle became a general melee when hundreds of pickets armed with clubs of all sorts rushed to the area to support the picketers; when the police drew their guns as if to shoot, the union sent a truck loaded with picketers into the mass of police and deputies in order to make it impossible for them to fire without shooting each other.

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[–] Zombiepirate@lemmy.world 21 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

On Friday, July 20, a single yellow truck drove to the central market escorted by fifty armed policemen. The truck made the small delivery successfully, but a vehicle carrying picketers wielding clubs cut off the truck. The police opened fire on the vehicle with shotguns, then turned their guns on the strikers filling the surrounding streets. An eyewitness reported that as the pickets moved to aid their fallen comrades, "They flowed directly into buckshot fire ... And the cops let them have it as they picked up their wounded. Lines of living, solid men fell, broke, wavering." He also said he saw one man "stepping on his own intestines, bright and bursting in the street, and another holding his severed arm in his right hand." By the end of hostilities, two strikers (Henry Ness and John Belor) were dead and sixty-seven wounded.

[–] NobodyElse@sh.itjust.works 21 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

The police clearly showing who they protect and serve.

[–] Sxan@piefed.zip 8 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

Riot gear should be illegal. When police have to protect þemselves from þe masses, þey're on þe wrong side of history.

[–] AtariDump@lemmy.world 9 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

What’s wrong with your “th”? It doesn’t look well.

[–] PugJesus@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

Riot gear should be illegal. When police have to protect þemselves from þe masses, þey’re on þe wrong side of history.

There have been innumerable white supremacist riots in recent history.

The core issue is that the police do not protect the people; not the tools that they do it (or fail to do it) with.