This comment is pending approval and won't be displayed until it is approved.
Union Rights were not won easily. In 1877 Exxon-founder went to war with Tom Scott of the Pennsylvania Railroad, and the workers were squeezed in the relentless war on labor that ensued. 2000 people were killed in that real war with real bullets called "Labor Unrest of 1877". (google it.)
Exxon-founder family sent in the death squads of the Baldwin-Felts hired-thugs agency in 1912-1913, covered over by the fiction that the Paint Creek, Cabin Creek mines was owned by the Pratt company that was headquartered at 26 Broadway and had been covertly bought out by Exxon-founder decades earlier. Strikers were assassinated and nobody ever prosecuted.
In 1914 the Baldwin-Felts goon with four machinguns and their trademarked armored car were moved to Ludlow, Colorado to destroy the strikers camp of the miner families evicted from company housing. For four hours on April 19th they poured lead and firebombs onto the family tents, killing 19 children, women and men. Exxon-Rockefeller and his goons were protected by govt from prosecution, although a couple of strikers were prosecuted.
Union Rights were not won easily. In 1877 Exxon-foun
Exxon-foun
In 1914 the Baldwin-Fe