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this vice. He illustrates the point with personal stories: a girl who was half Polish and half Jewish and the plight she found herself in, the Italians, American Italians, and the Jewish problem. The Jewish problem isn't necessarily a Jewish prob-lem, its a human problem. At one time there was a program in the United States to deport the Jews to Dakota, in order to populate the Dakotas. Later in the book, Adamic's concern is Yugoslavia. Hitler invades Yugoslavia in 1941 and Yugoslavia is crushed in a week. A quarter of a million Serbs and Slovenes were in concentration camps and guerilla warfare broke out. The reprisals of the Germans against the Yugoslav people were great. For every German killed, one hundred Serbs had to die. He discusses the plight of Gerrpan Americans, how they were driven to approve of Hitler because of the boycott of German goods and of Germans. The old country feeling is very strong in Germans about the fatherland. American Germans did not want Hitler to win, but they did want him to destroy Russia and especially the British Empire because of the humiliation they received during World War I. However, they did not want him to gain dominance over the United States. They were hoping that the United States would not go to war with Germany the way they had in 1917-1- 8. Adamic likes to talk about the passage into the future. He has some predictions. He feels war in Europe is inevitable. At the end of the war there will be a sort of United States of continental Europe, but people will be citizens of the world, with the ideal of international boundaries being broken down. He ends the book by talking about his project — The Plymouth Rock Ellis Island. He points out how the United States began as an extension of the British Isles but can't be seen that way any more. LABOUR Adamic has a great social conscious-ness. All his work contains the reoccurring plea for the breakdown of the class structure. Laughing in the Jungle (1934) if. Adamic's account of American capitalist . This system is doomed. It is inivitaoie that those on the bottom will become dissatisfied with their lot and try to overthrow the system. Dynamite — The Story of Class Violence in America (1931) is an account of this ongoing struggle. Dynamite is the history of unions, the growth of unions in the United States, the reason why unions exist and how they came into being. More than just a history on the growth of unions in the United States, this book contains Louis Adamic's economic and social philosophy. He begins his book by saying "I am not and never was a member of any labour union or political party or movement in the United States". The book begins in the early 1800s discussing the oppression of the workers and the way the employer saw the workers. The workers were seen as foolish, hot-head- ed foreigners and their demands were thought of as impudent conduct. The labourers were thought af as impudent conduct. The labourers were ignorant immigrants and considered to be scum. Adamic feels that unions came about when the working situation became intolerable. He quotes a communist saying "Fight or starve". Ha talks about the conditions in the coal mines in Pennsylvania which led to tha early riots in the 1800s. The people in the mines were primarily Irish immigrants working in extremely hazardous conditions. When the conditions got bad enough they resorted to terrorism to make their point. They would blow up the mine and kill the owners of the mine and of course, the organization was secret, and they went by the code name of the Molly Maguires. In Adamic's opinion, the reason was that they couldn't sit down and talk to the owners. Workers would just resort to terrorism to make their point. The fact is that the United States was born in a revolution. There has always been radical class divider. Some have and some don't have and yet there is enouht for everyone, if the system of distribution could be a little more equitable. In the 1920s, the United States predicted the downfall of the Soviet regime and them was anti-re- d hysteria. They played up all the brutalities of the Bolshevik revolution. They were afraid of a similar revolution in !це United States so they exploited fear and cultivated fear among the workers. Also, Adamic is very critical of the work p.ofiteering that went on in the Uni'eu States during the First World War. Aftp the First World War, the employers, with the power of their war profiteering wealth, really took advantage of the situation. There was a great deal of unemploument and chaotic social conditions. This brou-ght about a nation-wid- e drive to America-nize the American workers and the workers were primarily immigrants. The workers wanted better working conditions and were upset with company welfare policies, group insurance and other such inven-tions. They were pacified and never really got what they wanted. Therefore, unions wire formed to try and help the worker. Adamic is very critical of unions, because he sees unions as a racket and unions are populated by criminals. There is a distinct correlation between unions and rackettering. In the beginning days of the unions, they hired gangsters for protection from employers and the anti-union activities. In order to have a bit of clout, the unions, hired gangsters. These were the dynamiters and if the workers didn't get their demands, they blew up struggle between the haves and have nots. Crime is just another capitalist tool; its a billion dollar industry. The class struggle in the United States has forced the workmen into the criminal clas. In order to achieve economic betterment, people had to resort to crime. Criminals come from classes which suffer the most from poverty, uncertain and unhealthy enviro-nments and evil conditions of life and "' our The poorer a man is, the less h3 can indulge in honesty. The social .-.- micture is oorrupi, inhuman and brutali-zing from top to bottom. The book is called Dynamite because dynamite si the way to bring about what the workers conceive is just social order. Dynamite was the tool used. It became one of the most powerful elements in the American nation during the 1920s. He spends a great deal of time talking about Chicago and the working conditions in Chicago between 1922 and 1933. This was when Al Capone and his gang ruled the city using dynamite. Criminality became a very important element in American life. It dified all agencies of the law. The gang controlled municipal governments and courts, and fear of violence decided economic and other issues. The recketeers were so powerful, they sold jobs. The large factory workers paid the gangsters for protection against their workers. Therefo-re, the gangsters were tools of the capitalists. They also brought tension when the workers were rioting. Blowing up factories brought a lot of publicity and sympathy to employers instead of emplo-yees. Adamic sees violence as a very costly way of drawing attention to the problem, although it does get results. He states that the America society is ready for a revolution, but the workers must organize their minds. Workers will be violent until they organize their minds to the spirit of the revolution. The unions and or revolutionary stirrings in the United States. Therefore the labour movement has always been prominant in the United States. Louis Adamic blames the imperso-nal hature and social irresponsibility of capitalism for the violence that began in the 1800s and continues to present day with class structure. He sees the United States as the crossroad when he wrote this book in the 1930s during the depression. Would the country go right or left? Aj the time he thought right would be the first course taken but the United States would eventually go left because of its revok'tio-nar- u nature. It is a country founded in revolution after all. After the Amencan Civil War in the 1860s there was a sprout of Marxism in the United States. Marxism was very appealing. He talks about Abraham Lincoln and sees him as a sort of socialist. His views were on how the country was to be governed. He felt he was socialistic and that Lincoln coming from an impoverished background had the right ingredients for being leftist. The narrow, selfish viewpoint of employers led to the birth of the labour movement. The labour movement was born out of the illtreatment of the employees. Adamic thinks they are just settling cheap. Wtah they should be struggling for is a complete new social structure, where the workers receive a share of the profits. Right now they are being paid off to work and are not really part of the system. This is creating all the bitterness in this large 4
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Nase Novine, May 05, 1982 |
Language | sr; hr |
Subject | Yugoslavia -- Newspapers; Newspapers -- Yugoslavia; Yugoslavian Canadians Newspapers |
Date | 1982-03-10 |
Type | application/pdf |
Format | text |
Rights | Licenced under section 77(1) of the Copyright Act. For detailed information visit: http://www.connectingcanadians.org/en/content/copyright |
Identifier | nanod2000144 |
Description
Title | 000124 |
OCR text | this vice. He illustrates the point with personal stories: a girl who was half Polish and half Jewish and the plight she found herself in, the Italians, American Italians, and the Jewish problem. The Jewish problem isn't necessarily a Jewish prob-lem, its a human problem. At one time there was a program in the United States to deport the Jews to Dakota, in order to populate the Dakotas. Later in the book, Adamic's concern is Yugoslavia. Hitler invades Yugoslavia in 1941 and Yugoslavia is crushed in a week. A quarter of a million Serbs and Slovenes were in concentration camps and guerilla warfare broke out. The reprisals of the Germans against the Yugoslav people were great. For every German killed, one hundred Serbs had to die. He discusses the plight of Gerrpan Americans, how they were driven to approve of Hitler because of the boycott of German goods and of Germans. The old country feeling is very strong in Germans about the fatherland. American Germans did not want Hitler to win, but they did want him to destroy Russia and especially the British Empire because of the humiliation they received during World War I. However, they did not want him to gain dominance over the United States. They were hoping that the United States would not go to war with Germany the way they had in 1917-1- 8. Adamic likes to talk about the passage into the future. He has some predictions. He feels war in Europe is inevitable. At the end of the war there will be a sort of United States of continental Europe, but people will be citizens of the world, with the ideal of international boundaries being broken down. He ends the book by talking about his project — The Plymouth Rock Ellis Island. He points out how the United States began as an extension of the British Isles but can't be seen that way any more. LABOUR Adamic has a great social conscious-ness. All his work contains the reoccurring plea for the breakdown of the class structure. Laughing in the Jungle (1934) if. Adamic's account of American capitalist . This system is doomed. It is inivitaoie that those on the bottom will become dissatisfied with their lot and try to overthrow the system. Dynamite — The Story of Class Violence in America (1931) is an account of this ongoing struggle. Dynamite is the history of unions, the growth of unions in the United States, the reason why unions exist and how they came into being. More than just a history on the growth of unions in the United States, this book contains Louis Adamic's economic and social philosophy. He begins his book by saying "I am not and never was a member of any labour union or political party or movement in the United States". The book begins in the early 1800s discussing the oppression of the workers and the way the employer saw the workers. The workers were seen as foolish, hot-head- ed foreigners and their demands were thought of as impudent conduct. The labourers were thought af as impudent conduct. The labourers were ignorant immigrants and considered to be scum. Adamic feels that unions came about when the working situation became intolerable. He quotes a communist saying "Fight or starve". Ha talks about the conditions in the coal mines in Pennsylvania which led to tha early riots in the 1800s. The people in the mines were primarily Irish immigrants working in extremely hazardous conditions. When the conditions got bad enough they resorted to terrorism to make their point. They would blow up the mine and kill the owners of the mine and of course, the organization was secret, and they went by the code name of the Molly Maguires. In Adamic's opinion, the reason was that they couldn't sit down and talk to the owners. Workers would just resort to terrorism to make their point. The fact is that the United States was born in a revolution. There has always been radical class divider. Some have and some don't have and yet there is enouht for everyone, if the system of distribution could be a little more equitable. In the 1920s, the United States predicted the downfall of the Soviet regime and them was anti-re- d hysteria. They played up all the brutalities of the Bolshevik revolution. They were afraid of a similar revolution in !це United States so they exploited fear and cultivated fear among the workers. Also, Adamic is very critical of the work p.ofiteering that went on in the Uni'eu States during the First World War. Aftp the First World War, the employers, with the power of their war profiteering wealth, really took advantage of the situation. There was a great deal of unemploument and chaotic social conditions. This brou-ght about a nation-wid- e drive to America-nize the American workers and the workers were primarily immigrants. The workers wanted better working conditions and were upset with company welfare policies, group insurance and other such inven-tions. They were pacified and never really got what they wanted. Therefore, unions wire formed to try and help the worker. Adamic is very critical of unions, because he sees unions as a racket and unions are populated by criminals. There is a distinct correlation between unions and rackettering. In the beginning days of the unions, they hired gangsters for protection from employers and the anti-union activities. In order to have a bit of clout, the unions, hired gangsters. These were the dynamiters and if the workers didn't get their demands, they blew up struggle between the haves and have nots. Crime is just another capitalist tool; its a billion dollar industry. The class struggle in the United States has forced the workmen into the criminal clas. In order to achieve economic betterment, people had to resort to crime. Criminals come from classes which suffer the most from poverty, uncertain and unhealthy enviro-nments and evil conditions of life and "' our The poorer a man is, the less h3 can indulge in honesty. The social .-.- micture is oorrupi, inhuman and brutali-zing from top to bottom. The book is called Dynamite because dynamite si the way to bring about what the workers conceive is just social order. Dynamite was the tool used. It became one of the most powerful elements in the American nation during the 1920s. He spends a great deal of time talking about Chicago and the working conditions in Chicago between 1922 and 1933. This was when Al Capone and his gang ruled the city using dynamite. Criminality became a very important element in American life. It dified all agencies of the law. The gang controlled municipal governments and courts, and fear of violence decided economic and other issues. The recketeers were so powerful, they sold jobs. The large factory workers paid the gangsters for protection against their workers. Therefo-re, the gangsters were tools of the capitalists. They also brought tension when the workers were rioting. Blowing up factories brought a lot of publicity and sympathy to employers instead of emplo-yees. Adamic sees violence as a very costly way of drawing attention to the problem, although it does get results. He states that the America society is ready for a revolution, but the workers must organize their minds. Workers will be violent until they organize their minds to the spirit of the revolution. The unions and or revolutionary stirrings in the United States. Therefore the labour movement has always been prominant in the United States. Louis Adamic blames the imperso-nal hature and social irresponsibility of capitalism for the violence that began in the 1800s and continues to present day with class structure. He sees the United States as the crossroad when he wrote this book in the 1930s during the depression. Would the country go right or left? Aj the time he thought right would be the first course taken but the United States would eventually go left because of its revok'tio-nar- u nature. It is a country founded in revolution after all. After the Amencan Civil War in the 1860s there was a sprout of Marxism in the United States. Marxism was very appealing. He talks about Abraham Lincoln and sees him as a sort of socialist. His views were on how the country was to be governed. He felt he was socialistic and that Lincoln coming from an impoverished background had the right ingredients for being leftist. The narrow, selfish viewpoint of employers led to the birth of the labour movement. The labour movement was born out of the illtreatment of the employees. Adamic thinks they are just settling cheap. Wtah they should be struggling for is a complete new social structure, where the workers receive a share of the profits. Right now they are being paid off to work and are not really part of the system. This is creating all the bitterness in this large 4 |
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