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El Vaquita ("little male cow") is one of several famous street dogs in the country, who frequently join demonstrations and protests, and instinctively side with them during confrontations with the police. During one clash, El Vaquita was shot by police with a riot shotgun and injured by a pellet. He would not allow himself to be captured, and had repeatedly refused to be adopted, so no one could take him to the vet.
So instead, local people organised a fake demonstration, which he then joined, which led him voluntarily to the vets where his injuries were treated. In 2019, in a poll by the local newspaper El Diario, he was voted "character of the year", surpassing all of the humans.
We have posters and other items commemorating other protest dogs Negro Matapacos and Loukanikos."
We managed to get in touch with a representative of "Working Class History" and they agreed to have a little chat with us. "Back in 2014, we were thinking about ways we could help workers, communities, and activists organize better to improve their lives and conditions," they told Bored Panda.
"We could see that social media was a very powerful tool and tried to think about how we could use it to encourage people to get involved in collective action and help people organize. We knew that the key to social media was virality, so we came upon the idea of date anniversaries being a hook to grab people's interest. So we decided to research and write up a number of 'on this day in history' posts about social movements and struggles in the past, to help both inspire people organizing today and help people learn lessons from movements in the past."
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The team behind the account spends loads of time reading and researching various topics before sharing them with their fans. "Story ideas can come from anywhere: books, archives, old newspapers," the representative explained. "Some are also sent to us by our followers."
"We share all of our anniversaries each day on Twitter. But with Instagram and Facebook, we narrow it down to the 2 or 3 stories each day which we think are most likely to be popular, while also trying to keep the stories as diverse and varied as possible."
"Recently, some of our most popular content has included stories about resistance to fascism, indigenous resistance to colonialism, stray dogs joining protests in Chile and Greece, black liberation and anti-racist movements, and lots more."
In addition to their social media accounts, "Working Class History" also produces a podcast, so if you're interested in dissecting such events, give it a listen!
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Rather than "discover" America, as is the popular myth, Columbus merely arrived in what is now the Bahamas, and began over five centuries of genocide against the Indigenous inhabitants. As soon as Columbus landed, he and his crew began enslaving, murdering, torturing and raping the Taíno people who lived there. Travelling to Haiti, Columbus then began forcing the Indigenous people to mine gold, and chopping off the hands of any who did not collect enough. But it was an impossible task as there was almost no gold in the area.
In just two years, half of the 250,000 Taínos on Haiti had died: either by murder or suicide in desperation. Within just a few decades, only 500 remained. However, Indigenous people in the Caribbean and elsewhere did resist both Columbus and the other colonisers who came subsequently, and continue to do so today.
Indigenous Peoples' Day celebrates this resistance, and was first proposed in 1977. South Dakota became the first US state to celebrate it in 1990, and every year more states, cities and institutions make the switch from Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples' Day. Due to continued pressure from Indigenous resistance, in 2021 the US federal government acknowledged Indigenous Peoples' Day for the first time, although at the same time they still officially celebrate Columbus Day as well."
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