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PICKET SIGN OF THE WEEK

“Here's a sign I made for the Kingston, NY Starbucks strike,” writes Labor Notes’ Natascha Elena Uhlmann. “Workers there joined the national strike today and shut down their store.” 


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The Country Song That Powered a General Strike
This week on Labor History Today, we revisit the 1946 Oakland General Strike through the eyes of labor educator and activist Stan Weir — and uncover the surprising role a chart-topping “country” hit played on the picket line. After we hear the day’s events from Labor History in 2:00, host Chris Garlock digs into Weir’s vivid account of the strike’s carnival-like atmosphere, where bars rolled jukeboxes into the streets and “Pistol Packin’ Mama” — the first country song ever to top the Billboard pop chart — echoed off downtown buildings for 54 hours. We trace how an American Federation of Musicians strike helped turn the tune into a national sensation, and why its defiant energy resonated with the mostly women department-store strikers who ignited the Oakland uprising.
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When the Machines Start to Sing
On this week’s Labor Heritage Power Hour, musician David Rovics talks about his unexpected collaboration with an AI persona he calls Ai Tsuno—already producing nearly 40 songs. We explore “vibe-coding” music, the threat AI poses to working musicians, and why Rovics thinks universal basic income may be essential.
We also revisit the 1946 Oakland General Strike and its surprising soundtrack, “Pistol Packin’ Mama,” and close with a preview of the DC Labor Chorus’ Favorite and Sacred Songsconcert this Saturday, featuring a powerful holiday medley.


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