Just your average Joe.
27 posts
No Sister - Overpass (Live)
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BOAT SHOW - RESTLESS | Tram Sessions
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Slag Queens, 1, live, Brisbane Hotel, nipaluna, Hobart, 3.05.2019
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Blood Sport - Reflective Orange
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IDLES Mercedes Marxist - Albany NY 5/8/19
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Frustration - Assassination (Live @ Rockstore)
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Gomme - Cut Your Finger // Live @ tcritromal (06/05/2018)
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BELGRADO - London "Grosvenor" 22.03.2014 XEROX MUSIK
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Was going to keep this as a straight music tumblr but I need a Thursday Nite Rant feature. From now on weekdays will be music posts and Sundays will feature choice reblogs on organised labour, the unions, and that good stuff. In keeping with the punk genre of this blog.
As for this coming week expect some melodic and ambient punk from Spain and Brazil.
Series: Women Working In Industry, 1940 - 1945. Record Group 86: Records of the Women’s Bureau, 1892 - 1995
March is Women’s History Month! Women have shaped this country’s history in more ways than we can count. Long before Rosie the Riveter joined the war effort in the 1940s, women earned wages to support themselves and their families. This series of posts celebrates the diversity of women’s labor, ranging from industry to agriculture to folklore and beyond.
This archival series (Women Working In Industry, 1940 - 1945) contains images depicting women and their contributions to the war effort during World War II. The photographs show women for the first time on a mass scale and from every social and economical background preforming jobs that have been traditionally considered as men’s work. In addition to the clerical and secretarial fields, women are seen working in the aircraft industry, the metal industry, ordnance, the railroad, the shipyards, as well as the military services. There are approximately 94 different occupations shown in this series where women were performing the work.
This month’s Women’s History series comes via Nora Sutton, one of our interns from the Department of State’s Virtual Student Foreign Service (VSFS) program. Nora is finishing her Master’s in Public History at West Virginia University this semester.
While Roman Vishniac was most famous for his images of the rise of Nazism and the beginnings of the Holocaust in Europe, he also took a series of evocative photos of New York in wartime.
From the top: Factory worker cutting and grinding glass, Hoffman MF & Co., New York (c. 1942-44), Students taking notes in a Chinese language class, offices of the American Women’s Volunteer Service-Chinese Women’s New Life Movement, Chinatown, New York (c. 1943-44), and Customers waiting in line at a butcher’s counter during wartime rationing, Washington Market, New York (c. 1941-44).
For more, see the International Center of Photography’s online archive of Roman Vishniac’s photographs, at vishniac.icp.org
catpuke | An Alternatrip Show
‘Warsuxx’ and ‘Pulse’.
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Bananach - Aphrodites Live at STBA
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BLXPLTN - Education Destruction (Official Video)
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The Ravens! - Lights On
Legacy content has been archived so as to not prejudice criminal proceedings against me by Monsanto and Coca Cola.