人間の歴史

47 Pins
 7y
Collection by
shihlun:  Tim Page - Vietnam War Protests US Activists, Vietnam, American War, Vietnam Protests, Vietnam Veterans, In This Moment, North Vietnam, Change The World, Truth
mananddance
shihlun: Tim Page - Vietnam War Protests US
Absolutely! Thoughts, Quotes, Equality, Lives Matter, Social Justice, Understanding, Beliefs, Empowerment, Power To The People
TheBullshitz.com
Absolutely!
Wow. But racism doesn't exist! Wake Up! Black Power, People, Black History, Shit Happens, Poor Taste, Sick, Sexism, Stupid People, Mankind
Wow. But racism doesn't exist! Wake Up!
protest War, Jimi Hendrix, Feelings, Humour, Beatles, Give Peace A Chance, Protest, Words
amazing things
protest
09 May 1970, Washington, DC, USA --- Political activists Abbie Hoffman and Jane Fonda talk at a demonstration in Washington, DC, protesting the recent violence used to breakup a Vietnam War protest at Kent State University. Four Kent State students were killed, and many others injured, when members of the National Guard fired tear gas and rifles into crowds of student demonstrators who were protesting the Nixon administration's expansion of the Vietnam War into Cambodia. --- Image by © JP La... Hippies, Jane Fonda, Jane, Sixties, 60s, Activist, Hoffman
0000403896-008
09 May 1970, Washington, DC, USA --- Political activists Abbie Hoffman and Jane Fonda talk at a demonstration in Washington, DC, protesting the recent violence used to breakup a Vietnam War protest at Kent State University. Four Kent State students were killed, and many others injured, when members of the National Guard fired tear gas and rifles into crowds of student demonstrators who were protesting the Nixon administration's expansion of the Vietnam War into Cambodia. --- Image by © JP La...
U.S. Antiwar Protesters, NYC, 1967. "In mid-1960s’ America, a majority supported President Johnson and his policies in Vietnam. Opposition to the war had been growing . . . slowly . . . and by 1967, reached a tipping point following large antiwar protest marches in New York City, San Francisco, Washington DC and elsewhere. All of the photographs in this essay were taken at a protest march that took place in New York City on April 15, 1967" ( from Howard Lipan ) | Flickr: Damn Yankee New York City, Washington Dc, Back In The Day, American
Antiwar Protesters
U.S. Antiwar Protesters, NYC, 1967. "In mid-1960s’ America, a majority supported President Johnson and his policies in Vietnam. Opposition to the war had been growing . . . slowly . . . and by 1967, reached a tipping point following large antiwar protest marches in New York City, San Francisco, Washington DC and elsewhere. All of the photographs in this essay were taken at a protest march that took place in New York City on April 15, 1967" ( from Howard Lipan ) | Flickr: Damn Yankee
U.S. More than 100,000 students stand in and around the Reflecting Pool in Washington, DC, demonstrating against the recent violence used to breakup a Vietnam War protest at Kent State University, where 4 students were killed when the National Guard fired tear gas and rifles into crowds of student demonstrators protesting the Nixon administration's expansion of the Vietnam War into Cambodia, 09 May 1970, Washington, DC // Image by © JP Laffont/Sygma/CORBIS History, Us History, Historical Photos, Fotografia, The Past, Human, Anos 60, Musica
0000403896-005
U.S. More than 100,000 students stand in and around the Reflecting Pool in Washington, DC, demonstrating against the recent violence used to breakup a Vietnam War protest at Kent State University, where 4 students were killed when the National Guard fired tear gas and rifles into crowds of student demonstrators protesting the Nixon administration's expansion of the Vietnam War into Cambodia, 09 May 1970, Washington, DC // Image by © JP Laffont/Sygma/CORBIS
Vietnam protester York, Vintage, Cold War, Civil Rights Movement, African Diaspora
Old New York
Vietnam protester
Vietnam War Protestors Troops, Protest Signs
Vietnam War Protestors
Violence in the United States against African Americans, especially in the South, rose in the aftermath of the Civil War, after slavery had been abolished and recently freed black men were given the right to vote. Nearly 3,500 African Americans (that were reported) were lynched in the United States between 1882 and 1968, mostly from 1882 to 1920. The last reported lynching was in 1968. Black History Facts, America, Black Knowledge, Jim Crow, History Facts, Historia
Violence in the United States against African Americans, especially in the South, rose in the aftermath of the Civil War, after slavery had been abolished and recently freed black men were given the right to vote. Nearly 3,500 African Americans (that were reported) were lynched in the United States between 1882 and 1968, mostly from 1882 to 1920. The last reported lynching was in 1968.
Nazi photographer Hugo Jaeger took a portfolio of pictures in the newly-established ghetto of Kutno, Poland. We cannot be sure whether his motive was callousness, compassion, or mere curiosity. In a vivid and sad image, this is another, more pensive image of a beautiful young woman who was caught at a moment of time amidst the horror. Her name and fate are unknown. (October 1939) Git, Resim, Kutno, Fotografie, Arc, Jaeger, Jewish Ghetto, Women
Nazi photographer Hugo Jaeger took a portfolio of pictures in the newly-established ghetto of Kutno, Poland. We cannot be sure whether his motive was callousness, compassion, or mere curiosity. In a vivid and sad image, this is another, more pensive image of a beautiful young woman who was caught at a moment of time amidst the horror. Her name and fate are unknown. (October 1939)
Lebensborn Heim Art, German People, German, The Third Reich, Wwii, German Girls, Political Posters
Premier Source of Third Reich Memorabilia & Nazi Lit | OD43
Lebensborn Heim
A Lebensborn visitor. Lebensborn (Fount of Life) was an SS-borne, state-supported, registered association in Nazi Germany with the intention of raising the birth rate of "Aryan" children from extramarital relations of "racially pure and healthy" parents on the basis of Nazi racial hygiene and health ideology. Inside The Third Reich, Deutschland, American Heritage, Germany Ww2, Interesting History, Anne Frank
Lebensborn
A Lebensborn visitor. Lebensborn (Fount of Life) was an SS-borne, state-supported, registered association in Nazi Germany with the intention of raising the birth rate of "Aryan" children from extramarital relations of "racially pure and healthy" parents on the basis of Nazi racial hygiene and health ideology.
A mother hides her face in shame, c.1948, Chicago.  Forced with eviction and penniless, the parents have literally put their children up for sale. This was not a joke…What’s interesting is that the accompanying article did not pass judgement and there are no calls for whisking the children away to protective services. I'm wondering what ended up happening to these children? Children, Ord, Olds, Bizarre, Fotos
CALUMET 412
A mother hides her face in shame, c.1948, Chicago. Forced with eviction and penniless, the parents have literally put their children up for sale. This was not a joke…What’s interesting is that the accompanying article did not pass judgement and there are no calls for whisking the children away to protective services. I'm wondering what ended up happening to these children?
During the Great Depression these were the types of homes that many had, known as tennament homes. These homes are small areas that make up the bedroom, kitchen, and living room all in one. A lot of times, large families would live in these homes, showing just how cramped people would have to live. ~ Ciara Perez Architecture, Vintage Photos, Lewis Hine, Hearth, Shorpy Historical Photos, Historical Pictures
Is Bad at Times: 1913 high-resolution photo
During the Great Depression these were the types of homes that many had, known as tennament homes. These homes are small areas that make up the bedroom, kitchen, and living room all in one. A lot of times, large families would live in these homes, showing just how cramped people would have to live. ~ Ciara Perez
Oregon, August 1939. "Unemployed lumber worker goes with his wife to the bean harvest. Note Social Security number tattooed on his arm." Films, Anton, Mata Hari, Moda
535-07-5248 and Wife high-resolution photo
Oregon, August 1939. "Unemployed lumber worker goes with his wife to the bean harvest. Note Social Security number tattooed on his arm."
1930s Oyster shuckers, Children of The Great Depression Dorothea Lange, Kinder, Library Of Congress
A Few Portraits of Extreme Poverty - 1930s Children of The Great Depression
1930s Oyster shuckers, Children of The Great Depression
Mother and nine children living in a field on U.S. Route 70 near the Tennessee River during the Depression - 1936.  Photo by Carl Mydans for the Farm Security Administration Great Depression, Pantanal, Mothers, Poor People, Poverty, Child
Rural Mother: 1936
Mother and nine children living in a field on U.S. Route 70 near the Tennessee River during the Depression - 1936. Photo by Carl Mydans for the Farm Security Administration
Japan. Street scene, early 1950s Portraits, Vintage Japanese, Japan Street, Vintage Photographs, Japan Photo
Vintage Japan
Japan. Street scene, early 1950s
SILK FACTORY GIRLS DRAWING THREAD FROM COCOONS in OLD JAPAN by Okinawa Soba, via Flickr. ca 1915-23. Retro, Old Photos, Vintage Photography, Photographer
SILK FACTORY GIRLS DRAWING THREAD FROM COCOONS in OLD JAPAN
SILK FACTORY GIRLS DRAWING THREAD FROM COCOONS in OLD JAPAN by Okinawa Soba, via Flickr. ca 1915-23.
Black Power salute at the 1968 Olympics Robert Kennedy, American Athletes, Jesse Owens, Black Power Salute, Smith Center, Iconic Photos, Sports Photograph
40 Of The Most Powerful Photographs Ever Taken
Black Power salute at the 1968 Olympics
Ordinary people. The courage to say no.    The photo was taken in Hamburg in 1936, during the celebrations for the launch of a ship. In the crowed, one person refuses to raise his arm to give the Nazi salute. The man was August Landmesser. He had already been in trouble with the authorities, having been sentenced to two years hard labour for marrying a Jewish woman.  We know little else about August Landmesser, except that he had two children. By pure chance, one of his children recognized h... Photo, Blanco Y Negro, Picture
august landmesser
Ordinary people. The courage to say no. The photo was taken in Hamburg in 1936, during the celebrations for the launch of a ship. In the crowed, one person refuses to raise his arm to give the Nazi salute. The man was August Landmesser. He had already been in trouble with the authorities, having been sentenced to two years hard labour for marrying a Jewish woman. We know little else about August Landmesser, except that he had two children. By pure chance, one of his children recognized h...
In one of the most infamous pictures of WWII, a member of the SS prepares to shoot a Jewish woman with her back to him, desperate to protect her child. A single bullet from his rifle was sufficient for both at such intimate range. Anecdotes say that the shooter - a Hungarian Auxiliary - was drunk when he did this, and upon sobering up, was so horrified at his deed that he committed suicide. Horror, Military, Genocide, Survival, Wwi, Asker
In one of the most infamous pictures of WWII, a member of the SS prepares to shoot a Jewish woman with her back to him, desperate to protect her child. A single bullet from his rifle was sufficient for both at such intimate range. Anecdotes say that the shooter - a Hungarian Auxiliary - was drunk when he did this, and upon sobering up, was so horrified at his deed that he committed suicide.
Courtesy of CSPG: Center for the Study of Political Graphics El Salvador, Chile, Protest Posters, Propaganda Posters, Che Guevara, Communism
Courtesy of CSPG: Center for the Study of Political Graphics
Venceremos. Unidad Popular. Chile, 1970s. Vintage Posters, Illustrations Posters, Posters, Popular, Veteran
Political posters from Chile on show at El Taller Latino - The Volunteer
Venceremos. Unidad Popular. Chile, 1970s.
Frederick Douglass has been called the father of the civil rights movement. He rose through determination, brilliance, and eloquence to shape the American nation. He was an abolitionist, human rights and women's rights activist, orator, author, journalist, publisher, and social reformer. Frederick Douglass, The Orator, Black History Month, Black Is Beautiful, Human Rights, National Portrait Gallery
Frederick Douglass National Historic Site
Frederick Douglass has been called the father of the civil rights movement. He rose through determination, brilliance, and eloquence to shape the American nation. He was an abolitionist, human rights and women's rights activist, orator, author, journalist, publisher, and social reformer.
Charlayne Hunter (1961) leaving the University of Georgia campus after registering as a student. She holds a place in Georgia civil rights history as one of the first two African American students (the other student was Hamilton Holmes) admitted to the University of Georgia. Also known for her career as an award-winning journalist, Hunter-Gault is respected for her work on television and in print. Models, University Of Georgia, High Society, Journalism, African American Women, Georgia
'African American Student Charlayne Hunter Leaving University of Georgia Campus After Registering' Premium Photographic Print - Joe Scherschel | AllPosters.com
Charlayne Hunter (1961) leaving the University of Georgia campus after registering as a student. She holds a place in Georgia civil rights history as one of the first two African American students (the other student was Hamilton Holmes) admitted to the University of Georgia. Also known for her career as an award-winning journalist, Hunter-Gault is respected for her work on television and in print.
Joan Trumpauer Mulholland, 1961.  Joan, a 19 year old Freedom Rider, was sentenced to two months in prison for her involvement in the integration of a Jackson, Mississippi bound train.  She served more than the required two months because each addition day reduced her $200 fine by $3. In the Fall of 1961, Joan transferred from Duke University to historically black Tougaloo Southern Christian College because she felt integration should be a two way street. Martin Luther King, Mulholland, Infamous, Joan, Mississippi
Cool Chicks from History
Joan Trumpauer Mulholland, 1961. Joan, a 19 year old Freedom Rider, was sentenced to two months in prison for her involvement in the integration of a Jackson, Mississippi bound train. She served more than the required two months because each addition day reduced her $200 fine by $3. In the Fall of 1961, Joan transferred from Duke University to historically black Tougaloo Southern Christian College because she felt integration should be a two way street.
National Guardsmen surround Vietnam protesters at People's Park in Berkeley, California. May 15, 1969 National Guard, Berkeley California, Berkeley
History Photographed on X
National Guardsmen surround Vietnam protesters at People's Park in Berkeley, California. May 15, 1969