Between 1900 and 1920, like Howard Zinn's parents, more than 14 million immigrants arrived in the United States. They came fleeing poverty or war, racism or religious persecution. They dreamed of a promised land, of wealth, or simply of a better life. The New World opened its arms wide to the poor and huddled masses of the Old: its unwanted, its fugitives, and even a few utopians... After all, the rapidly expanding industries of the time required cheap labor, and immigrant workers - men, women and children - were easy to exploit. But the same period also saw the birth of organized labor, with its strikes and conflicts, and the appearance of great figures like Emma Goldman, Mother Jones, Eugene Debs and the Wobblies.
I also found a DVD .vob version of this documentary. As well as a really old Xvid rip which is probably bad quality compared to more modern standards. I guess I would recommend a new rip to x264 or x265 .mkv.
0 seeds here: https://concen.org/content/you-cant-be-neutral-moving-train-howard-zinn
and 0 seeds here: https://concen.org/content/howard-zinn-1922-2010-videosaudiobooks
I've been trying to upload this torrent for days, but I keep hitting "internal server error". This is recommended:
Howard Zinn - A People's History of the United States - Part 1 - Bread and Roses (2016) [1080p]
You can download the active seed here:
https://www.torlock.com/torrent/43851339/howard-zinn-a-peoples-history-o...
Between 1900 and 1920, like Howard Zinn's parents, more than 14 million immigrants arrived in the United States. They came fleeing poverty or war, racism or religious persecution. They dreamed of a promised land, of wealth, or simply of a better life. The New World opened its arms wide to the poor and huddled masses of the Old: its unwanted, its fugitives, and even a few utopians... After all, the rapidly expanding industries of the time required cheap labor, and immigrant workers - men, women and children - were easy to exploit. But the same period also saw the birth of organized labor, with its strikes and conflicts, and the appearance of great figures like Emma Goldman, Mother Jones, Eugene Debs and the Wobblies.
we could re-encode
sweet, thanks so much for considering that!
I'll message you if nobody else has a copy on hand
cheers ;)
I also found a DVD .vob version of this documentary. As well as a really old Xvid rip which is probably bad quality compared to more modern standards. I guess I would recommend a new rip to x264 or x265 .mkv.