For what?!
seen from United States
seen from Finland

seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Bulgaria
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Denmark

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
For what?!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
I love school strikes today I skipped history of art oral test, Italian oral test and chemistry oral test just because the janitors didn't feel like opening the school's gates
School strike for Palestine in Bristol yesterday.
Sixteen young people who say the state isnât doing enough to address climate change will get their day in court Monday. The lawsuit argues that lack of action violates plaintiffsâ rights under the state Constitution. This is the first youth climate lawsuit to ever make it all the way to trial in the U.S.
source
Oh, if a lot of children and teens went on strike or just laid flat in protest, for example for Palestine, how much of an effect it would have?
I know they did for climate, but only on Fridays. What about every day until USA stops giving aid to Israel and votes for a ceasefire?
I don't think it would take that many months if it was most children and teens in most states... They definitely couldn't take everyone into custody.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
ââThe Dames Let Us Down,â Say Student Strikers, Returning To School,â Toronto Star. April 20, 1939. Page 25 & 26. ---- BEFORE STRIKE ENDED For three days students went on strike at Port Haney, B.C., because they said their schoolhouse was rat-infested and a handicap to students and teachers. They loafed, fished, did a little picketing. But yesterday the strike was over.
PORT HANEY YOUNGSTERS ARE BACK IN THE SCHOOL THEY CONDEMNED Port Haney, little Fraser valley town in B.C., is back to normal again. Three hundred protesting students returned to classes yesterday in the unlighted school which they condemned as unfit. Three days ago they trooped out on strike parading with signs, but the strike was over when the studentsâ council voted 11-5 for return. âToo many girls on the council!â exclaimed some irate young males, who declared: âThe dames let us down.â
âTanned Hides, Co-Edsâ Lure, Bust of Studentsâ Strike,â Toronto Star. April 20, 1939. Page 25 & 26. ---- B. C. School Reopens - Reveal Gladstone Murray Once Was Pupil ---- âDAMES LET US DOWNâ --- Special to The Star Port Haney, B.C., April 20. - Fourteen-year-old âBrainsâ Williams and 17-year-old Douglas Edwards are convinced the old-fashioned razor strap and fluttering feminine hearts are a menace to civilization.
Though they would be the first to deny it, the freckled-faced young âBrainsâ and his good-looking partner are moving spirits behind the âchildrenâs crusade,â which 300 school students of this Fraser Valley town walk out of classes three days ago and stay out, as a protest against overcrowding. Today, however, they were forced to admit their strike was at a temporary end. Reluctantly, Haney;s pupils straggled back to class down country lanes to resume their readinâ, âritinâ and ârithmetic. âThe dames let us down, young Edwards growled bitterly. The son of a valley mill operator, he is the âFrank Merriwellâ of the school and a natural-born leader.
Young Williams, a laughing, good-natured little man, with a sharp face and sharper mind, blames the parental rod for breaking up a glorious three-day holiday devoted to loafing, fishing, and a little incidental striking.
âMy old man said heâd tan my hide if I didnât go back to school,â he confessed to a Star reporter.
âYeah, and mine said heâd take away my clarinet and sent it back to Vancouver,â piped up another young red-head.
Girls Swing Vote At any rate, the students went back to classes yesterday after their council, headed by pretty Phyllis Dewold, had voted 11-5 for return. âToo many girls on council,â an irate knot of boys cried, when the decision was announced. Lusty boos resounded over the McLean high school playing field, where students had massed in bleachers to talk the matter over with their principal, F. J. Welland.
The students went back to classes grudgingly. Several said they would be out on strike again within a week.
Meanwhile, they are pinning their hopes for better conditions on a petition which they have signed and forwarded to Dr. George M. Weird, provincial minister of education.
In the letter they complain that Maple Ridge school, which was built in 1870 and numbers Gladstone Murray among its alumni, is overcrowded, dilapidated, has been condemned four times, and is a virtual arena for Port Haneyâs rats.
âCome and see for yourself,â they invited the minister. So far the government has indicated they will leave it a municipal problem. With the chairman of the school board away on holidays, the four remaining trustees have split on the issue.
Trustee Runs Blockade A bitter argument Tuesday night resulted in a near-riot when one of the trustees tried to force his way through a cordon of students who linked arms to prevent him from leaving the building. In the ensuing fracas a pretty ninth-grade student, Peggy Whitby, suffered three scratches on the neck.
âHe was mad, all right,â she told reporters. âBut I donât think he meant to hurt me.â
All other demonstrations of students, who have the sympathy of a large number of farmers in the area, have been most orderly. They marched out in neat file singing âThe Stein Song,â and since that day have had a whale of a time with their mass hookey.
Teachers were credited with a neat coup dâetat Wednesday when they issued term report cards to parents. âThat will bring some of them back,â one instructor said: âand I miss my guess if a few of âem donât take their classes standing up.â
[AL: Gotta love the casual misogyny of blaming the strike ending without a resolution on teenage girls on the student council - and that not being interrogated by the Star reporter. Just based on the pictures, there were clearly just as many girls as boys on the picket line. Weird take, but the rest of the story is fascinating.]
skolstrejk fĂśr klimatet instagram
Signs from Helsinki Climate Strike