(Updated with link & my apologies) Protest Art, & Stagecoach Mary, From “The Saturday Evening Post”

Considering History: Protest Art and Art as Protest in American History

Art has been integral to the foundational American story of protest.

Ben Railton

This series by American studies professor Ben Railton explores the connections between America’s past and present.

It’s hard to describe our current moment as a golden age for much of anything in America, but we are indeed amidst a renaissance of protest art. Portland’s inflatable resistance frogs have morphed into a consistent presence of life-size artistic costumes at protests, including at the massive #NoKings rallies on October 18th.

People dressed in inflatable duck costumes at the Indianapolis No Kings protest on October 18, 2025 (Photo courtesy of J. Bortel)

And public and street art has likewise become a consistent space for expressions of protest and resistance, as illustrated by this graffiti quotation from the 14th Amendment found on the wall of an abandoned Dunkin Donuts near my university in Fitchburg, Massachusetts.

Protest graffiti in Fitchburg, Massachusetts (Photo courtesy of Ben Railton)

Those examples comprise two distinct but interconnected categories: protest art — artworks present at or directly representing collective actions; and art as protest — artworks that themselves comprise an expression and form of resistance. Both types are part of a long, rich history, as art has been integral to the foundational American story of protest. Here I’ll highlight just a few examples of each category from across our history. (snip-MORE-click through on the title)

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Missing in History: Stagecoach Mary Broke Barriers (and a Few Noses)

America’s first Black female mail carrier defied bias, bandits, and bad weather to deliver the mail on time in Montana.

Nancy Rubin Stuart

Mary Fields ca. 1895 (Wikimedia Commons)

“I like to be rough. I like to be rowdy. I also like to be loving….I like to baby sit.”

Mary Fields

Mary Fields was as beloved as she was feared. Few people dared challenge the six-foot-tall, 200-pound former slave who carried a gun, drank, and had a hot temper. Despite her formidable image, Fields loved children, helped others, and carried the mail through the blizzards of northern Montana.

Born into slavery around 1832 in Hickman County, Tennessee and freed after the Civil War, Fields later found work as a chambermaid on the Mississippi steamboat Robert E. Lee. There she met Judge Edmund Dunne, who hired her as a servant in his household. After his wife’s death,  Dunne sent Fields and his five children to live with his sister, Sara, or Mary Amadeus, Mother Superior of the Ursuline convent in Toledo, Ohio around 1874. There the former slave and the nun became fast friends. According to the Toledo Blade, legend has it that when Fields arrived in Toledo, Mother Amadeus asked if she needed anything, to which her friend replied, “Yes, a good cigar and a drink.”

Mary Fields ca. 1895 (Wikimedia Commons)

The following year, Mother Amadeus was sent to Montana Territory to establish a school for indigenous girls at St. Peter’s Mission, west of the town of Cascade. When Fields learned that Mother Amadeus was stricken with pneumonia, she moved to Montana and nursed the nun back to health. After that, the 52-year-old Fields volunteered at the convent, hauling stones to build the school, fetching supplies from nearb y towns, washing the convent’s laundry, tending to its many chickens, managing the kitchen, and maintaining the mission’s garden and grounds. (While she lived at the convent, Fields refused to be paid for her work, preferring to come and go as she pleased.) (snip-MORE-click through on the title)

A Couple Of Pieces From “Them”

A Man Got His Jaw Broken Defending a Trans Woman. The Community Paid for His Surgery

Jarod Adkison had been left with a concussion by three men.

By Abby Monteil

After the story of a cisgender man who was severely beaten over the summer while defending a trans woman went viral, strangers have helped him cover his reconstruction surgery.

33-year-old Jarod Adkison told Austin American-Statesman that he began chatting with three women while visiting Barton Springs Pool near Austin, Texas on July 26. While they were sitting by the pool, Adkison noticed three men who appeared drunk coming up and making fun of one of the women, who is trans.

“It all stemmed from the men seeing the trans lady and making a lewd gesture,” he said. (snip-MORE-click on the title to finish)

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Our First Lady Cole Escola to Play Gender Nonconforming Role in Netflix’s One Piece

The performer will play the role of Bon Clay.

By James Factora

Cole Escola has been cast in the third season of Netflix’s live-action adaptation of One Piece as a fan favorite character.

The news of the actor’s casting was announced on Monday. They will be playing Bon Clay, who is described as “a master of performance and precision who is as dangerous as they are dazzling, a theatrical assassin who turns combat into art.” The character in the original manga is described as an okama, a Japanese umbrella term that can refer to gender nonconforming men, trans women, and crossdressers. So basically, Escola is perfect for the role. (snip-MORE-click through on the title)

GOP Knives OUT For Nancy Mace

The Majority Report clips on Zohran Mamdani and stuff related to his win.

Zohran’s Blueprint For Beating The Establishment

 

Is THIS The End Of Cuomo?

Morning Joe FED UP With Greenblatt’s BS

Trump In Full Meltdown After GOP’s Election Disaster

 

 

Hasan Confronts Media Weirdo Following Him Around Zohran’s Party

 

U.S. Labor Organizes, & Acts, On This Date In Peace & Justice History

November 8, 1892
Thirty thousand black and white, factory and dock workers staged a general strike in New Orleans, demanding union recognition, closed shops (where all co-workers join the union), and hour and wage gains. They were joined by non-industrial laborers, such as musicians, clothing workers, clerks, utility workers, streetcar drivers, and printers.
November 8, 1935
United Mine Workers president John L. Lewis and other labor leaders formed the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO). They had split with the existing labor union umbrella organization, the American Federation of Labor (AFL), which was not interested in organizing unskilled workers, such as those in the steel, rubber, textile and auto industries.

John L. Lewis
CIO history 

https://www.peacebuttons.info/E-News/peacehistorynovember.htm#november8

“Whiskyjack”

Trump Slump Gets Worse

Also I have a doctor’s appointment this morning, the second time this week.  Hugs

 

ICE Agents Invade School To Arrest Teacher In Front Of Kids

What I find deplorable is the fear they caused to the young children all to “capture” a woman who is working and has paperwork allowing her to be here.  But the ICE thugs seem to get bounties for each person they snatch.  She was a teacher there.  How is this the going after the worst of the worst and removing dangerous criminals from the streets?   Plus notice that the FBI is now warming of masked criminals pretending to be agents or officers to do crimes.  As Emma says that was totally being predicted as kidnappings and trafficking’s of young people and children would start happening.   Hugs

The Great March To Transvaal, Apartheid Condemned by U.N., Draft Cards Ignited, & Iran-Contra Denied On This Date In Peace & Justice History

November 6, 1913
Mohandas K. Gandhi led 2500 ethnic Indian miners, women and others from South Africa’s Natal province across its border with Transvaal in the Great March. This was a violation of the pass laws restricting the movement of all non-whites in the country.
Originally granted the rights of British subjects, Indians’ rights were steadily eroded beginning in the 1890s with the denial of the right to own property.
Shortly before the March, a court in Capetown had invalidated all Muslim and Hindu marriages. Gandhi and many others were arrested and jailed after refusing to pay a fine.

 
The Great March to Transvaal    

Mohandas Gandhi, 1915
Read about the early resistance in South Africa 
November 6, 1962
The 17th session of the U.N. General Assembly passed Resolution 1761 condemning apartheid in South Africa and called on all member states to terminate diplomatic, economic and military relations with the country. The policies of the country embodied in apartheid, the strict racially separatist regime, were declared a threat to international peace and security.

Apartheid was the racially separatist regime under which black and, to a somewhat lesser extent, so-called colored South Africans, were without political, civil or economic rights. All political power and wealth were held by the white population, approximately 15% of the country. “Apartheid” is the Afrikaans word for “apartness.” (Afrikaans is the language of the Boers, or [white] Afrikaners.)
U.N pressure over the years on South Africa 
November 6, 1965
2,500 people gathered in New York City’s Union Square to witness the burning of draft cards, a violation of recently passed federal law, as an expression of resistance to the Vietnam War.
Dorothy Day, founder of the Catholic Worker movement, and pacifist leader A.J. Muste spoke, identifying with the “crime” about to be committed.


Gordon Christianson, chairman of the Committee for Nonviolent Action and a World War II combat veteran, used his lighter to burn the cards.
A counter-demonstrator shot a fire extinguisher at those ready to burn their cards, but they still ignited. And the counter-demonstrators shouted, “Burn yourselves, not your draft cards!”
At trial, those who were arrested conceded the prosecution’s case, submitting footage of the action shot by a supporter. They made a defense under the First Amendment to the Constitution, arguing that the burning of draft cards in such a context was an act of symbolic speech. The trial judge found them guilty and sentenced them to six months in federal prison.
November 6, 1986
Although an American plane with supplies for the Nicaraguan contra insurgents had been shot down the previous month, and a Lebanese newspaper reported that the U.S. government had arranged for the sale of weapons to Iran, President Ronald Ronald Reagan denied involvement (“. . . a story that came out of the Middle East, and that to us has no foundation . . . .”) in what came to be known as the Iran-Contra scandal. Both the ongoing aid to the contras and the weapons sales to Iran were violations of U.S. law.

https://www.peacebuttons.info/E-News/peacehistorynovember.htm#november6

Politcal cartoons / memes / and news I want to share. 11-5-2025

 

 

 

 

While I was at camp Ten Oaks Project, last week, I had the pleasure to facilitate a storyboard making workshop with campers from the Leadership program! I promised I’d make a strip out of the storyboard we created together, so here it is!

 

 

 

#Evangelical from What Are You Really Afraid Of?

 

 

We live in stressful times

 

 

Turkeys Hope Thanksgiving Is Canceled

 

A Tale of Two Americas

Image from What Are You Really Afraid Of?

 

 

 

 

 

John Deering for 10/23/2025

#mikejohnson from AZspot

 

 

Speaker Johnson Has No Plans To Reopen The House

 

 

Congress Still Gets Paid

 

 

A Tale of Two Americas

 

ZOHRAN MAMDANI

 

 

#white people twitter from White People Twitter

 

 

 

 

GOP healthcare plan 2025

 

 

 

60 Minutes is no longer hard-hitting news

 

 

 

 

 

These Little Piggies Make A Fist

 

Hurt Trump Feelings In 1962 Retribution

 

 

Little man, big aggression

 

Image from What Are You Really Afraid Of?

 

Is Trump a Peacemonger or Warmonger?

 

 

 

STONE AGE DIPLOMACY

NUCLEAR CIRCUS

Trump and Putin showing nuclear weapen

Putin ruins the Russian budget.

 

 

pirate Trump

John Deering for 11/4/2025

 

 

 

Former Prince Andrew future

TRUMP WITH LEAF BLOWER

The Xmas Ghost of Epstein appears

 

 

The research is progressing

 

ElFasher Sudan Civilwar Buffalo Africa Refugee Rib