Wait which follow up remind me where we left off with him I hope I did the proper follow-up US Government had won an appeal with the UK government in order to extradite him to the US very close to the high court in the United Kingdom has appealed to the Supreme Court Britain Supreme Court that is to stop his extradition it was France I know they just don't want to deal with it anymore. I don't know if people are following where he is and if you remember about a year ago judge fenesta Barrister if you need a reminder of her name blocked his extradition on humanitarian grounds that if convicted in the US listen to be imprisoned in the adx Florence supermax facility in Florence Colorado where isolation is Extreme and mental health services are limited and judge noted that mr. Assange suffered from depression and had persistent thoughts of suicide so that's why he wasn't extradited then that ruling was overturned last December by and appellate panel of the high court which said judge Barrister should have notified the US Department of Justice of her views before issuing her ruling to afford it the opportunity to offer assurances to the district his name is actually Barrister oh hold on. It's just kind of funny Court in Britain it would have been very ironic with a package of assurances that Mr Assange would not be a prison at adx-florence or held according to special administrative measures restrictive solitary confinement reserved for terrorism in National Security Prisoners the doj also said that it would agree to transfer Mr Assange who is originally from Australia to an Australian prison to serve his sentence and there is no reason why this court should not accept the insurance that I sure and says as meaning what they say the appeals judge says there is no basis for assuming that the USA has not given me assurances in good faith what does this mean for Julian well I think it's obvious but I can spell it out for you this means Julian's Warriors can challenge the overturned ruling not to be extradited which means he will be extradited however the court still has to agree to hear the case the judges on Monday refused him permission for a direct appeal to the Supreme Court on their decision they did say this case raises an issue of legal importance that he could ask the UK's Top Court to rule Lord Burnett Lord chief justice also said Mr Assange has case had raised a legal question over the circumstances in which judge has received and consider the differences from the US about how he would be treated in prison and nasty and international said while the organization assurances that the court had dodged its responsibility on ensuring issues of public importance were fully considered by the Judas that theory the courts must ensure that people are not at risk of torture or other ill-treatment this was at the heart of the two other issues the high court has now what that's will stall any extradition from the UK for now and that's that until the u.s. gets to appeal that I don't think that's the highest court still I feel like he's going to be right now 4 cd it sounds like to try to meet a middle compromise and saying K we will extradite him but to Australia cuz that's where we send our prisoners care of him and so now he gets permission to appeal to the court he doesn't get to do it he just gets to like put in a plea to see if they'll hear him please and sorry I thought he had one that's that's correct it is just that he gets to yeah he gets to ask for a chance to appeal he doesn't even like it's not a yes it gets to appeal he gets to ask and then isn't the legal system fun like every time that we talked aboutCurrently we are lower in zinc than we used to be not as likely to die listening we are your ever-present host at least when the podcast is on Taylor and Chelsea here today to talk to you about the cyclical events of workers rights mostly it's a historical sense at this time we're at a point in workers rights where we are seeing a lot of turmoil and conflict between employers and employees pretty much throughout the world released in North America pretty much all throughout it and I thought it would be a good time in our podcast to go back over the history of historical strikes that have taken place in North America so that we can really see where at least past Generations dealt with their struggle for rights in the workplace we are going to cover a few of the more violent worker LED strikes that took place in the early 1800s and 1900s and talk about how can I okay that's good that clearly means you were listening without further Ado I think where we're going to start is with the Railroad Strike of 1877 the great Railway Strike of 1877 AKA it also goes by the great upheaval the greatness of this Railway strike was due to the series of violent real Straits which occurred in 1877 I have you guessing a lot at everything I'm saying today across the United States across a portion of the United States and getting away from getting up to the great strike it was a tough year it was the fourth year of an economic depression after the Panic of 1873 now this is not the Great Depression if you're up on your years of the Great Depression this one was happening around this time 1870 late 1870s and I believe the Great Depression was is this depression one Earnest between workers and the leaders of the industry immigration from Europe with underway as was the migration of row workers into the city's budget increase the competition for jobs and this allowed companies to drive down wages and easily lay off workers because they were aplenty the strikes were caused by the third weight cut of 10% in one year announced by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in Martinsburg West Virginia this work was already poorly paid and it was after all a dangerous job with poor working conditions I know I wouldn't have wanted to be doing that the official straight starts July 14th after this announcement in Martinsburg West Virginia which is the third wage cut and the strike last 45 days in total and an estimated 100 people were killed in the unrest in over a thousand had been jailed damage in its entirety was estimated at 5 to 10 million dollars I'm really not sure why there's a 5 million dollars discrepancy between represented by trade unions as unions themselves were in their Berry infancy as they started to come about around the Civil War which actually wasn't long before the city and state governments were created by the National Guard federal troops and private flash unofficial militias organized by the railway spot against the workers at its height the strikes were supported by 100000 workers for the population of the day that was a guess so let's 39 million okay is that a lot a lot I don't know that this is all set up for kind of what happened I'm going to get into the fun stuff the violence so the strike happens on July 16th the workers at the B&O station in Martinsburg West Virginia respond by uncoupling the locomotive that says I'm doing them for the Layman person in the station in finding them in the round house and declaring that no train leave Martinsburg unless the cut was