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  • Under the Iron Heel: The Wobblies and the Capitalist War on Radical Workers by Ahmed White
  • Gregory S. Kealey
Ahmed White, Under the Iron Heel: The Wobblies and the Capitalist War on Radical Workers (Oakland: University of California Press 2022)

Invoking Jack London's dystopian novel, The Iron Heel (1908), Ahmed White offers his readers a blistering denunciation of the "bourgeois vigilantism" and state repression brought to bear to destroy the Industrial Workers of the World (iww) in the first three decades of the 20th century. To put it another way, "to understand what became of the iww requires that one confront repression on these terms [horrific brutality], appreciate its vast scale and comprehensive reach, and see how in wrecking lives it also wrecked the union." (7) The narrative follows the chronological history of the iww from its founding in 1905 through the bloody trials and tribulations of its pre-war glory days, the grotesque state repression of the shortened US war years, and closes with the continuous and intensified vengeance of the Red Scare and Palmer Raids. The author, a legal historian at the University of Colorado Boulder, uses innovative sources to depict the savagery and brutality of "how capital in a capitalist world is bound to rule." His extensive use of Federal and State Penitentiary and Prison Records, all levels of court records, and the American Civil Liberties Union (aclu) papers is the most creative and detailed account of such repressive efforts to date. His command of the extensive secondary literature on the state and regional level also adds to the impressive detail he brings to little-studied states and resource industries throughout the Midwest, Southwest, and Pacific Northwest, while not ignoring the South or California. Here, in his accounts of Wobbly organizing in the wheat fields of the Great Plains, the fruit and vegetable farms of California, the lumber woods of Oregon, the hard rock and coal mines of Arizona and Minnesota, and the oil fields of Oklahoma, the author captures well the threat the iww posed to capital. Always more of a social movement than simply a union, the Wobblies' continuous refusal to bow before the joint forces of capital and the state brought a new set of legal, semi-legal, and blatantly illegal repressive responses.

On the legal side, an array of state criminal syndicalism laws and a new federal Espionage Act (1917) followed by a new Sedition Act (1918), which accompanied US entry into World War I, were passed and then utilized to smash dissent and eliminate resistance to capital and the war effort. Semi-legal efforts included the use of federal troops and state national guard units, while illegal actions included vigilante beatings, shootings, killings, expulsions from cities, towns, and states, coercion of witnesses, purchased false testimony from professional witnesses, perjury, rigged juries, and more. The list is virtually endless and leaves the reader gasping at the detailed evidence of business and state bloody repression against American workers. The author could have provided an even more compelling account with some minimum quantification of his criminal syndicalism materials. While they would remain incomplete owing to the nature of the surviving historical records, such tabular data would have made it far easier for readers to track the development of arrests, prosecutions, and convictions on a state and industrial level over time.

In a 1971 classic Labor History review essay concerning the iww, William Preston turned the tables on Melvyn Dubofsky's major history of the Wobblies and sarcastically asked, "Shall this be all?" Much as there is to admire in White's Under the Iron Heel, this reviewer found himself posing a similar query. The depiction of repression here is so complete and the powers exercised by [End Page 343] capital so total that little room remains for resistance that is seemingly not predestined to brutal failure. This argument is far removed from the extraordinary agency exercised by the hundreds of thousands of workers across the US who fought in iww struggles in these years. In a concluding chapter that provides a brief overview of subsequent US labour history and especially of labour law developments, the author finds little positive...

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