
Why is the National Education Association encouraging students to skip school?
Yesterday was May 1 — May Day — and across the country, activists staged coordinated demonstrations under the banner of “no work, no school, no shopping.”
These are sweeping political claims, touching on immigration policy, cultural debates, and national partisan conflicts.
The National Education Association — with roughly 3 million members, making it the largest labor union in the United States — was among the organizations supporting the effort. On its website, the NEA offers organizational resources for participants, including a “solidarity toolkit.”
May Day? Mayday!
The union frames May Day as part of a long tradition of labor activism, tracing its roots to the late 19th-century movement for the eight-hour workday.
Broadly speaking, that’s true.
But May Day also carries
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