āBut I tell you, we in Harlan County, all of our life weāve been kicked around. Weāve been put in jail. Weāve been shot at. Weāve had dynamite thrown at us. And then you donāt want us to have nothinā. Well, I tell you, Mr. Horn, Iām gonna be standinā right there on that picket line lookinā at you just as long as it takes.ā
āYou gotta win this fight yourselves. Now, itās the first time East Kentucky has stood up against the coal operators, and youāre doinā it. And when you win, youāre fighting for your kids and your grandkids. Every one of them will have a better life because of what youāre doinā here. And thatās why the fightās so hard. If there wasnāt so much at stake, they wouldnāt be fightinā you this hard.ā
Harlan County, USAĀ (1976), documenting the 13-month Brookside miners strike in Kentucky from 1973 to 1974


















