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| Crucible of Free Speech: Free Speech for the Masses
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| Trade unions and radical movements used film, radio, and mass-circulation magazines to advance their social causes and to reach audiences among Chicago's working class.
During the Great Depression, Americans confronted the possibility that neither capitalism nor democracy could meet their material and political needs. In Chicago, a newly revived trade union movement sought not only higher wages, but also greater economic and political democracy for workers. Chicago’s industrial workers, sometimes with the energetic support of socialists and communist organizers, gained free speech at work and greater participation in local and national politics.
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