this post was submitted on 23 Apr 2025
11 points (100.0% liked)

Documentaries

285 readers
26 users here now

A place to post documentaries about anything!

Interested in a community more focused on Solarpunk & Anarchist Documentaries? Check out [email protected]

Rules:

  1. Documentaries Only: Posts which are not documentaries will be removed.

  2. Posting format: DocumentaryTitle - "optional short description of the documentary" followed by duration [00:00:00]. The use of [Trailer] or [Preview] tag is required. A (CC) tag is strongly encouraged.

  3. Post Correct Title: Ensure the documentary title is correct. The title is often not the same as the YouTube submission

  4. Be respectful and civil, no threats, trolling or harassment

  5. No torrents

  6. No far-right / pro-dictatorship propaganda

founded 5 months ago
MODERATORS
 

March 1933, within weeks of his inauguration, President Franklin Roosevelt sent legislation to Congress aimed at profiting relief for the one out of every four American workers who were unemployed. He proposed a Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) to provide jobs in natural resource conservation. Over the next decade, the CCC put more than three million young men to work in the nation's forests, parks, and farms: planting trees, creating flood barriers, fighting fires, and building roads and trails. Corps workers lived in camps under quasi-military discipline and received a wage of $30 per month, $25 of which they were required to send home to their families. This film, by director Robert Stone, interweaves rich archival imagery with the personal accounts of CCC veterans to tell the story of one of the boldest and most popular New Deal experiments, positioning it as a pivotal moment in the emergence of modern environmentalism and national service.

top 1 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 days ago

quasi-military in that you got food and shelter and most anything else you need outside of the monthly stipend which would be like a hundred dollars to keep and 500 to send home. A bit more really but im doing real rough napkin math.