Revolution
While
some Americans were dropping out of society to form their own “counter
culture,” others were trying to reform the political and economic foundations
of American life. Out of the Ban-the-Bomb movement of the 1950s and
1960s and the Civil Rights activities in the South came a new generation
of activists determined to expose and correct injustices at home and
change the course of the Vietnam War overseas.
Until
1964 the New Left and other activists utilized peaceful, educational
and nonviolent tactics such as teach-ins, political rallies, door-to-door
canvassing and leafleting to spread the word of reform. Later, as they
grew more and more frustrated with “the system,” and the changes they
advocated were not materializing, and as a government hostile to criticism
infiltrated and harassed some groups, tactics changed to confrontation
and violence, with murmurs, then shouts of a new American “Revolution.”
Nonviolent,
educational tactics were often displaced by bombings, take-overs of
buildings and advocacy of armed revolution.
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Rat.
May
3, 1968
(NY: R.A.T. Publications)
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Reformers
became radicals and were perceived by the government and “the silent
majority” as a real threat to the country’s stability and/or war-making
powers.
The
underground press never claimed objectivity. Rather than simply reporting
the news, underground editors and writers created and announced events
of their own making.
In December 1967, a group of media activists, including Abbie Hoffman,
Jerry Rubin and others, met to plan strategy for movement activities.
During one marathon, stoned brainstorming session, Paul Krassner, editor
and publisher of The Realist, jumped up and shouted “Yippie,
we’re Yippies,” giving birth to the Youth International Party. Their
tactics included satirical theatrics and calculated outrage aimed at
capturing publicity in the mass media.
With
“Clean-for-Gene” student volunteers working for Eugene McCarthy’s 1968
Presidential candidacy, and the National Mobilization Committee to End
the War in Vietnam, the Yippies planned a “Festival of Life” that would
provide an alternative to the August 1968 Democratic National Convention
in Chicago, dubbed a “convention of death” by the Yippies.
For months, the underground press heatedly debated the wisdom of luring
thousands of peace-loving flower children to a knowingly hostile territory,
Richard Daley’s Chicago.
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Avatar.
Vol.2,no.6,
1968 (NY: Avatar, Inc.)
©Avatar, Inc.
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“Don’t come
to Chicago if you expect a festival of peace,” warned the Chicago
Seed, ironically a central vehicle for organizing the event.
The mass
violence which erupted shocked Americans already grim by the murders
that year of Bobby Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr., and riots
in black urban ghettoes in previous summers. Rather than garnering
support for the radical cause, and despite assertions that Daley’s
police forces were chiefly responsible for the violence, the Chicago
events further polarized Americans and marked the beginnings of increased
violence and intensity of purpose on the part of both the radical
groups and the government.
Lured
by the counterculture into rejecting what they perceived as hypocritical
American values, influenced by the Old and New Left and numerous peace
movements, and emboldened by the adventurous daring of the truly radical
groups, American youth
united with them all over the issue of the Vietnam War to form and
perpetuate what was then referred to as “The Movement.” Their activities
culminated in massive protests in large cities and on the nation’s
campuses in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Widespread
anti-war demonstrations spread rapidly throughout academia as groups
such as Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) spread the movement
rhetoric by establishing chapters on a wide number of college campuses
and publishing their own newspapers for distribution among student activists.
By 1969 SDS split into several factions, including the notorious Weather
Underground (or “Weathermen”), which utilized violent tactics on campuses
to gain publicity for a variety of causes.
Protests intensified in the late 1960s over issues as specific as objections
to campus expansion into the local community or as global as the end
to U.S. imperialism. Students demanded a greater role in decision-making
within their respective colleges and universities.
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UConn
Free Press.
Vol.1, no.2, 1969 (Storrs,
CT: Radical Action Press)
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They
challenged the presence of recruiters for war-related industries,
objected to the presence on campus of the Reserve Officer Training
Corps (ROTC) and questioned the role of academia in the “military-industrial
complex.”
Campus
activity was not always peaceful. Reacting to violence, whether real
or feared, university administrators called in riot-equipped police
and even the National Guard. In May 1970 at Kent State University,
Ohio National Guardsmen fired into demonstrating students, killing
four and wounding eleven others. Shortly afterward two students died
by police bullets when a dormitory at Jackson State University in
Mississippi was fired upon.
Immediately
afterward, a wave of protests closed down campuses throughout the
country in a National Student Strike. Classes were canceled or devoted
to discussions of turbulent contemporary issues, and business as usual
stopped on as many as 250 campuses.