Showing posts with label Kent State University. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kent State University. Show all posts

Monday, May 4, 2020

Kent State - Fifty Years

The only good thing you could say about the two major Americans wars of this century, the Iraq War  and the Afghanistan War, was that while you may have been be called unpatriotic for being against them, at least you won't get massacred for it. That's exactly what happened to four students at Kent State University in Kent, Ohio, fifty years ago today - Monday, May 4, 1970.
A massive protest on the Kent State campus had begun three days earlier after President Nixon widened the war in Vietnam by bombing Cambodia in an attempt to go after Viet Cong guerillas taking refuge over the border. In an attempt to maintain order in Kent, Ohio governor James Rhodes - who detested the antiwar demonstrators - sent the state militia onto the campus on May 2. University officials attempted to ban the protest set for the following Monday, but two thousand demonstrators showed up anyway. The militia tried to control the crowd with tear gas, which led to a riot. In short order, shots were fired at the demonstrators, and four students were killed with twelve wounded.  I wrote on this blog a more detailed account a decade ago of what happened on that spring day in 1970, and I only bring it up again today because, first of all, a fifty-year anniversary is a major milestone, and secondly, we now have someone in the White House who has a problem with public dissent and would go farther than Nixon or Rhodes ever would have gone in order to stamp it out.
I was only four years old when the Kent State massacre took place, but it always infuriated me that anyone even would even attempt to curtail the right of free speech with weapons in the United States of America.  And in the aftermath of Kent State,  the exercise of the right to protest fell by the wayside for a long time when it became apparent that speaking out could get yourself killed. :-(

Once again, remember today the fourth of May.

Friday, May 1, 2020

Music Video Of the Week - May 1, 2020

"Ohio," Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young  (Go to the link in the upper-right-hand corner.)

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Kent State - Forty Years Later

The shootings at Kent State University by the Ohio National Guard during an antiwar demonstration, which took place forty years ago today, was a turning point for public protest in America. Four students were killed and nine were wounded, casting a shadow on the right of public assembly and redress of grievances in America. What had begun in the spring of 1970 as a demonstration against President Nixon's expansion of the Vietnam War in Cambodia ended with an act of violence by an American military unit against the civilians they were supposed to serve, effectively inhibiting those who sought to exercise their right to protest.
Something went horribly wrong when the Guardsmen were sent to Kent, Ohio to deal with the riots that erupted after Nixon's act, and Ohio governor James Rhodes only fanned the flames by dismissing protesters as un-American. The vandalism and looting that had begun in Kent three days earlier had been relatively minor, and arguably did not demand the heavy-handed response of Rhodes to send in the Guardsmen at the request of the mayor of Kent, who had declared a state of emergency. Responding to violence with major force only begat more violence - the arson against Kent State's Reserve Officer Training Corps building (vacant and slated for demolition) on May 2, which was followed by students's attempts to keep local fire crews from extinguishing it, and then came the use of tear gas and bayonets against demonstrators on May 3. Too much ugliness had been visited upon Kent State, and the situation dissolved into a blood feud between the antiwar element and the state militiamen. On May 4, the unthinkable happened when the Guardsmen, acting overzealously and irrationally, fired into a crowd of protesters at will. Two of the four students killed were not even part of the protests - they were on their way to class.
Much of the blame for the violence belongs to the National Guard for its reckless actions and to Governor Rhodes, for overreacting to the initial looting and allowing the situation to spin out of control once the Guard was sent in. The disregard both Rhodes and Nixon had for the antiwar movement on the basis of simply disagreement with the government's foreign policy, ultimately, sowed the seeds of the violence and the shootings. The events of May 4, 1970 opened a new and frightening chapter in American history, where the perceived failure of protest to bring about change - especially peaceful change - made Americans more cynical and, ultimately, more detached. The biggest effect was the the fear of protest and resignation to the upper hand of authority; people who thought they could change public policy with free speech were suddenly taking their lives into their hands by doing do in such an open fashion.
The killings were stupid and shameful. It was government suppression at its worst. The best way to honor the four dead at Kent State is to continue to speak out against unjust policies and misguided leadership and not to be afraid to stand up and speak out - and to make sure that such an act can never happen again.
Remember today the fourth of May.