***WHEN DID THE 1960'S END?-The
Anti-Vietnam War Events Of May Day 1971
Peter Paul Markin comment:
I have recently been reviewing books
and documentaries about radical developments in the 1960’s. They included
reviews of the Weather Underground, Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and
the memoirs of Bill Ayers, a central figure in that movement. Throughout this
material one thing that I noticed was that the various interviewees had
different takes on when that period ended. Although in the end the
periodization of history is a convenient journalistic or academic convention in
the case of the 1960’s it may produce a useful political guide line.
It is almost universally the case
that there is agreement on when the 1960’s started. That is with the
inauguration of Democratic President John F. Kennedy and his call to social
activism. While there is no agreement on what that course of action might
entail political figures as diverse as liberals Bill Clinton and John Kerry on
to radicals like Mark Rudd, Bill Ayers and this writer agree that this event
and its immediate aftermath figured in their politicization.
What is not clear is when it ended.
For those committed to parliamentary action it seems to have been the
assassination of Robert Kennedy and the events around the Democratic Convention
in 1968 that led to the election of one Richard Milhous Nixon as President of
the United States. For mainstream black activists it seems to have been the
assassination of Martin Luther King that same year ending the dream that
pacifist resistance could eradicate racial injustice. For mainstream SDSers
apparently it was the split up of that student organization in 1969. For the
Black Panthers, the deaths of Fred Hampton and Mark Clark proving for all to
see who wanted to see that the American government was really out to get
militant blacks off the streets. For those who thought that the counterculture
might be the revolution the bloody Rolling Stone’s concert at Altamont in
California in 1969 seems to have signaled the end. For the Weather Underground
the 1970 New York townhouse explosion and death of their comrades was the
signpost. Since everyone, everybody who tried to struggle through and make
sense of the decade, can play this game here is my take.
I can name the day and event exactly
when my 1960’s ended. The day- May Day 1971 in Washington D.C. The event- a
massive attempt by thousands, including myself, to shut down the government
over the Vietnam War. We proceeded under the slogan- IF THE GOVERNMENT WILL
NOT SHUT DOWN THE WAR-WE WILL SHUT DOWN THE GOVERNMENT. At that time I was
a radical but hardly a communist. However, the endless mass marches of the
period and small local individual acts of resistance seemed to me to be leading
to a dead end. But the war nevertheless continued on its savagely endless way.
We needed to up the ante. That day we formed up in collectives with appropriate
gear to take over the streets of Washington and try to get to various
government buildings. While none of us believed that this would be an easy task
we definitely believed that it was doable. Needless to say the Nixon government
and its agents were infinitely better prepared and determined to sweep us from
the streets-by any means necessary. The long and short of it was that we were
swept off the streets in fairly short order, taking many, many arrests. We had
taken a terrible physical and psychological beating that day from which the
movement never really recovered. To borrow for Hunter Thompson above we had
seen the high water mark washed away right before our eyes.
I walked away from that event with my eyes finally opened
about what it would take to made fundamental societal changes. On reflection,
on that day we were somewhat like those naïve marchers in St. Petersburg,
Russia that were bloodily suppressed by the Czarist forces at the start of the
revolution there in January 1905. Nevertheless, in my case, from that point on
I vowed that a lot more than a few thousand convinced radicals and
revolutionaries working in an ad hoc manner were going to have to come
together if we were to succeed against a determined and ruthless enemy. Not a
pretty thought but hard reality nevertheless. Enough said.
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