The 40th
Anniversary Of The Fall Of Saigon (Ho Chi Minh City)-An American Ex-Soldier’s
Story.
[1940]
I remember commenting to Sam during the course of our conversations on the fact that no way, no way in hell, if it had not been for the explosive events of the 1960s, of the war and later a bunch of social issue questions, mainly third world liberation struggles internationally and the black liberation question at home we would not even be having the conversations we were having, not the two of us anyway, talking stuff about the virtues of the “enemy” which would have been treason talk if not legally then emotionally (both of also as we rattled on chuckling a little at using the old time terms, especially the use of “struggle” and “question,” for example the black, gay, woman questions since lately we have noticed that younger activists no longer spoke in such terms but used more ephemeral “white privilege,” “patriarchy,” “gender” terms reflecting the identity politics that have been in fashion for a long time, since the ebb flow of the 1960s).
I (and Sam too) had imbibed all the standard identifiable working-class prejudices against reds, some of those prejudices more widespread than among the working class among the general population of the times, you know, like the big red scare Cold War “your mommy is a commie, turn her in,” “the Russians are coming get under the desk and hold onto your head,” anybody to the left of Grandpa Ike, maybe even him, nothing but communist dupes of Joe Stalin and his progeny who pulled the strings from Moscow and made everybody jumpy; against blacks (I had stood there right next to my father, Ralph, Sr., when he led the physical opposition to blacks moving into the Tappan Street section of town and had nothing, along with my corner boys at Van Patten’s Drugstore, but the “n” word to call black people, sometimes to their faces. Sam’s father was not much better, a southerner from hillbilly country down in Appalachia who had been stationed in Hingham no too far from Carver at the end of World War II and stayed, who never could until his dying breathe call blacks anything but the “n” word); against gays and lesbians (me and my boys mercilessly fag and dyke baiting them whenever the guys and I went to Saratoga Springs where those “creeps” spent their summers doing whatever nasty things they did to each other and Sam likewise down in Provincetown with his boys, he helping, beating up some poor guy in a back alley after one of his boys had made a fake pass at the guy, Jesus; against uppity women, servile, domestic child-producing women like our good old mothers and sisters and wanna-bes were okay as were “easy” girls ready to toot our whistles, attitudes which we had only gotten beaten out of us when we ran into our respective future wives (and me with Joyell too but don’t mention that to my wife Laura since all these years later she see red when I mention her name in any content) who had both been influenced by the women’s liberation movement although truth to tell they were not especially political, but rather artistic types. Native Americans didn’t even rate a nod since they were not on the radar, were written off in any case as fodder for cowboys and soldiers in blue. But mainly we had been red, white and blue American patriotic guys who really did have ice picks in our eyes for anybody who thought they would like to tread on old Uncle Sam (who had been “invented” around my way, my Troy hometown way).
Vietnam War: Reflections, Resistance and Implications
Talk: "From Warrior to Peace Activist" by Pat Scanlon, Veterans for Peace
Talk: "Behind the scenes: a participant's view of the movement to Bring the Troops Now" by Marilyn Levin, United for Justice with Peace
Slide show: "Vietnam Today" by Duncan McFarland, United for Justice with Peace
2015 is the year antiwar activists are commemorating the 50th anniversay of the first antiwar teach-ins and national protests in 1965. The Pentagon is also remembering the war with a well-funded project to sanitize the history and erase the atrocities and resistance -- funded with your tax dollars! It's important to remember the true history. After the program, the audience is invited to offer their personal reflections on the 1960s.
Sponsored by United for Justice with Peace and cosponsored by Veterans for Peace.
Bertolt Brecht (1898–1956)
To those born later
I
Truly I live in dark times!
Frank speech is naïve. A smooth forehead
Suggests insensitivity. The man who laughs
Has simply not yet heard
The terrible news.
What kind of times are these, when
To talk about trees is almost a crime
Because it implies silence about so many horrors?
When the man over there calmly crossing the street
Is already perhaps beyond the reach of his friends 10
Who are in need?
It’s true that I still earn my daily bread
But, believe me, that’s only an accident. Nothing
I do gives me the right to eat my fill.
By chance I've been spared. (If my luck breaks, I'm lost.)
They say to me: Eat and drink! Be glad you have it!
But how can I eat and drink if I snatch what I eat
From the starving
And my glass of water belongs to someone dying of thirst?
And yet I eat and drink. 20
I would also like to be wise.
In the old books it says what wisdom is:
To shun the strife of the world and to live out
Your brief time without fear
Also to get along without violence
To return good for evil
Not to fulfill your desires but to forget them
Is accounted wise.
All this I cannot do.
Truly, I live in dark times. 30
II
I came to the cities in a time of disorder
When hunger reigned.
I came among men in a time of revolt
And I rebelled with them.
So passed my time
Given me to on earth.
I ate my food between battles
I lay down to sleep among murderers
I practiced love carelessly
And I had little patience for nature’s beauty. 40
So passed my time
Given to me on earth.
All roads led into the mire in my time.
My tongue betrayed me to the butchers.
There was little I could do. But those is power
Sat safer without me: that was my hope.
So passed my time
Given to me on earth.
Our forces were slight. Our goal
Lay far in the distance 50
Clearly visible, though I myself
Was unlikely to reach it.
So passed my time
Given to me on earth.
III
You who will emerge from the flood
In which we have gone under
Bring to mind
When you speak of our failings
Bring to mind also the dark times
That you have escaped. 60
Changing countries more often than our shoes,
We went through the class wars, despairing
When there was only injustice, no outrage.
And yet we realized:
Hatred, even of meanness
Contorts the features.
Anger, even against injustice
Makes the voice hoarse. O,
We who wanted to prepare the ground for friendship
Could not ourselves be friendly. 70
But you, when the time comes at last
When man is helper to man
Think of us
With forbearance.
Ralph Morris comment:
Yeah, sure I served
in Vietnam, served Regular Army, after I kind of panicked when I got my draft
notice from my “friends and neighbors” at the Troy, New York draft board in
late 1966 and enlisted expecting, based on a foolish belief in the recruiting
sergeant, that I would be placed in an electronics MOS by doing so. I can still
remember my G.I. dog-tag number RA038341396, that RA in front of the numbers not
like a lot of guys, guys who I wished I had been more like who had “U.S.”
before their dog-tag numbers signifying that they were draftees, maybe kicking
and screaming draftees like a guy I ran into in the G.I. anti-war movement in
1971, Fritz Jasper, who was a big guy in Vietnam Veterans Against the War
(VVAW) and who had served a year in an Army stockade before they let him out
for refusing to go to ‘Nam.
But what did I know
then. What did I know like Fritz who was one of those kicking and screaming
draftees out of New York City, Brooklyn I think, about getting with
Quaker-driven draft counsellors or military resistance counsellors once he knew
after about three day in the Army in 1969 that he was in the wrong place and
every instinct told him that year that he was going to ‘Nam if he didn’t do
something quick to get the military’s attention. So he did first by refusing
his orders and then by refusing to do a damn Army thing. They put his ass in
some damn stockade down South and were going
to throw away the key before some people he was in contact with, some Quaker
people or people who worked with Quakers got him some legal help and they went
to federal court to spring him. Remind to tell you some more of his story
sometime because it is kind of interesting when people ask me about military
resisters then. That’s the big case I tell them about because I know it cold
although I know there were plenty of others, plenty that got some coverage.
Maybe better I will ask Fritz to tell his story sometime because, guess what,
that resistance/stockade experience made a peacenik “lifer” out of him. He is
working with Veterans For Peace down in the city just like I am in Troy (really
the whole North Country area and in Boston when I visit Sam Eaton who has a big
part in this story and the VFP chapter there needs warm bodies for an
action.)
And what if I did know
how to make those anti-war connections. What good would it have done me since
before ‘Nam I was enthrall to some pretty red, white and blue notions, some
ideas it has taken my whole freaking dead ass life to break from, and I still
breaking from. All I know is this, bloody, forlorn god forsaken Vietnam changed
my life, probably has been the number one experience that has kept me going
trying to light the lamp of peace. If I hadn’t I today probably would be like a
lot of guys and gals who were waving South Vietnamese National Liberation Front
(NLF) flags like I did later on when I got “religion” on the war issue. Waved
that flag at the end when the “other side” came down Highway One in Vietnam in
the Spring of 1975 like bats out of hell and resolved the whole thing in a
couple of months, stuff that had taken thirty years of their blood and over ten
of ours to conclude not to count the whole torn apart countries left in the
wake. Those others have now long past made their peace with the American empire,
made it quick and easy when the deal when down and the American government
pulled the hammer down and they flinched when it counted a whole bunch of times
since, times like Iraq 2003. Yeah, some people learn the hard way but they
learn the lesson well.
Yeah, what good would
all of that knowledge done me then. See my old man, Ralph, Senior, ran a high
precision electrical shop doing a lot of work for the big employer in the area,
General Electric, a company which had many big contracts with the Department of
Defense in those years and I worked for him a couple of years in high school
and after I got out so I expected that I could do something useful for the Army
with that skill. But see beside that little “error” in believing word one from
that damn recruiting sergeant, First Sergeant Riley, a good old boy, a “lifer” (
a very different “lifer” from Fritz Jasper) from Arkansas who had already done
two tours in ‘Nam and had blessed the Army each and every day for giving him
shoes and three squares a day if I recall, the United States of America under
the benevolent guidance of some damn Texan, Lyndon Johnson, LBJ, to be exact in
1967, 1968 was looking for nothing but “grunts” to comb the bushes and jungles
of Vietnam. Looking for grunts to flush out every commie from every hut in
every hamlet in that benighted country no matter how long it took and how much
“collateral damage” ensued so I was trained as an 11B (Bravo), an infantryman,
a “grunt,” “cannon fodder” although I didn’t pick up that last term until
later, later when I got discharged, when people explained to me in concrete
terms what I was, al that I was, to the people who ran the damn war.
That discharge
business is important because unlike a couple of guys I heard about who were
raising hell about the war, in Vietnam if you can believe that, yeah, raising
holy hell, and guys I ran into later at Fort Dix who had joined the G.I.
anti-war resistance after I came back to the “real world” I didn’t raise any
hell while I was in the Army. (And knew nothing about Fritz’s case even though
as he showed me a copy later it was publicized at Fort Dix via a G.I.
newspaper, The Morning Report, run
out of one of the G.I. coffeehouses that we sprouting up around military bases
when the civilian anti-war movement, the radical students mainly, realized they
had to get to the grunts if they were going to end the war on their terms not
that of the American government.) Didn’t see the percentage in it, didn’t want
to wind up in Long Binh Jail, the LBJ as everybody in-country called it, or
worse, some long forgotten stretch out in the prairies of Kansas at Fort
Leavenworth, the place where they now have the heroic Wiki-leaks whistle-blower
Private Chelsea Manning doing a hard thirty-five year stretch just for telling
the truth about American military atrocities in Iraq and Afghanistan since 2001.
Although this piece is about my own military service and what I did or didn’t
about what was going on in Vietnam, mainly didn’t, except a few words to
buddies over beers at the PX or over a joint in the barracks or boondocks the
Manning case grabbed me, grabbed me hard and I took her case to heart. [For
those not in the know or who don’t recognize the case by that name before her
conviction and sentencing in August 2013 she was known a Bradley Manning which
makes her being at the all-male prisoner Leavenworth that much harder.] I went to many rallies in her
support, raised money for the legal defense, circulated every kind of petition
to get her free, still do, and went down to Fort Meade where she was tried by
court-martial a few times. Yeah, call it guilt maybe, call it pay back, but I
was supporting a fellow soldier in her hour of need, something I didn’t do back
then. But enough of this.
In ‘Nam whatever I
did or didn’t do is where I got the “fire in the belly” to see that the whole
war was off balance, didn’t make the kind of sense right there in-country that
it did in faraway propaganda-drenched America, fighting commies, fighting
dominos, picking up on my father’s “my country, right or wrong” mentality or my
corner boys looking for some cheapjack glory learned from watching too many Green Beret-type movies. The reality: picking
off random peasants who got in the crossfire because we were too scared to go
forward if we thought VC was in the area or at night when we knew, not at first
but by 1968, that “the night belonged to Charlie” as we called him, first as a
term of disrespect but finally after Tet 1968 as an enemy worthy of respect
whatever the NCOs and officers said. Jesus. Yeah, that’s the patriotic hogwash what
I had to fight against, get rid of from my mind, and frankly it has been a
lifelong struggle on some things. (But get this who would have thought that a sixty-something
purple heart ex-soldier would be out on the hustings to get a transgender woman,
Chelsea Manning, out of hard rock prison back then, now even.)
But back in Vietnam
days, in-country not affected too much by reports of draft resistance in 1967
although I had had heard on Armed Forces Radio the bit about the student radical
trying to “levitate” the Pentagon (and thought it a weird thing to do with gunfire
all around me) and like I said a little about guys bucking against the military
system, mostly blacks who I got along with personally but there was a lot of
black nationalism in the air and we didn’t’ mix that much in 1967 (1968 yes
after the Tet offensive showed what the hell we were up against we made an “armed
truce” to survive) but that was kind of so much air then. I had been
progressively getting more and more fed up with the war, with the killing, with
what it was doing to me, what it was doing to my buddies, and what the United
States of America was turning me and them into, nothing but animals.
I even extended my
tour from the usual year (thirteen months really when you figure in the 30 days
of R&R) to eighteen months so if I didn’t get killed I could get out a few
months earlier from my three year enlistment (and get as a bonus stationed at
Fort Dix at the end of my enlistment on the East Coast only a couple of hundred
miles from home). Well I might have had a death wish or something extending my
tour of duty but I made it out alive with only a small purple heart wound but
when I got out in late 1969 I joined, not right away but soon, that VVAW that I
talked about earlier. Yeah wound up joining the Vietnam Veterans Against
the War, the main anti-war veterans group at the time. Such a move by me and
thousands of other soldiers who had served in ‘Nam is a real indication even
today of how unpopular that war was when the guys who had fought the damn thing
arms in hand, mostly guys then, rose up against the slaughter. I wound up taking
part in a lot of VVAW actions around Albany and New York City mainly.
Nah, I thought I was
going to but no I am not going to tell war stories here about what happened in
Vietnam, the “dog soldier” stories because you can read about them, or see a
movie like The Deer Hunter or Apocalypse Now, films like that to get a
flavor of the heat and humiliation of battle or books by guys who did want to
tell “dog soldier stories” like Mike Caputo, and Phil Jackson. What I want to
talk about in this the 40th anniversary of the fall of Saigon is the
“afterwards” part, the VVAW part, the May Day 1971 part, the “red collectives”
in Cambridge part with my old friend and political activist associate Sam Eaton,
and the part where I, not without some conflict came to cheer on the DNV/NLF
offensive in the Spring of 1975 which led to the fall of Saigon, now Ho Chi
Minh City, and left ashes in American governmental mouths (and mine too but for
different reasons).
I didn’t really want
to tell any stories, didn’t want to think about Vietnam at all although that
experience one way or another touches my soul every damn day I live. I had in
fact for some years later denied to strangers that I had even served in Vietnam
including one girl, Joyell who I ran into at an anti-war rally on Cambridge
Common one time when I went there to visit Sam where she was waving a NLF flag
which made me wince at first but she was a beauty and very smart too so I took
a run at her and she at me, yeah, Joyell, a radical girl from Cambridge when
that was a cool thing to be in say 1972, 1973,
whom I dated for a year and had told that I had been a drafter resister
and when she found out I was a Vietnam vet, even with the VVAW imprimatur, had
left me flat.
But see Sam, Sam
Eaton, and I had been talking one night a few months back after having a few
high-shelf whiskeys at our favorite watering hole, Jack Higgins’ Grille down
just outside the Financial District near Quincy Market when I had come to
Boston to see him on one of our periodic visits with each other and he said I
“owed it to the movement,” owed it to “the generations that came after” to
paraphrase a poem by Bertolt Brecht to tell how an average patriotic guy from a
sternly patriotic Cold War “my country, right or wrong” family, neighborhood,
city got “religion” on the issues of war and peace, and had kept the faith ever
since despite having to swallow some sad truths like that I had fought on the
wrong side of history in that fight, that whatever happened later the fight was
for the Vietnamese people to figure out without the mightiest military power in
the known world and in known history raining hell and damnation on those
benighted people.
See Sam, a guy who
didn’t go to war, didn’t have to go to war, because his draft board (his
“friends and neighbors”) in Carver, Massachusetts had exempted him on the very
reasonable grounds that he was then the sole support of his mother and four
younger sisters after his drunken sot of a father (Sam’s term) passed away of a
massive heart attack in 1965 is very keen on his history these days, has been
since the days when we got involved in those “red collective” study groups back
after the May Day 1971 fiasco. He had read that the United for Justice and
Peace (UJP) was hosting a series of events commemorating that fall of Saigon by
taking a retrospective look at what the American anti-war movement in general
did to aid that decisive event and how the various civilian and military
resistance movements, you know stuff like Fritz Jasper did by refusing to go to
Vietnam when under military orders to do so, did as well. So he dragged me to
that series and then bugged me for a couple of months afterward to write
something like a cautionary tale from a guy like me who was not a draft or
military resister but who nevertheless got “religion” on the war issue and
unlike guys from VVAW like the current Secretary of State John Forbes Kerry
didn’t forget the lessons when the “main chance” came along and he, Kerry,
abandoned every decent instinct he ever had.
So here goes. But
like I said I don’t want to, maybe can’t tell war stories except maybe a little
to show a point but no blood and gore stuff because all you need to know is
58,000 plus names on black marble down in Washington, D.C., hundreds of
thousands injured with small physical wounds like mine or grievous ones like
Johnny Jann from my platoon who lost both legs, mostly uncounted thousand with
PTSD, a mass of unnumbered suicides, tons of guys who never made it back to the
“real” world and wound up homeless living like Bruce Springsteen said like
“brothers under the bridge,” Vietnam bombed back practically to the Stone Age
maybe before if the Air Force generals had been totally unleashed, countless
hamlets, villages, towns blown to smithereens, millions of luckless innocent
people who didn’t bother a soul killed, almost as many “enemy” soldiers and
“friendlies” too. Yeah, that is all you need to know.
I remember commenting to Sam during the course of our conversations on the fact that no way, no way in hell, if it had not been for the explosive events of the 1960s, of the war and later a bunch of social issue questions, mainly third world liberation struggles internationally and the black liberation question at home we would not even be having the conversations we were having, not the two of us anyway, talking stuff about the virtues of the “enemy” which would have been treason talk if not legally then emotionally (both of also as we rattled on chuckling a little at using the old time terms, especially the use of “struggle” and “question,” for example the black, gay, woman questions since lately we have noticed that younger activists no longer spoke in such terms but used more ephemeral “white privilege,” “patriarchy,” “gender” terms reflecting the identity politics that have been in fashion for a long time, since the ebb flow of the 1960s).
I (and Sam too) had imbibed all the standard identifiable working-class prejudices against reds, some of those prejudices more widespread than among the working class among the general population of the times, you know, like the big red scare Cold War “your mommy is a commie, turn her in,” “the Russians are coming get under the desk and hold onto your head,” anybody to the left of Grandpa Ike, maybe even him, nothing but communist dupes of Joe Stalin and his progeny who pulled the strings from Moscow and made everybody jumpy; against blacks (I had stood there right next to my father, Ralph, Sr., when he led the physical opposition to blacks moving into the Tappan Street section of town and had nothing, along with my corner boys at Van Patten’s Drugstore, but the “n” word to call black people, sometimes to their faces. Sam’s father was not much better, a southerner from hillbilly country down in Appalachia who had been stationed in Hingham no too far from Carver at the end of World War II and stayed, who never could until his dying breathe call blacks anything but the “n” word); against gays and lesbians (me and my boys mercilessly fag and dyke baiting them whenever the guys and I went to Saratoga Springs where those “creeps” spent their summers doing whatever nasty things they did to each other and Sam likewise down in Provincetown with his boys, he helping, beating up some poor guy in a back alley after one of his boys had made a fake pass at the guy, Jesus; against uppity women, servile, domestic child-producing women like our good old mothers and sisters and wanna-bes were okay as were “easy” girls ready to toot our whistles, attitudes which we had only gotten beaten out of us when we ran into our respective future wives (and me with Joyell too but don’t mention that to my wife Laura since all these years later she see red when I mention her name in any content) who had both been influenced by the women’s liberation movement although truth to tell they were not especially political, but rather artistic types. Native Americans didn’t even rate a nod since they were not on the radar, were written off in any case as fodder for cowboys and soldiers in blue. But mainly we had been red, white and blue American patriotic guys who really did have ice picks in our eyes for anybody who thought they would like to tread on old Uncle Sam (who had been “invented” around my way, my Troy hometown way).
See I, Sam too for that matter, had joined the anti-war
movement for personal reasons at first which had to do a lot with ending the war
in Vietnam and not a lot about “changing the whole freaking world” (Sam’s term).
Like I said my story was a little bit amazing that way, since I had served in
the military, served in the Army, in Vietnam. But like I already told you in
1967, 1968 what Uncle needed, desperately needed as General Westmoreland called
for more troops, was more “grunts” to flush out Charlie and so I wound up with
a unit in the Central Highlands, up in the bush trying to kill every commie I
could get my hands on just like the General wanted.
After I got out I
worked in my father’s high precision electrical shop for a while to make some
dough and head west, head somewhere not stinking nowhere Troy, not the woe begotten
North Country. One day in 1970 I was taking a high compression motor to Albany to
a customer and had parked the shop truck on Van Dyke Street near Russell Sage
College. Coming down the line, silent, silent as the grave I thought later,
were a ragtag bunch of guys in mismatched (on purpose I found out later)
military uniforms carrying individual signs but with a big banner in front
calling for “Immediate Withdrawal From Vietnam” in big black letters and
signing the banner with the name of the organization in red-Vietnam Veterans
Against the War (VVAW). That was all, and all that was needed. Nobody on those
still patriotic, mostly government worker, streets called them commies or
anything like that but you could tell some guys in white collars and ties who had
never come close to a gun, except maybe to kill animals or something
defenseless really wanted to. One veteran as they came nearer to me shouted out
for any veterans to join them, to tell the world what they knew first-hand
about what was going on in Vietnam. Yeah, that shout-out was all I needed, all I
needed to join my “band of brothers.”
Let me tell you thought how Sam and I met in Washington on
May Day 1971 because that will explain a lot of why I am writing this thing
that almost half a century later still hurts my brain. I remember that I had
first noticed that Sam was wearing a VVAW supporter button when I saw him on the
football field at RFK Stadium and I had asked if he had been in ‘Nam. Sam, a
little sheepishly, explained that he had been exempted from military duty since
he was the sole support for his mother and four younger sisters after his
father had passed away of a massive heart attack in 1965. (He had also said he
had gone to work in Mister Snyder’s print shop where he had learned enough
about the printing business to later open his own shop which he kept afloat
somehow during the late 1960s with his high school friend Jack Callahan’s help
and which became Sam’s career after he settled down when the 1960s ebbed and
people started heading back to “normal” in the mid-1970s)
Oh yeah the reason we were in RFK was not for a football
game, the NFL Washington Redskins did not play that game in May, but because we
both respectively had been arrested along with thousands of others in a massive
civil disobedience action that I will tell more about in a minute. Sam told me,
since we had plenty of time to talk, the reason that he had joined the anti-war
movement after years of relative indifference since he was not involved in the
war effort had been that his closest high school friend, Jeff Mullins, had been
blown away in the Central Highlands and that had made him question what was
going on. Jeff, who like us had been as red, white and blue as any guy, had
written Sam when he was in Vietnam that he thought that the place, the
situation that he found himself in was more than he bargained for, and that if
he didn’t make it back for Sam to tell people, everybody he could what was
really going on. Then with just a few months to go Jeff was blown away near
some village that Sam could not spell or pronounce correctly even all these
many years later. Jeff had not only been Sam’s best friend but he said was as
straight a guy as you could meet, and had gotten Sam out of more than a few scrapes,
a few illegal scrapes that could have got him before some judge. So that was
how Sam got “religion,” not through some intellectual or rational argument
about the theories of war, just wars or “your country right or wrong” wars, but
because his friend had been blown away, blown away for no good reason as far as
that went.
May Day 1971 was a watershed for both of us, both of us
before May Day having sensed that more drastic action was necessary to “tame
the American imperial monster” (Sam’s term picked up from The Real Paper, an alternative newspaper he had picked up at a
street newsstand in Cambridge) and had come away from that experience, that
disaster, with the understanding that even to end the war would take much more,
and many more people, than they had previously expected. I, in particular, had
been carried away with the notion that what I and my fellow veterans who were
going to try to symbolically close down the Pentagon were doing as veterans
would cause the government pause, would make them think twice about any
retaliation to guys who had served and seen it all. I got “smart” on that one
fast when the National Guard which was defending the Pentagon, or part of it
that day, treated us like any Chicago cops at the Democratic Party Convention
in 1968, treated us like cops did to any SDS-ers anywhere, and treated us just like
anybody else who raised their voices against governmental policy in the
streets.
I told Sam while were
in captivity that I had been working in my father’s shop for a while but our relationship
was icy (and would be for a long time after that although in 1991 when Ralph,
Senior retired I took over the business). I would take part in whatever actions
I could around the area (and down in New York City a couple of times when they
called for re-enforcements to make a big splash).
I had, like I said, joined
with a group of VVAW-ers and supporters for that action down in Washington,
D.C. See the idea, which would sound kind of strange today in a different time
when there is very little overt anti-war activity against the current crop of
endless wars but also shows how desperate we were to end that damn war, was to
on May Day shut down the government if it did not shut down the war. Our
group’s task, as part of the bigger scheme, since we were to form up as a total
veterans and supporters contingent was to symbolically shut down the Pentagon.
Wild right, but see the figuring was that they, the government, would not dare
to arrest vets and we figured (“we” meaning all those who planned the events
and went along with the plan) the government would not treat it like the big
civilian action at the Pentagon in 1967 which Norman Mailer won a literary
prize writing a book about, Armies of the
Night. Silly us.
Sam and I after the fall-out from May Day were thus
searching for a better way to handle things, a better way to make an impact
because those few days of detention in D.C. that we had jointly suffered not
only started what would be a lifelong personal friendship but an on-going
conversation between us over the next several years about how to bring about
the greater social change we sensed was needed before one could even think
about stopping wars and stuff like that. (The story, in short, of how we got
out of RFK after a few days was pretty straight forward. Since law enforcement
was so strapped that week somebody had noticed and passed the word along that
some of the side exits in the stadium were not guarded and so we had just
walked out. And got out of town fast, very fast, hitchhiking back north to
Carver first, and me later going back to Troy).
Hence the push by Sam toward the study groups led by “red
collectives” that were sprouting up then peopled by others who had the same
kind of questions. Collectives which we
would join, unjoin and work with, or not work with over the next few years
before both of us sensed the tide of the rolling 1960s had ebbed.
Old time high school thoughts
even with the cross-fire hells of burned down Vietnam villages melted into the
back of his brain crossed my mind when I first thought of Marx, Lenin (I, we,
were not familiar with Trotsky except he had “bought it” down in Mexico with an
icepick from some assassin), Joe Stalin, Red Square, Moscow and commie dupes.
Sam had not been far behind in his own youthful prejudices as he told me one
night after a class and we were tossing down a few at Jack’s in Cambridge before
heading home to the commune where Sam was staying. That was the summer of 1972,
the year I broke from my father’s business and spent the summer in Cambridge,
the summer I first met Joyell, her waving in the breeze NLF flag and her jet
black hair and pale blue eyes.
I had gone out of my way to note in a blog entry for Fritz
Jasper’s New York VFP chapter that before I got “religion” on the anti-war and
later social justice issues I had held as many anti-communist prejudices as
anybody else in Troy, New York, not excluding my rabidly right-wing father who
never really believed until his dying days in 2005 that the United States had
lost the war in Vietnam. I had realized that all the propaganda he had been fed
was like the wind and my realization of that had made me a very angry young man from the time I got out of the Army onward.
I tried to talk to my father about it but Ralph, Senior was hung up by a
combination “good war, World War II, his war where America saved international
civilization from the Nazis and Nips (my father’s term since he fought in the
Pacific with the Marines) and “my country, right or wrong.” All Ralph, Senior
really wanted me to do ever was to get back to the shop and help him fill those
goddam GE defense contract orders. And like I said I did it, for a while.
I had also in that blog entry expressed my feelings of
trepidation when after a lot of things went south on the social justice front
with damn little to show for all the arrests, deaths, and social cataclysm when
me and Sam had gotten into a latter study group in Cambridge run by a “Red
October Collective.” That group focused on studying “Che” Guevara and the
Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky after an earlier introduction to the Marxist
classics. Sam was constantly trying to figure out why we were spinning our wheels
trying to change the world for the better just then and to think about new
strategies and tactics for the next big break-out of social activism so he
would drag me along half-kicking and screaming. At the end of each meeting we
would sing the Internationale before
the group broke up. At first I had a hard time with the idea of singing a
“commie” song (I didn’t put it that way but I might as well have according to
Sam) unlike something like John Lennon’s Give
Peace A Chance, songs like that. As I, we got immersed in the group I lightened
up and would sing along if not with gusto then without a snicker.
That same apprehensive attitude had prevailed when after
about three meetings we began to study what the group leader, Jeremy, called
classic Marxism strategy, the line from Marx and Engels to Lenin and the
Bolsheviks. A couple of the early classes had dealt with the American Civil War
and its relationship to the class struggle in America, and Marx’s views on what
was happening, why it was necessary for all progressives to side with the North
and the end of slavery, and why despite his personal flaws and attitudes toward
blacks Abraham Lincoln was a figure to admire. All of which neither of us knew much
about except the battles and military leaders in American History classes.
What caused the most fears and consternation for me was the
need for revolution worked out in practice during the Russian revolutions of
1905 and 1917. I could see that it was necessary in Russia during those times
but America in the 1970s was a different question, not to speak of the beating
that we had taken for being “uppity” in the streets in Washington, D.C. in 1971
when we were not thinking thought one about revolution (maybe others had such
ideas but if so they kept them to themselves) and the state came crashing down
on us anyway.
At the beginning in
any case, and that might have affected my ultimate decision, some of my old
habits kind of held me back, you know the anti-red stuff, Cold War enemy stuff,
just like at first I had had trouble despite all I knew about Vietnam, what it
had to meant to me and my buddies, that the other side had the better argument
in history calling for victory to the Viet Cong. But I got over it, got in the swing, mostly. Joyell
and her energy helped a lot then too. And I still think that was the right
outcome. Enough said.
The Marxism did not
come easy, the theory part, maybe for me a little more than Sam who had taken
junior college night classes to bolster the small print shop he had built from
nothing after Mister Snyder moved his operation to Quincy to be nearer his main
client, State Street Bank and Trust (although for long periods his old Carver
friend, Jack Callahan, managed the place when Sam was off on his, our anti-war campaigns).
We got that the working-class, our class, should rule and be done with
inequalities of all kinds but the idea of a revolution, or more importantly, a
working class party which was on everybody’s mind in those days to lead that
revolution seemed, well, utopian. The economic theory behind Marxism, that
impossible to read Das Capital and
historical materialism as a philosophy were books sealed with seven seals for us
both. Nevertheless for a few years, say until 1975, 1976 when the tide really
had ebbed for anybody who wanted to see we hung around with the local “reds,” mostly
those interested in third world liberation struggles and political prisoner
defense work.
Those were really our
earnest “socialist years” although if you had asked us for a model of what our socialism
looked like we probably would have pointed to Cuba which seemed fresher than
the stodgy old Soviet Union with their Brezhnev bureaucrats. Yeah, those were
heady times, we made a ton of mistakes but one that we didn’t make was having
silent thrills in our hearts when the DNV/NLF troops came swooping down on
Saigon April of 1975. Even if I gave the slightest pause at first hearing.
Vietnam War: Reflections, Resistance and Implications
When: Monday, June 29, 2015, 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Where: encuentro 5 • 9 Hamilton Place • suite 2A • Boston
Remembering the Vietnam antiwar movement on the 40th anniversary of the end of the war
Program
Film: "Only the Beginning: Operation Dewey Canyon 2" (Vietnam Vets throw away their medals, 1971)Talk: "From Warrior to Peace Activist" by Pat Scanlon, Veterans for Peace
Talk: "Behind the scenes: a participant's view of the movement to Bring the Troops Now" by Marilyn Levin, United for Justice with Peace
Slide show: "Vietnam Today" by Duncan McFarland, United for Justice with Peace
2015 is the year antiwar activists are commemorating the 50th anniversay of the first antiwar teach-ins and national protests in 1965. The Pentagon is also remembering the war with a well-funded project to sanitize the history and erase the atrocities and resistance -- funded with your tax dollars! It's important to remember the true history. After the program, the audience is invited to offer their personal reflections on the 1960s.
Sponsored by United for Justice with Peace and cosponsored by Veterans for Peace.
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