Saturday, May 04, 2024

KENT STATE AND THE LACK OF AN OFF RAMP

I've never been comfortable with the simplistic idea that history repeats itself, but I've been squirming lately.  I feel like I'm watching the trailer for a horror movie we lived through, long ago.  


Once again, America is involved in a war where it uses the brutal leadership, and atrocities, of the other side to justify its continued involvement in the war, dehumanization of the civilian population and killing of women and children.  The residents of Gaza are enduring a man-made famine.  Their children are enduring amputations without anesthesia.  Thousands of extended families have been exterminated by bombings.  Once again, the culture, history and grievances of the natives of the battleground are widely unknown to the American public.  Once again, American politicians are lying from the podiums of the White House and State Department.  Once again, the only real outlet for opposition is in the streets and on college campuses.   In some ways, the media's participation in manufactured consent is worse than in the past.  


During the Vietnam War, that opposition would sometimes find sensational and, briefly, disruptive tactics.  Those invited to Presidential events, sometimes award recipients themselves, would turn and denounce the war.  They were hustled off the stage and shouted down.  More recently, when anti-war protesters have interrupted Joe Biden's speeches, his supporters have drowned out those calling for a cease fire, by chanting "Four More Years!", with all the fervor of the Nixon Youth.  Yes, that was the slogan of the Nixon/Agnew campaign.  That was their bumper sticker and that was their chant, at public gatherings, as they bellowed it, rapturous at the thought of four more years of Nixon, Agnew and Mitchell.  


On May 1, 1970, Richard Nixon referred to campus radicals who opposed his Vietnam policies as "bums".  Three days later, on May 4, 1970, National Guard troops, on the campus of Kent State University shot 13 unarmed college students and killed four of them.  On May 15, 1970, at Jackson State College, in Mississippi, police shot 14 students, killing two.  


Joe Biden, this week, condemned "antisemitic protests", leaving the implication that the protests themselves were antisemitic.  The House of Representatives promptly piled on by passing a bill that would create a definition of antisemitism that conflates certain criticisms of the State of Israel, or of its policies, as antisemitic.  It is in this atmosphere that militarized police forces have been sent onto college campuses across the country.  The corporate media and the duopoly of the Democratic and Republican parties have, for the most part, been cheer leaders in the state violence committed against peaceful protesters.  This has led to student outrage and a wildfire of protests across the country.  The kind of radicalization, that took years in the 60s and 70s, has now happened in the span of six months.  In the short term, we may be spared another Kent State this spring; the semester is almost over.  But, things are not going to get better. I've said most of what I can about Gaza and the rule of law, back on Human Rights Day, in December.  I relived Kent State here.


I'm still scared.  Students have been met with police violence at Columbia (as they were 50 years ago), at Washington University in St. Louis, and in Austin.  At UCLA, police stood by as pro-Israel counter protesters attacked the peaceful encampment of the Pro-Palestine/anti-war group, even shooting fireworks into their tents.  Four reporters for the student newspaper were also attacked.  


Six months in and the war drags on, universities in Gaza have been razed to the ground, hospitals destroyed, the entire population displaced, famine, malnutrition, disease, PTSD among children, orphans, a destroyed environment, no crops, nowhere to run.  Over here, there is no political will on the part of those in power to stop the horror. In fact, the U.S. government has actively encouraged it, giving political cover at the U.N., in the U.S. media and by supplying the very weapons being used on civilians.  All while claiming it sees no evidence of the war crimes that millions watch daily, live on their phones.


The last time a Democratic president presided over an unpopular war, in an election year, he knew he couldn't win reelection and withdrew in March.  This March, the Democrats doubled down, with Bill Clinton and Barak Obama hosting fat cats at a fundraiser for Joe Biden.  That last time I referred to was 1968.  Even with Johnson out, the nominee was to be his V.P., Hubert Humphrey, who had won zero primaries.  The result was mass demonstrations at the Democratic Convention in Chicago.  I doubt the demonstrations will be as large this year, because the anti-Vietnam War movement had a long standing infrastructure.  I could be fooled, though, at how fast protests can be organized this year and how fast thousands can be mobilized.  Things went badly then.  This year, in addition to an anti-protester news media, there will be Trump baying from the sidelines.  Which means we're screwed coming and going.  Biden's, and Netanyahu's, stubbornness will lead to more protests.  The cops will become more and more aggressive.  Somebody is going to get killed.  Well, in addition to the 35,000, over there, already killed.  But you know what I mean.  And that's before the election.  


Young people aren't going to look at a Democratic party peopled with the likes of Kathleen Hochul, John Fetterman, Antony Blinken and Joe Biden and say, "I better drive to the polls!"   Palestinian Americans, living in Michigan aren't going to grieve over their lost parents, grandparents, nieces, nephews, cousins and friends, all of whom were crushed under concrete apartment buildings, bombed by American supplied weapons, and say, "four more years!" 


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