Not having been alive in the 60s, and not having studied it, I don't
know much.  Hearing the McCain campaign dredge up the Vietnam era
vis-a-vis Bill Ayers I thought it couldn't be a good thing.

I could see how many college students, hearing about armed agents of
the government storming a campus and killed unarmed passersby or the
FBI that in the middle of the night broke into an apartment and killed
2, would feel they were at war with the government.

Not a good time - or a clear time - in American history.  And NOT a
good thing dredge up for review.  We've got current battles to fight.

But since they did, I've looked into it, read a lot, but thought Bill
Ayers should be heard from too:

-------------------------------
April 2008, Bill Ayers
Abridged by me

Day in and day out I go about my business, I hang out with my kids and
my grandchildren, take care of the elders, I go to work, I teach and I
write, I organize and I participate in the never-ending effort to
build a powerful movement for peace and social justice; now and then
(and unpredictably) I appear in the newspapers or on TV

The other night, for example, I heard Sean Hannity tell Senator John
McCain that I was an unrepentant terrorist who had written an article
on September 11, 2001 extolling bombings against the U.S., and even
advocating more terrorist bombs. Senator McCain couldn't believe it,
and neither could I.

I've written a lot about the Viet Nam period, about politics, about
schools and social justice, and I read and speak about all of it. I
encourage people to argue, to agree or disagree, to discuss and
struggle, to engage in conversation.

So in that spirit here is another attempt at clarity:

1. Regrets. I'm often quoted saying that I have "no regrets." This is
not true. For anyone paying attention—and I try to stay wide-awake to
the world around me all/ways—life brings misgivings, doubts,
uncertainty, loss, regret. I'm sometimes asked if I regret anything I
did to oppose the war in Viet Nam, and I say "no, I don't regret
anything I did to try to stop the slaughter of millions of human
beings by my own government." Sometimes I add, "I don't think I did
enough." This is then elided: he has no regrets for setting bombs and
thinks there should be more bombings.

The illegal, murderous, imperial war against Viet Nam was a
catastrophe for the Vietnamese, a disaster for Americans, and a world
tragedy. Many of us understood this, and many tried to stop the war.
Those of us who tried recognize that our efforts were inadequate: the
war dragged on for a decade, thousands were slaughtered every week,
and we couldn't stop it. In the end the U.S. military was defeated and
the war ended, but we surely didn't do enough.

2. Terror. Terrorism—according to both official U.S. policy and the
U.N.—is the use or threat of random violence to intimidate, frighten,
or coerce a population toward some political end. This means, of
course, that terrorism is not the exclusive province of a cult, a
religious sect, or a group of fanatics. It can be any of these, but it
can also be—and often is—executed by governments and states. A bombing
in a café in Israel is terrorism, and an Israeli assault on a
neighborhood in Gaza is terrorism; the September 11 attacks were acts
of terrorism, and the U.S. bombings in Viet Nam for a decade were acts
of terrorism. Terrorism is never justifiable, even in a just cause—the
Union fight in the 1860's was just, for example, but Shernan's March
to the Sea was indefensible terror. I've never advocated terrorism,
never participated in it, never defended it. The U.S. government, by
contrast, does it routinely and defends the use of it in its own cause
consistently.

3. Imperialism. I'm against it, and if Sean Hannity and others were
honest, this is the ground they would fight me on. Capitalism played
its role historically and is exhausted as a force for progress: built
on exploitation, theft, conquest, war, and racism, capitalism and
imperialism must be defeated and a world revolution—a revolution
against war and racism and materialism, a revolution based on human
solidarity and love, cooperation and the common good—must win.

We begin by releasing our most hopeful dreams and our most radical
imaginations: a better world is both possible and necessary. We need
to bring our imaginations together and forge an unbreakable human
alliance. We need to unite to transform and save ourselves as we fight
to change the world and save humanity.

http://billayers.wordpress.com/2008/04/06/episodic-notoriety-fact-and-fantasy/

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