Reflections on the Kent State massacre

http://blogs.creativeloafing.com/theclog/2009/05/04/reflections-on-the-kent-state-massacre/

May 4th, 2009
by John Grooms

Today marks the 39th anniversary of the Kent State massacre, when 
National Guard troops fired on a large crowd of students who were 
demonstrating against Nixon's invasion of Cambodia. Those killings in 
Ohio helped shape the attitudes, politics and history of my 
generation, and so it seems frankly strange that so little public 
notice is given to the anniversary of Kent State, or to its aftermath 
on American college campuses. Oh, once a year, the press drags out 
the photo of the young woman on her knees crying next to a dead 
student, but that's pretty much it. We Americans aren't exactly known 
for caring deeply about our own history, but regardless of our 
national amnesia, it's a simple fact that May 1970 was a turbulent, 
chaotic time that scared hell out of the established order.

The year 1968 had been a rough one, as has been widely written about, 
but for sheer, keening rage, May 1970 was unlike anything since the 
Civil War. Within two weeks of Nixon's invasion, and 10 days after 
Kent State, nearly 500 American colleges were brought to a halt by 
student strikes, and serious violence rocked hundreds of American 
campuses. For a couple of weeks, students throwing bricks at cops, 
busting windows, fire-bombing ROTC buildings, and rolling police cars 
­ along with heavily armed authorities launching tear gas and 
breaking heads open ­ were primary preoccupations at this country's 
centers of higher learning. A dizzying feeling that we were in the 
middle of a national emergency, that things were teetering on the 
edge, was in the very air we breathed. And then something very lucky 
happened for the college administrators and government authorities: 
the school year ended. Kids went home to parents and summer jobs, and 
the tide of rage receded. OK, that's it, class. Have a nice spring day.

.


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