Those who forget the past . . . 
http://www.opednews.com/articles/Those-who-forget-the-past-by-Bob-Patterson-110906-675.html
 

September 6, 2011 
By Bob Patterson 



As the ninth month of the year begins, here are a few items that the columnist 
considers important cultural tidbits: an unpopular Democratic President is 
struggling to get renominated, a bumper sticker being sold on Telegraph Avenue 
in Berkeley asks: "Hey, hey, LBJ, how many kids did you kill today?," there is 
an ongoing protest at People's Park, the Freedom of Speech issue is spawning 
arrests, a new book by Shel Silverstein is due out this month, the Playboy Club 
(and "the bunny slouch"?) will be featured in a new TV series, and Pan Am will 
get tons of free publicity from a new fall TV series (perhaps based on the book 
"Coffee, Tea, or me?"?), so with out looking at a calendar can you please say 
what year is this? British disk jockey Danny Baker recently proclaimed that 
this year is 1968 and he might be right. 



The longer Obama is President the easier it becomes for a pundit to make clever 
and perceptive comments; all that's needed is a great memory. A case in point 
would be pollution and global warming. You don't need to be a conspiracy theory 
scientist to have a major emotional reaction to a bit of popular American 
culture from 1970. Who can watch the Iron Eyes Cody Public Service Announcement 
and not get the point? 



Who can listen to "Man in Black," Johnny Cash's 1971 hit that covered just 
about all of today's problems, and not find it moving? 



For people living in Berkeley and facing the task of preparing to mark the 
fiftieth anniversary of Mario Savio's speech from the top of a police car, the 
recent No Justice No BART protests and arrests about the Freedom of Speech 
issue have a distinct "been there done that" aspect. 



People's Park is back in the news. Activists are staging a protest. They assert 
that the University of California in Berkeley is using incremental limitations 
as a way of trying to end the use of the area known as People's Park as a 
campsite for homeless people. Activists inform journalists that efforts are 
being made to end the program to feed the homeless in the park. Similar 
protests in 1969 were suspended after the Park and the protests, which resulted 
in the death of James Richter, became national news stories. 



Peace is still the objective for Peaceniks only the name of the war has 
changed. 



Mario Savio objected to high tuition fees in the Sixties and asserted that 
students had a right to express their opinions. Two years ago students were 
holding demonstrations at UCB to draw attention to increases in tuition costs. 



Over the Labor Day weekend, a march by the United Farm Workers reached 
Sacramento where they hoped to deliver their list of grievances and goals to 
the governor of California. 



For a columnist who made futile efforts to get to the 1968 Democratic National 
Convention in Chicago, this year's issues and protests have a strong déjà vu 
aspect to them. One ingredient that is missing from attempts to photograph and 
write about this year's events is an endless supply of energy and enthusiasm. 



Scrambling around the San Francisco Bay area to get photos at a benefit for the 
Northern California 9/11 Truth Alliance, People's Park and the various No 
Justice No BART protests, it is obvious that getting a by-line in the Berkeley 
Barb is a goal that will never be accomplished. 



In one day, can one reporter photographer cover a nine hour event at the Grand 
Lake Theater in Oakland, a planned new No Justice No BART event in San 
Francisco, and check in with the protest in People's Park? Obviously we'll have 
to postpone plans to do a round-up column on the current spate of items 
concerned with the quality of the judicial branch of government in the USA 
today. We're working on developing other columns such as one that compares the 
Republican philosophy to that of the Apaches and play with the irony that some 
famous Republicans have been accused of kidnapping Geronimo's skull. 



We'll try to cover the Sunday event at the Herbst Theater in San Francisco on 
September 11. We'll monitor the People's Park protest. We'll do updates on the 
No Justice No BART protests. Rather than struggling with the knack of loading 
Tri-X film on the Nikkor reels, we'll be struggling to learn the new html 
skills to move our photojournalism into the digital era, but we will also be 
aware of certain other limitations on our efforts. 



Back in 1968, the World's Laziest Journalist used to annoy the snot out of some 
close friends by introducing cultural comments and insights with the phrase 
"Back in 1968." We don't bug them with that shtick anymore because a two of the 
folks who were most upset with it, have "gone to the happy hunting grounds." 



In the April 1965 issue of Cavalier magazine, Paul Krassner wrote: "There was, 
of course, one Berkeley administration official who mustered up his 
oversimplification gland and labeled the protest there as not much more than a 
"civil rights panty raid.'" 



Krassner also wrote: "There is an Establishment (translate: in-power) point of 
view about events such as these -- usually predictable but nevertheless in a 
state of limited flux -- and the mass media serve as vehicles for and 
reflections of the Establishment point of view." What if Rupert Murdoch is the 
Establishment? 



Now the disk jockey will give some Berkeley musicians a bit of exposure by 
playing the "Fixing to Die" rag, "Run through the Jungle," and "Long as I can 
see the Light." We have to go and try to buy a copy of Eye magazine. Have a 
"hella-groovy" type week. 




. 


-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Sixties-L" group.
To post to this group, send email to sixties-l@googlegroups.com.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
sixties-l+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/sixties-l?hl=en.

Reply via email to