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bamademo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-29-05 09:17 PM
Original message
If anyone is watching PBS The Sixties..
...our esteemed ex Gov G. Wallace is on. God help us. Angry White Man.
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On Par Donating Member (912 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-29-05 09:20 PM
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1. I Can Still Remember RFK's Train...
I went from a teen to an adult in that decade. It was surely the best of times, and the worst of times.
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whistle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-29-05 09:25 PM
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2. Wait for the Nixon campaign for the presidency and his promise
...of a secret plan to end the Vietnam war 6 months after he gets into office! And the American people, especially the reublicans bought that lying piece of shit's promise.

<snip>

The Nixon Years
The secret negotiations began in the spring of 1968 in Paris and soon it was made public that Americans and Vietnamese were meeting to discuss an end to the long and costly war. Despite the progress in Paris, the Democratic Party could not rescue the presidency from Republican challenger Richard Nixon who claimed he had a secret plan to end the war.

Nixon's secret plan, it turned out, was borrowing from a strategic move from Lyndon Johnson's last year in office. The new president continued a process called "Vietnamization", an awful term that implied that Vietnamese were not fighting and dying in the jungles of Southeast Asia. This strategy brought American troops home while increasing the air war over the DRV and relying more on the ARVN for ground attacks. The Nixon years also saw the expansion of the war into neighboring Laos and Cambodia, violating the international rights of these countries in secret campaigns, as the White House tried desperately to rout out Communist sanctuaries and supply routes. The intense bombing campaigns and intervention in Cambodia in late April 1970 sparked intense campus protests all across America. At Kent State in Ohio, four students were killed by National Guardsmen who were called out to preserve order on campus after days of anti-Nixon protest. Shock waves crossed the nation as students at Jackson State in Mississippi were also shot and killed for political reasons, prompting one mother to cry, "They are killing our babies in Vietnam and in our own backyard."

The expanded air war did not deter the Communist Party, however, and it continued to make hard demands in Paris. Nixon's Vietnamization plan temporarily quieted domestic critics, but his continued reliance on an expanded air war to provide cover for an American retreat angered U.S. citizens. By the early fall 1972, U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and DRV representatives Xuan Thuy and Le Duc Tho had hammered out a preliminary peace draft. Washington and Hanoi assumed that its southern allies would naturally accept any agreement drawn up in Paris, but this was not to pass. The leaders in Saigon, especially President Nguyen van Thieu and Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky, rejected the Kissinger-Tho peace draft, demanding that no concessions be made. The conflict intensified in December 1972, when the Nixon administration unleashed a series of deadly bombing raids against targets in the DRV's largest cities, Hanoi and Haiphong. These attacks, now known as the Christmas bombings, brought immediate condemnation from the international community and forced the Nixon administration to reconsider its tactics and negotiation strategy.

<more>
<link> http://www.pbs.org/battlefieldvietnam/history/

This is what Bush is now doing in Iraq and the result will be the same, greater expansion, more dead, and eventually Americans will get sick of the war and pull out of Iraq, gaining NOTHING!
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Gloria Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-29-05 09:30 PM
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3. McCarthy. I still have a McCarthy bumper sticker...it seems like
so long ago....I feel like the same things should be going on now--protests, energy, leaders...

But nothing. It makes me feel sort of dead. Hopeless.

What the hell is going on now???
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intheflow Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-29-05 10:02 PM
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4. It just made me cry.
When the people spontaneously came out to honor Bobby Kennedy's body as it went from Chicago to Arlington Cemetery by train. Who would draw that many people today? :cry:
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poliscizac Donating Member (1 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-29-05 11:26 PM
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5. Wallace
Also if you haven't seen the PBS doc "Settin the Woods on Fire", you should check it out. It takes an in depth look at Wallace and tries to explain his complexities and contradictions.

If you are only familiar with his 60s/70s racebaiting period, you should give it a look.
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