Politics were so different in 1968

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff

Politics were so different in 1968

Postby chiggerbit » Wed Feb 27, 2008 8:46 pm

Jack Kennedy had been taken out not even five years before, then in 68 they took out MLK and Bobby. The Nam war was becoming a nightmare, but it would be another five years or so before the draft would become a lottery. so the lives of the poor and less educated were cheap. And I have absolutely no clue how Humphrey got the nomination. Talk about anyone less inspiring, there was no one. What a bore.




Daley was an out-and-out, old-time crook, so I guess that would be more difficult today. Maybe.


The anti-war movement then came from the young people, today it comes from those same people, now grown old, and the younger generation only cares about how many consumer products it can afford. If this happened today, Dellinger, Davis, Hayden, Hoffman and Ruben would get life in prison.

http://tinyurl.com/3yspex

Brief History Of Chicago's 1968 Democratic Convention
(Sources: "Miami and the Siege of Chicago" by Norman Mailer, Facts on File, CQ's Guide to U.S. Elections)

The 1968 Democratic Convention, held on August 26-29th, stands as an important event in the nation's political and cultural history. The divisive politics of the convention, brought about by the Vietnam war policies of President Johnson, prompted the Democratic party to completely overhaul its rules for selecting presidential delegates -- opening up the political process to millions. The violence between police and anti-Vietnam war protesters in the streets and parks of Chicago gave the city a black-eye from which it has yet to completely recover. The following is a brief history of the events leading up to the convention, the convention itself and the riots surrounding it.

Events Leading up the 1968 Convention Riots
The primary cause of the demonstrations and the subsequent riots during the 1968 Chicago convention was opposition to the Vietnam War. Young peace activists had met at a camp in Lake Villa, Illinois on March 23 to plan a protest march at the convention. Anti-war leaders including David Dellinger (editor of Liberation magazine and chairman of the National Mobilization Committee to End War in Vietnam) Rennie Davis, head of the Center for Radical Research and a leader of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), Vernon Grizzard, a draft resistance leader, and Tom Hayden (also a leader of the Students for a Democratic Society) coordinated efforts with over 100 anti-war groups.

Groups related to this effort also planned events. Jerry Rubin (a former associate of Dellinger) and Abbie Hoffman (both leaders of the Youth International Party (YIPPIES) planned a Youth Festival with the goal of bringing 100,000 young adults to Chicago. They tried to get a permit from Chicago to hold a YIPPIE convention. The permit was denied, but the YIPPIES still came.

On March 31, President Johnson announced he would not seek re-election. Johnson's favorability ratings were in the mid-30% range and polls showed even less support for his Vietnam War policies (about 23%.) The announcement created uncertainty in the anti-war groups' convention plans. Many anti-war activists also became involved in the presidential campaigns of war opponents such as Sen. Robert Kennedy (D-NY), Sen. Eugene McCarthy (D-WI) and Sen. George McGovern (D-SD).

However, by early April there was much talk of Hubert Humphrey, Johnson's Vice President, running for the presidency. Humphrey officially entered the race on April 27th. Because of his close identity with the Johnson administration, the plans for demonstrations were not cancelled.

Other events preceding the 1968 Democratic convention contributed to the tense national mood. On April 4, civil rights leader Martin Luther King was assassinated and riots broke out throughout the country. (This included Chicago, where Mayor Daley reportedly gave a "shoot to kill" instruction to police.) On June 3, artist and cultural icon Andy Warhol was shot. Finally, on June 5th, presidential candidate Robert Kennedy (President John Kennedy's brother) was shot in the head after winning the California primary. He died the next day. There also were countless protests against the Vietnam war at this time. Student protesters effectively shut down Columbia University in April.

Attempts to Move the Convention from Chicago
Many Democrats were eager to move their national convention from Chicago to Miami, where the Republicans were to hold their nominating event. Democrats were concerned not only about the possibility of unruly protests, an ongoing telephone strike in Chicago threatened to cause logistical nightmares. The television networks also lobbied to move the event to Miami -- TV and phone lines already were installed at the Republican convention site. In addition, because of the phone strike in Chicago, television cameras would be limited to the hotels and the convention center -- new phone lines were needed to cover outside events. Any footage taken outside this area would have to be shot on film, which would require processing before it was broadcast.

Mayor Richard J. Daley would not let the convention leave Chicago. He promised to enforce the peace and allow no outrageous demonstrations. He also threatened to withdraw support for Humphrey, the apparent nominee, if the convention was moved. President Johnson also wanted to keep the convention in Chicago and is rumored to have said "Miami is not an American city."

The Convention
Humphrey came to Chicago with the nomination virtually sewn up -- he had between 100 and 200 more delegates than he needed, as well as the support of blacks, labor groups and Southern Democrats. However, he still felt his nomination was in jeopardy.

Humphrey was clearly seen as Johnson's man. President Johnson still had a grip over the convention, even going as far as to ensure states supportive of him received the best seats at the convention hall. But Johnson did not show up for the event.

Mayor Daley, who wanted Ted Kennedy to run for President, caucused his delegation of 118 the weekend before the convention and decided to remain "uncommitted." Humphrey also was at risk from the growing anti-war wing of the Democratic party. After vascillating between the pro-war policies of the Johnson administration and the anti-war policies of his opponents, Humphrey made it clear on CBS's Face The Nation the weekend before the convention he supported President Johnson's Vietnam policies.

Humphrey faced a major credentials fights. Delegations from 15 states tried to unseat Humphrey's delegates and seat anti-Vietnman delegates. Humphrey's forces won every fight. There also was manuevering behind the scenes at the Conrad Hilton (where the press and the Democratic party were staying) to try and get Sen. Ted Kennedy to run.

Sen. Dan Inouye (D-HI) gave the keynote address, but it was decidedly downbeat, with 10 of 13 pages devoted to what's wrong with the country. (Keynote speeches are usually upbeat affirmations of the party.)

The most contentious issue was Vietnam, and the debate on the minority "peace plank." The convention managers scheduled the debate for late (past prime-time) Tuesday night, but the peace delegates staged a protest and it was rescheduled for the next afternoon.

Debate was limited to one hour for each side and structured to prevent hostile exchanges. Rep. Phil Burton (D-CA) was the featured speaker in support of the peace plank, Sen. Edmund Muskie (D-ME) was the featured speaker in support of the Johnson-Humphrey language. After the Humphrey language was approved, the New York and California delegations began to sing "We Shall Overcome" and more delegations marched around the convention floor in protest. Television made it impossible for the convention planners to hide the protests of delegates favoring the peace plank. Even if planners tried to hide rebel delegations (such as New York and California) by placing them in the back of the convention hall and turning down their microphones, a camera and sound-man covering the floor could easily broadcast their protests across the nation.

During the debate on the peace plank, the worst day of rioting occurred outside the Amphitheater, in the so-called "Battle of Michigan Avenue."

Humphrey was nominated by Mayor Joseph Alioto of San Francisco. (His daughter is now running for Congress in California.) Sen. George McGovern was nominated by Sen. Abraham Ribicoff (D-MA), who shocked the convention by saying, "With George McGovern as President of the United States we wouldn't have Gestapo tactics in the streets of Chicago." Mayor Daley erupted in anger and shook his fist at Ribicoff. Most reports of the event also say Daley yelled an off-color epithet beginning with an "F," but accoriding to CNN executive producer Jack Smith, others close to Daley inist he shouted "Faker," meaning Ribicoff was not a man of his word, the lowest name one can be called in Chicago's Irish politics.

Humphrey easily won the nomination by more than a 1,000 votes, with the delegation from Pennsylvania putting him over the top.

On the last day, Thursday, the convention opened with a film tribute to Bobby Kennedy. Also, Mayor Daley printed up hundreds of "We Love You Daley" signs and orchestrated a pro-Daley demonstration in the convention to contrast with the negative image the city had gained during the course of the convention.

Humphrey chose Sen. Edmund Muskie (D-ME) to be his running mate. Julian Bond, the African-American civil rights activist, was nominated for Vice President, but withdrew because he was 28 years old, under the constitutional age (35) to hold the office.

The Riots
Outside the official convention proceedings, anti-war demonstrators clashed with 11,900 Chicago police, 7500 Army troops, 7500 Illinois National Guardsmen and 1000 Secret Service agents over 5 days.

The violence centered on two things: the Chicago police forcing protesters out of areas where they were not permitted to be; and protesters clashing with police, and their reinforcements, as they tried to march to the convention site.

The violence began Sunday August 25th. Anti-war leaders had tried to get permits from the city to sleep in Lincoln park and to demonstrate outside of the convention site. Those permit requests were denied, although the city did offer them a permit to protest miles away from the Amphitheater But the protesters were undeterred. When the park was officially closed, Chicago police bombed protesters with tear gas and moved in with billy-clubs to forcibly remove them from the park. Along with the many injuries to anti-war protesters, 17 reporters were attacked by police (including Hal Bruno, who was then a reporter for Newsweek and is now political director for ABC.) Throughout the convention, police would see the press as the enemy. Subsequent battles between police and protesters occurred nightly in Lincoln Park and Grant Park.

Also present that first night and throughout the convention were the famous Beat artists Allen Ginsberg and William Burroughs and French poet Jean Genet. Most events and protests featured speeches from Tom Hayden, Rennie Davis, Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin.

The worst day of protesting was Wednesday, and was dubbed the "Battle of Michigan Avenue." Protesters were stopped in their march to the convention site and the media recorded graphic violence on the part of the Chicago police. Many innocent bystanders, reporters and doctors offering medical help were severely beaten by the police. Many hotels where the delegates were staying were affected by the riots. Fumes from the tear gas used by the police and "stink bombs" thrown by the protesters drifted into the buildings. (One of those affected was the Conrad Hilton, the headquarters for the Democratic party and the press.)

Another major clash occurred on the final day of the convention, when protesters tried once again to reach the convention center. They were twice turned away. A barricade was put up around the convention center to prevent anyone without credentials from entering the facility.

When the convention was finally over, the Chicago police reported 589 arrests had been made and 119 police and 100 protesters were injured. The riots, which were widely covered by the media, led to a government funded study to determine the cause of the violence. The study was led by Daniel Walker, a Democratic businessman from Illinois who would ran successfully for governor in Illinois in 1972. The study placed most of the blame on the Chicago police. Mayor Daley disagreed with the report and issued the Chicago police a pay raise.

The Aftermath
On March 20, 1969, a Chicago grand jury indicted eight police officers and eight civilians in connection with the disorders during the Democratic convention. The eight civilians, dubbed the "Chicago 8," were the first persons to be charged under provisions of the 1968 Civil Rights act, which made it a federal crime to cross state lines to incite a riot. David Dellinger was chairman of the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam. Rennie Davis and Tom Hayden were members of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin were leaders of the Youth International Party (YIPPIES). Lee Weiner was a research assistant at Northwestern University. John Froines was a professor at the University at the University of Oregon. Bobby Seale was a founder of the Black Panthers.

The trial of the "Chicago 8" opened before Judge Julius Hoffman in Chicago on September 24, 1969. It was a circus. The defendents disrupted the trial and talked back to the judge. The defense attorneys repeatedly accused the judge of bias against them. Because of Seale's repeated courtroom outbursts, Hoffman had ordered him gagged and chained to his chair on October 29. When the restraints were removed on November 3, Seale resumed his outburts, calling Hoffman a "racist," a "facist" and a "pig." Seale's trial was severed from the other seven on November 5, 1969 when Hoffman declared a mistrial on the conspiracy charges and sentenced him to four years in prison for contempt.

The long "Chicago 7" case finally went to the jury on February 14, 1970. The next day Judge Hoffman convicted all 7 defendents, plus defense attorneys William Kunstler and Leonard Weinglass, of contempt of court. (Kunstler had told the judge the trial was a "legal lynching" for which Judge Hoffman was "wholly responsible.") The jury returned its verdicts on February 18, 1970. Froines and Weiner were aquitted. Dellinger, Davis, Hayden, Hoffman and Ruben were convicted of crossing state lines with intent to incite a riot and giving inflammatory speeches to further their purpose. They were fined $5,000 each, plus court costs, and given five years in prison.
Last edited by chiggerbit on Thu Feb 28, 2008 10:16 am, edited 1 time in total.
chiggerbit
 
Posts: 8594
Joined: Tue May 10, 2005 12:23 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Summer of 1967 made Americans the Enemy.

Postby Hugh Manatee Wins » Wed Feb 27, 2008 9:10 pm

It was the ghetto uprisings during the Summer of 1967 that made the Pentagon decide that America's cities full of angry poor people were a dangerous new military front that had to be pacified.

Military plans for occupying cities were polished.

April 4, 1967 Martin Luther King declared the Vietnam War to be the a problem related to poverty and civil rights and was linking up with the white anti-war movement.

So the USG went into Gestapo mode with the FBI's COINTELPRO crimes and the CIA's Operation CHAOS crimes, the infiltration of, murder, jailing, harassment, and division of social movements - the New Left, peace activists, Black Panthers, American Indian Movement, feminists, liberal Hollywood, etc.

The many underground newpapers that were the backbone of the counterculture resistance to fascism were targeted by CIA. So much for a free press.

After Watergate and the Church Committee Hearings on CIA abuses, the CIA-control and influence on mainstream media became more severe to remilitarize the culture and revive fascist attitudes like authoritarianism.

'Give peace a chance' was replaced with 'May the Force be with you.'

The American people, not just J. Edgar Hoover's targeted Communists and Negroes, were now officially an enemy population to be infiltrated, conquered and occupied so that "the sixties" would never happen again.

Or so TPTB hoped.
CIA runs mainstream media since WWII:
news rooms, movies/TV, publishing
...
Disney is CIA for kidz!
User avatar
Hugh Manatee Wins
 
Posts: 9869
Joined: Wed Nov 23, 2005 6:51 pm
Location: in context
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby chiggerbit » Wed Feb 27, 2008 9:31 pm

Dang, I'm just remembering all the draft card-burning by the young men, the bra-burning by the young women, the draft dodgers, some of whom moved to Canada. Those were the days.

Is this why I can forgive Obama some of his transgressions, because he elicits emotion from young people?
chiggerbit
 
Posts: 8594
Joined: Tue May 10, 2005 12:23 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby PeterofLoneTree » Wed Feb 27, 2008 10:50 pm

And shortly before 1968, the leader of the American Nazi Party, George Lincoln Rockwell was shot and killed in an Arlington, VA shopping mall parking lot on August 25, 1967.
PeterofLoneTree
 
Posts: 343
Joined: Fri May 20, 2005 12:10 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Thu Feb 28, 2008 2:31 am

Wow, is he any relation to Lew Rockell?
Joe Hillshoist
 
Posts: 10622
Joined: Mon Jun 12, 2006 10:45 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby Sepka » Thu Feb 28, 2008 5:10 am

Joe Hillshoist wrote:Wow, is he any relation to Lew Rockell?


Not that I'm aware of.
- Sepka the Space Weasel

One Furry Mofo!
User avatar
Sepka
 
Posts: 1983
Joined: Fri Jul 08, 2005 2:56 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby 8bitagent » Thu Feb 28, 2008 5:50 am

I hope 2008 isnt 1968 redux

And yeah, its amazing through documentaries(Im only 30) to see how America was at the brink of chaos...a tense situation in so many areas.

And how back then, the Democrats were the evil bad guy party of whom RFK was trying to change

But sadly, even back then many groups were coopted and cointelpro'd into oblivion...even the youth led groups, or some of them it would seem

The modern anti war movement is a joke, and doesnt hold a damn candle to the Vietnam era

Most liberals are only "anti war" when it comes to Iraq, not Afghanistan or Clinton's Kosovo and Iraq bombing

Most liberals are not near as fired up back then

Everyone's all latte'd/SUV'd up, hopped up on ipod, starbucks, youtube,
and reality tv. Obama is the perfect candidate for this generation

I really like Hugh's vast knowledge and interpretation of the turbulent 60's to mid 70's

One more thing, why do people think LBJ was a "good guy"? As if he really signed the civil rights act because he cared about equality
"Do you know who I am? I am the arm, and I sound like this..."-man from another place, twin peaks fire walk with me
User avatar
8bitagent
 
Posts: 12244
Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2007 6:49 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby judasdisney » Thu Feb 28, 2008 8:15 am

Nixon's Attorney General John Mitchell said in 1972: "This country is going [to move] so far to the right, you won't recognize it."

American citizens in 2008 would not recognize America in 1968:

In 1968, hospitals were non-profit.

In 1968, public space and public facilities were widespread.

In 1968, four times as many American citizens belonged to a labor union.

In 1968, the idea that the word "liberal" was bad would have been ludicrous.

In 1968, broadcast TV and radio airwaves were subject to the Fairness Doctrine: equal time for different points of view on public affairs.

In 1968, high school civics was a required class.

In 1968, two-income families were not necessary.

In 1968, trade unionists made yearly wages that were better than most white collar workers. I don't need to remind you what CEOs made in 1968 compared with 2008.

In 1968, the minimum wage was at its highest, around $1.70 in 1968 dollars ($9.50 in 2007 dollars). This was 90% of the poverty line in 1968. That's the highest the U.S. minimum wage ever achieved. However, minimum wage jobs were not as high a percentage of the U.S. workforce in 1968.

In 1968, paperback books were a growth industry, because Americans read for leisure.

In 1968, the United States had a middle class, artificially constructed by the policies of FDR, before those policies were dismantled by Reagan and Clinton. Where there is a middle class, there is leisure time. Where there is leisure time, there is participatory democracy and civic involvement.

I fear the 1970s more than I fear 1968. The next Democratic president will almost certainly be destabilized with Iran hostage-crisis-style false flags, both to make Bush look good in retrospect, and to weaken the Democratic president. The next Democratic administration will not have 1990s OPEC offering cheap oil, nor 1990s Alan Greenspan setting up the chessboard with low interest rates. There will be no interest rates left to cut. The next Democratic administration will have Cheney sleeper cells and false intelligence feeds. The next Democratic administration cannot be permitted to succeed under any circumstances. The failure is already pre-designed: taxes must be raised, there is nothing left to deregulate, there is not much left to privatize, the military is destroyed, diplomatic credibility is in shreds, and neither a black man nor a white woman could afford politically to investigate and prosecute the crimes of the Bush Administration.

When the foreshadowings and implications of 1968 are fulfilled in the U.S., they will likely look more like Chile 1973 and Argentina 1976.
judasdisney
 
Posts: 832
Joined: Tue Jun 20, 2006 3:32 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby judasdisney » Thu Feb 28, 2008 8:29 am

8bitagent wrote:And how back then, the Democrats were the evil bad guy party of whom RFK was trying to change


When 1960s Democrats had an out-of-control President from their own party destroying his country and his party with an illegal war based on lies, those 1960s Democrats marched in the streets and pressured LBJ into withdrawing from a second term.

When Republicans were faced with the same situation, zero Republicans marched in the streets. They're still not marching in the streets, and they did not demand Bush abstain from a second term. Much of Bush's 19% approval rating comes from Republicans who feel that Bush is not Right-Wing or authoritarian enough.

Most liberals are not near as fired up back then


That's by design and many years of non-stop assault on the very word "liberal" and all of its giant legacy of greatness. From the False Flag destabilizations of the Carter administration through the greed-legitimizing, union-busting Reagan administration through the move-the-goalposts Clinton administration, there has been no liberal standard-bearer for 40 years in the U.S. It's amazing that there are any liberals left whatsoever. The campaign to eradicate liberals has been impaired by the radical Bush Era. But the campaign to eradicate liberals is about to be revitalized and put on steroids.
judasdisney
 
Posts: 832
Joined: Tue Jun 20, 2006 3:32 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby IanEye » Thu Feb 28, 2008 8:41 am

8bitagent wrote:
I really like Hugh's vast knowledge and interpretation of the turbulent 60's to mid 70's.


I really like Kenny G's vast knowledge and interpretation of the Ragtime Jazz era to BeBop.
User avatar
IanEye
 
Posts: 4865
Joined: Tue Jan 17, 2006 10:33 pm
Blog: View Blog (29)

Postby Hammer of Los » Thu Feb 28, 2008 9:14 am

I was only a toddler in 1968, but somehow I have always felt a great affinity for those times.

Judasdisney, your list there is very informative, but sadly also rather depressing.

My only real point is that in the last few years I have heard the word "liberal" being used here in the UK in precisely the same derogatory, mealy-mouthed fashion that I had become accustomed to hearing it used from US commentators. I found it quite striking and revealing. The word liberal before then had only positive connotations of tolerance and fair-mindedness. Strangely though, when I mention these things to other people, they look at me as if they don't quite understand what I am saying. The shift to much greater intolerance, "toughness," narrow-mindedness, bigotry and dogmatism has happened slowly and without the populace even being aware of it. I believe it has occurred not so much as a result of general, "organic," bottom-up shifts in cultural values, but more due to a media agenda set at the highest (and most secretive) level, using the lever of fear. Terrifying stories of crime and "terrorism," and of the dangerous and threatening "other" have come to be the common staple of the mainstream media.

Just to illustrate my point, here are some definitions. Just ask yourself, which of these is a positive trait, and which negative;

Liberal adj.

1.
a. Not limited to or by established, traditional, orthodox, or authoritarian attitudes, views, or dogmas; free from bigotry.
b. Favoring proposals for reform, open to new ideas for progress, and tolerant of the ideas and behavior of others; broad-minded.
c. Of, relating to, or characteristic of liberalism.
d. Liberal Of, designating, or characteristic of a political party founded on or associated with principles of social and political liberalism, especially in Great Britain, Canada, and the United States.

2.
a. Tending to give freely; generous: a liberal benefactor.
b. Generous in amount; ample: a liberal serving of potatoes.
c. Not strict or literal; loose or approximate: a liberal translation.
d. Of, relating to, or based on the traditional arts and sciences of a college or university curriculum: a liberal education.


Illiberal adj.

1. Narrow-minded; bigoted.
2. Archaic. Ungenerous, mean, or stingy.
3. Archaic.
a. Lacking liberal culture.
b. Ill-bred; vulgar.

Goddamn that tolerant, broad-minded, generous, progressive liberalism! What we really need is more narrow-minded, bigoted, mean, vulgar and authoritarian illiberalism, yeah!

:cry:

God help us all.
Hammer of Los
 
Posts: 3309
Joined: Sat Dec 23, 2006 4:48 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby chiggerbit » Thu Feb 28, 2008 10:14 am

The riots, which were widely covered by the media, led to a government funded study to determine the cause of the violence. The study was led by Daniel Walker, a Democratic businessman from Illinois who would ran successfully for governor in Illinois in 1972. The study placed most of the blame on the Chicago police.


Can you imagine any study today coming to that kind of conclusion?
chiggerbit
 
Posts: 8594
Joined: Tue May 10, 2005 12:23 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby chiggerbit » Thu Feb 28, 2008 10:30 am

Does anyone have prison stats in 68? We've certainly become much more punitive today. There really was no prison/industrial complex back then.
chiggerbit
 
Posts: 8594
Joined: Tue May 10, 2005 12:23 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Postby IanEye » Thu Feb 28, 2008 10:47 am

chiggerbit wrote:Does anyone have prison stats in 68? We've certainly become much more punitive today. There really was no prison/industrial complex back then.


I beg to differ....

http://rigorousintuition.blogspot.com/2005/06/working-class-hero-is-something-to-be.html

Before becoming "Cinque" and founding the SLA, Donald DeFreeze had been an uneducated and unexceptional petty criminal who, between 1967 and 1969, worked as an informer for the Public Disorder Intelligence Unit of the LAPD. He found himself incarcerated at Vacaville State Prison "at the same time the CIA was conducting mind control experiments there under MKSEARCH Subproject 3," writes Dr Colin Ross in his Bluebird: The Deliberate Creation of Multiple Personalities by Psychiatrists. "These experiments involved administration of the drug pemoline [apparently researching memory function]...under the direction of Dr James Hamilton, as confirmed in an October 18, 1978 letter from Frank Carlucci, the Deputy Director of the CIA [later Chairman of the Carlyle Group] to Congressman Leo Ryan" (later murdered in Jonestown, during the termination of another experiment).

The black prison population seems to have been deliberately targeted, and DeFreeze in particular, through the person of CIA psychological warfare expert Colston Westbrook. (Westbrook also worked with William Wolfe in Vacaville, who went on to join the SLA and died with DeFreeze.) Westbrook had been an advisor to both the Korean CIA and the South Vietnamese Special Police Branch, and may have been involved in the Phoenix Program. He was himself black, and used the cover of the Black Cultural Association to gain the trust of prisoners, visiting DeFreeze twice a week for two years in what seems to have been an exercise in behavior modification. Ross writes that it was Westbrook who gave DeFreeze his guerrilla name, "Cinque," and even designed for him the seven-headed cobra which became the symbol of the SLA.


more at link.
User avatar
IanEye
 
Posts: 4865
Joined: Tue Jan 17, 2006 10:33 pm
Blog: View Blog (29)

must... not... bite... on... bait...

Postby crikkett » Thu Feb 28, 2008 11:48 am

Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:The American people, not just J. Edgar Hoover's targeted Communists and Negroes, were now officially an enemy population to be infiltrated, conquered and occupied so that "the sixties" would never happen again.


HMW would have been more accurate to write "The American people as a whole, not just the Communists and Blacks that J. Edgar Hoover targeted, became an enemy population to be infiltrated..."
crikkett
 
Posts: 2206
Joined: Sun Sep 09, 2007 12:03 pm
Blog: View Blog (5)

Next

Return to General Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests