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Keyword: 1968

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  • 40 years after RFK's death, questions linger

    06/03/2008 7:54:27 AM PDT · by SmithL · 21 replies · 123+ views
    San Francisco Chronicle ^ | 6/3/8 | Michael Taylor
    The assassination was over in a few seconds. In the photograph of that moment, Bobby Kennedy, his eyes open and glazed, lies on his back on a hotel pantry floor, his head cradled by a busboy dressed starkly in white - a tableau that seems almost angelic were it not so brutal. Less than 26 hours after being shot early on June 5, 1968, right after winning the California presidential primary, Kennedy was dead. He was 42.Three major assassinations rocked America in the 1960s. Two of the assassins - Lee Harvey Oswald, the killer of John F. Kennedy, and James...
  • The RFK Assassination: The Political Landscape (Remembering 1968)

    06/03/2008 5:21:25 AM PDT · by Nextrush · 2 replies · 81+ views
    6/3/08 | Self
    The Robert Kennedy campaign began in the ashes of Lyndon Johnson's re-election effort. Eugene McCarthy had spoiled LBJ, but if there was a favorite among anti-Johnson forces in the Democrat Party, it was Bobby Kennedy. He was warmly received at the 1964 convention and those who loved his brother always looked to him to bring back the Kennedy Administration. Lyndon Johnson did not bow to pressure to make Robert F. Kennedy his running mate in 1964. Instead, LBJ chose Minnesota Senator Hubert Humphrey, a man who proudly wore the label "liberal" and who would buckle under to Lyndon Johnson's leadership...
  • The RFK Assassination(Remembering 1968)

    06/02/2008 5:45:23 AM PDT · by Nextrush · 21 replies · 388+ views
    6/2/08 | Self
    The killing of Robert F. Kennedy has always been submerged in mythology spread by a liberal media and educational elite that has its own ideology and "theology" in mind. Kennedy's killing is bunched together with the assassinations of his brother John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King in a "Holy Trinity" of martyrdom that is an object of idolization and worship. It is ironic that all three men were far from deities, but all too human as has been evidenced by the details of their extramarital "relationships" that have emerged over the years. The other common mythology that was spread...
  • ..When you got to choose.....everyway you look at it you lose (Remembering 1968)

    05/26/2008 5:43:37 AM PDT · by Nextrush · 20 replies · 262+ views
    5/26/08 | Self
    I sat in the same kitchen this morning and listened to the same song I heard on the radio every morning in late May and early June of 1968. I knew nothing about a movie called "The Graduate" back then but my eight year old mind easily comprehended the common phrases Paul Simon put into the song. Those lyrics were drummed into me: "Jesus loves you more than you will know.... "God Bless You please Mrs. Robinson, heaven holds a place for those who pray...... "Where have you gone Joe DiMaggio, our nation turns its lonely eyes to you..." Of...
  • The Fallacy of Clinton's 1968 Analogy

    05/24/2008 10:22:44 AM PDT · by johnny7 · 14 replies · 148+ views
    ABC News ^ | May 24, 2008 | By Jake Tapper
    Lost in the uproar over Sen. Hillary Clinton's invoking of the assassination of Robert Kennedy when explaining why her staying in the race won't hurt party unity is an actual examination of her comparison of the 2008 Democratic primary season to the one from 1968. Clinton yesterday before the Argus Leader editorial board also invoked her husband's race in 1992. We've already twice now looked at how her reference to how her husband was still campaigning in June 1992 is a disingenuous claim.
  • The Taint of '68

    05/10/2008 11:53:19 AM PDT · by The_Republican · 4 replies · 48+ views
    RCP ^ | May 10th, 2008 | Rich Lowry
    'WHY don't we just vote to strike tonight - and we'll decide to morrow what we're striking for?" Those were the words of a student protester thoughtfully deliberating at Yale University, as recounted by Roger Kimball in his book on the left, "The Long March." It was a question that captured much of the heedless spirit of the student demonstrations of the 1960s, for which "May 1968" is shorthand. That spring 40 years ago saw a radical takeover of Columbia University - eventually duplicated at other elite campuses - and student protests around the world. In France, the government was...
  • Noam Chomsky on 1968 - It was the beginning of it all

    05/10/2008 11:51:37 AM PDT · by The_Republican · 29 replies · 83+ views
    newstatesmen.com ^ | May 10th, 2008 | Noam Chomsky
    Nineteen sixty-eight was one exciting moment in a much larger movement. It spawned a whole range of movements. There wouldn't have been an international global solidarity movement, for instance, without the events of 1968. It was enormous, in terms of human rights, ethnic rights, a concern for the environment, too. The Pentagon Papers (the 7,000-page, top-secret US government report into the Vietnam War) are proof of this: right after the Tet Offensive, the business world turned against the war, because they thought it was too costly, even though there were proposals within the government - and we know this now...
  • ACLU sues for DNC protesters

    05/02/2008 12:01:35 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 51 replies · 129+ views
    Rocky Mountain News ^ | May 2, 2008 | Daniel J Chacon
    The ACLU of Colorado has filed a federal lawsuit against the U.S. Secret Service and the city of Denver to ensure that protesters are within "sight and sound" of delegates attending the Democratic National Convention this August. "Ultimately, it's the federal courts that are sort of the last resort protectors of constitutional rights," Mark Silverstein, the ACLU's legal director, said today. "It's been the federal courts that are the ones to say law enforcement has not struck the proper balance here between security concerns and citizens' fundamental First Amendment rights," he said. Silverstein said the city is dragging its feet...
  • Democrats' Platform for Revolution [Must read]

    05/08/2008 12:59:52 PM PDT · by 2ndDivisionVet · 69 replies · 686+ views
    Point Of View ^ | May 8, 2008 | John Perazzo
    Americans are well acquainted with presidential candidate Barack Obama’s legendary pledges to bring “change” to America’s political and social landscape. (For example, see here and here and here.) Indeed, “Change We Can Believe In” is the slogan that adorns the homepage of his campaign website and so many of the placards displayed by the supporters who attend his speaking engagements. His Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, is also well practiced at issuing calls for change. Her “Change and Experience” ad campaign was but an outgrowth of her 1993 declaration, as First Lady, that “remolding society is one of the great challenges...
  • At Columbia, Remembering a Revolution

    04/27/2008 7:55:16 AM PDT · by PGR88 · 8 replies · 77+ views
    The Washington Post ^ | April 27, 2008 | Robin Schulman
    NEW YORK, April 26 -- Forty years ago, they launched a student protest at Columbia University that involved the occupation of five campus buildings, the hostage-taking of a dean, 712 arrests and injuries to scores of students, faculty members and police officers. This Story At Columbia, Remembering a Revolution The 1968 Protesters, Then and Now Now, they are lawyers, judges, playwrights, poets, professors and ministers. They gathered this weekend back on campus with former classmates to hear memories of those events and occasionally raise a revolutionary fist for old times' sake. "Strangest reunion I ever saw," said Victoria Benitez, a...
  • Spiro Agnew's Finest Hourn (Remembering 1968)

    04/14/2008 5:27:28 AM PDT · by Nextrush · 18 replies · 579+ views
    4/14/08 | Self
    Spiro Agnew's political career rose like a phoenix from the ashes. In six short years he went from being elected Baltimore County Executive to being elected Vice-President of the United States. He would be a bulldog for President Richard Nixon, playing a role that many future GOP Vice-Presidents like Dan Quayle and Dick Cheney would, making tough speeches to keep conservatives in line with the more moderate president who would "stay above it all." Agnew's attacks on the mainstream media ("the nattering nabobs of negativity") would make him as hated at the president himself in MSM circles. Agnew's election as...
  • Columbia’s Rebel Reunion - The university commemorates its darkest hour.

    04/11/2008 8:23:24 PM PDT · by neverdem · 5 replies · 122+ views
    City Journal ^ | 10 April 2008 | John Leo
    The conference program on the sponsors’ website promises to air a “wide range of viewpoints” on what happened and why, but the list of speakers shows no range at all—everyone seems to be a proud ex-protester or at least a familiar partisan of the Left. While Todd Gitlin (formerly the president of Students for a Democratic Society, now at Columbia’s journalism school) is a sober and reflective thinker, most of his fellow speakers are far from that standard. They include Kathleen Cleaver, Eldridge Cleaver’s widow and a former Black Panther official; veteran activist Tom Hayden; several former members of the...
  • Chicago and Baltimore: Martin Luther King Riots (April 6, 1968)

    04/06/2008 5:30:04 AM PDT · by Nextrush · 21 replies · 1,713+ views
    4/6/08 | Self
    Tributes poured out from all over the world in honor of Martin Luther King with Father George Clements of Chicago saying King "is a saint" and "should be canonized." Meanwhile on the streets of Chicago rioting broke out after King's death. Three thousand National Guard troops were initially deployed as many fires burned on the West Side of the city. Dozens were injured by rocks thrown at their cars or by gangs on the streets. Bricks were thrown at firefighters trying to put out the flames and stores were looted. Mayor Richard Daley called on President Johnson for regular Army...
  • "The Second Sacking of Washington": Martin Luther King Riots (April 5, 1968)

    04/05/2008 6:13:21 AM PDT · by Nextrush · 30 replies · 139+ views
    4/5/08 | Self
    "go home and get your guns"-Stokely Carmichael April 4,1968 in Washington D.C. I had a habit of sitting in the kitchen and eating my breakfast while the radio was turned on to the morning news. The morning of Friday April 5th, 1968 I heard the account of a radio reporter (from UPI) who hid under a car while mobs rioted in the street around him. He sounded scared and he had reason to as rioting broke out in the nation's captial following the assassination of Martin Luther King late on the evening or April 4th and early on the morning...
  • Remembering And Reflecting on Martin Luther King's Assassination (Remembering 1968)

    04/04/2008 5:46:31 AM PDT · by Nextrush · 11 replies · 110+ views
    4/4/08 | Self
    On Thursday April 4th, 1968 the City of Memphis was back in federal court seeking a permanent injunction against any protest by Martin Luther King to support the sanitation workers strike. Police Director Frank Holloman spoke of black adults buying guns and young black people receiving training in the use of molotov cocktails. In the evening I watched the "Huntley-Brinkley Report" on NBC and saw the story of the day before including the King speech. I was seven years old and this was the first time I had ever heard the name "Martin Luther King." In the evening just after...
  • Martin Luther King's Last Days: 40 Years Ago (April 3, 1968)

    04/03/2008 5:56:14 AM PDT · by Nextrush · 4 replies · 132+ views
    4/3/08 | Self
    Dr. Martin Luther King originally wanted to stage a new march in Memphis on Friday April 5th, 1968 but decided to push the march back to Monday the 8th so labor leaders could show up. The City of Memphis was afraid of more violence if King led another march on behalf of the striking sanitation workers. They went to federal court seeking an injunction. Federal District Judge Bailey Brown issued a temporary restraining order against a march on Monday April 8th. It was with that court order in mind that Dr. King made what would be his last speech. The...
  • Martin Luther King's Last Days(Remembering 1968)

    04/02/2008 5:29:44 AM PDT · by Nextrush · 3 replies · 106+ views
    4/2/08 | Self
    On Monday April 1st, Martin Luther King was in Atlanta preparing for a return to Memphis to lead a march on behalf of the striking sanitation workers. He spoke to his aides and others that day. Matters of discussion were the planned Poor People's March On Washington later in the year and the decision of President Johnson not to run for re-election. King had started on good terms with Johnson, who pushed through the controversial civil rights legislation of 1964. Portions of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 were seen by conservatives as federal power usurping state power in an...
  • Recreating '68

    04/01/2008 3:09:45 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 13 replies · 46+ views
    Human Events.com ^ | March 31, 2008 | Lisa Richards
    Those lovable, aggressive peace-loving anti-war factions of the left are ready for the 1968 presidential race. At least some of them are preparing to recreate the chaos that surrounded the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago when the Dem delegates gather this August in Denver, Colorado. The band of loons, freaks and frauds planning the new mess is unimaginatively named Recreate 68. It’s a radical left-wing group of “peace-loving” Castro-ettes whose goal is described as peaceful through good old fashioned liberal violence upon the dangerous American establishment and government that Recreate 68 feels must be taken down and controlled by revolutionaries....
  • Lyndon Johnson, Vietnam and Politics: 40 Years Ago Today (Remembering 1968)

    03/31/2008 6:08:20 AM PDT · by Nextrush · 16 replies · 972+ views
    3/31/08 | Self
    "Does Ho Chi Minh have anything like this"-President Lyndon Johnson According to Texas writer Larry L. King (not the CNN guy) the earthy talking Lyndon Johnson made this comment in the White House to staff members with his pants down and his manhood on display. Regardless of the raw nature of Johnson's reported comments the administration's Vietnam War policy always aimed to be a repeat of the Korean War with some negoatiated ending. The "bombing" of North Vietnam was restricted when it came to the main conduit of North Vietnam's war supplies, Haiphong harbor. There was fear that Soviets on...
  • 40 Years Ago Today: Violence In Memphis As King Leads March (Remembering 1968)

    03/28/2008 5:11:56 AM PDT · by Nextrush · 6 replies · 334+ views
    3/28/08 | Self
    The sanitation workers strike in Memphis could be seen as just any other labor-management dispute over pay, but since most of the workers were black, the racial aspect stood out. This brought Dr. Martin Luther King to Memphis in the spring of 1968 to support the strike that had begun in February. On March 28th, 1968 King marched with five thousand others in the streets of Memphis. Around 20 minutes after the march began, 200 youths began to break windows and loot stores along Beale Street. The march turned into chaos and Dr. King was taken away. One person was...