Ruling Imagination: Law and Creativity
Kent State 40 years ago, and making up facts to fit today’s world view.
Few things frustrate me in my teaching than my students ignorance of history that predates their adolescence.
Last week, on the 40th anniversary of the Kent State shootings, I wrote about both their impact on me then, and the frightening disconnect I see between current political rhetoric that compares President Obama’s policies to “fascism” and the very different reality of 40 years ago, when National Guard troops really did engage in activity that might genuinely be equated to fascism. I guess I shouldn’t have been surprised that I was attacked for thinking that calling President Obama a “fascist” seems silly to someone who remembers students being shot dead for protesting the invasion of Cambodia in 1970.
But I genuinely was surprised when in the comments to the post criticizing me another blogger stated that in discussing the Kent State shootings I “neglected” to mention that “the National Guard were shot at first” and that the host of the site in response to that comment wrote: ” Thank you very much for the historical accuracy you add to this issue. You are correct. Mr. Friedman has selective memory.”
The problem, of course, is that this purported “historical accuracy” is pure fantasy. There never has been any evidence that the students at Kent State were armed, much less that they shot at the National Guard. As the Cleveland Plain Dealer reports today, [t]wo trials and a presidential commission’s investigation could not determine what initiated the gunfire, although the presidential commission concluded that ‘the indiscriminate firing of rifles into a crowd of students and the deaths that followed were unnecessary, unwarranted and inexcusable.’” Why is this news now? Because the Plain Dealer reported the following 2 days ago:
The Ohio National Guardsmen who fired on students and antiwar protesters at Kent State University on May 4, 1970 were given an order to prepare to shoot, according to a new analysis of a 40-year-old audio tape of the event.
“Guard!” says a male voice on the recording, which two forensic audio experts enhanced and evaluated at the request of The Plain Dealer. Several seconds pass. Then, “All right, prepare to fire!”
“Get down!” someone shouts urgently, presumably in the crowd. Finally, “Guard! . . . ” followed two seconds later by a long, booming volley of gunshots. The entire spoken sequence lasts 17 seconds.
The previously undetected command could begin to explain the central mystery of the Kent State tragedy – why 28 Guardsmen pivoted in unison atop Blanket Hill, raised their rifles and pistols and fired 67 times, killing four students and wounding nine others in an act that galvanized sentiment against the Vietnam War.
People should know that before they begin spouting off about the policies of an American President they perhaps ought to know a little about history. And they certainly should know better than simply to make up facts that fit their world view.
ADDENDUM:
KENT STATE (trailer) from Mark Mori on Vimeo.
May 11th, 2010 at 7:07 pm
You might be interested to know that the Emmy Award winning documentary, “Kent State, The Day the War Cam Home” was just released on DVD for the 40th anniversary. In its review of the program, The Hollywood Reporter stated, “This extraordinary hour long doc is so good, so well constructed, that it can’t help but leave viewers feeling as if they themselves were on the bloody scene of the Kent State carnage…” for more go to kentstatedvd.com
May 15th, 2010 at 12:35 pm
It may be time to remember that the winners write the history. Unarmed protesters firing first is just one of many lies promoted as truth in today’s “history”. When those of us who remember Kent State or other events die, who will know truth from fiction?
It is funny that the word “fascism” is being used here and both not using its primary definition. Fascism means that corporations and their CEOs run the government to gain profit from public funds. In other words, to steal tax dollars and put them in their own pockets. Hitler would have remained a nobody without wealthy backers.
Hitler was the “faceman” like Obama, the Bushes (Sr calls all the shots), Clinton, Reagan, Carter, Nixon, LBJ, Kennedy (although he decided to go rogue), Eisenhower, Truman, and FDR (he was one of them). (I haven’t investigated all the way back to 1832, when the second Bohemian Grove was created.)
So the use of the term “fascist” applied to Obama is not only appropriate but warranted. This is all about power – monetary power – and turning everyone into monetary serfs who must continually give money to their “owners”, the banks and the government. Without paper money, the banks will control ALL aspects of currency. They will be able to suspend anyone’s accounts whenever they want for whatever they want.
Wars are the “best” way fascists know how to make money and control people through fear
at the same time. Obama just told us that the “war” in Afghanistan is going to heat up AND we’re still in Iraq as well.
You cannot prove to me that Obama is not a fascist. His actions speak volumes. Obama is just the latest puppet being played by Ghepetto – beware of Ghepetto!