Springfield News-Sun

Ghost of the 1968 Antiwar Movement has returned

- Charles M. Blow Charles M. Blow is a columnist for The New York Times.

At the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, anti-vietnam War protesters clashed with police officers — whose brutal role in the confrontat­ion was later described by a federal commission as a “police riot” — hijacking the focus of the convention.

Those demonstrat­ors had come of age seeing continual — and effective — protests during the civil rights movement and national mourning after the assassinat­ions of President John F. Kennedy, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. King had staked out his opposition to the war, saying that while he wasn’t attempting “to make North Vietnam or the National Liberation Front paragons of virtue,” he wanted to underscore his belief “that America would never invest the necessary funds or energies in rehabilita­tion of its poor so long as adventures like Vietnam continued to draw men and skills and money, like some demonic, destructiv­e suction tube.” He said he was “compelled to see the war as an enemy of the poor, and attack it as such.”

This was a generation primed for protest, with moral conviction as the foundation of its outrage about the Vietnam War — the first TV war, in which Americans could see the horrors of war — and the draft that saw around 2 million Americans conscripte­d. The movement against it began mostly on college campuses.

In the months leading up to the ‘68 DNC, which took place in August, organizers planned a major protest that drew students from around the country. Before the convention, Rennie Davis, one of the organizers, told the New York Times, “No denial of a permit is going to prevent the tens of thousands of people who are coming to Chicago from expressing their conviction­s on these issues.”

This is all playing out again.

Young people are following the Israel-hamas war on social media and are horrified by what they see. They’ve also grown up with protest movements — Occupy Wall Street, Black Lives Matter, the Parkland, Florida, students’ gun control campaign. We’re seeing antiwar protests spread across college campuses.

The semester will soon end and those students will leave for the summer, allowing more time and energy for their efforts to be focused on the DNC in Chicago in August.

Antiwar groups are already planning large protests at the convention. Hatem Abudayyeh of the U.S. Palestinia­n Community Network recently told the Chicago Tribune: “We’ll be marching with or without permits. This DNC is the most important one since 1968, also in Chicago, when Vietnam War protesters and the Black liberation movement organized mass demonstrat­ions that were violently repressed.”

And you can see substantia­l support for their cause. Although the spring 2024 Harvard Youth Poll found that 18-to-29-year-olds tended to rate most other major issues, including inflation and immigratio­n, as more important than the Israel-hamas conflict, the survey found that “young Americans support a permanent cease-fire in Gaza by a 5-to-1 margin.” And a Quinnipiac University poll released Wednesday found 53% of Democrats oppose sending more military aid to Israel.

The Biden campaign seems to think it can simply wait the protesters out, that passions will eventually fade and voters will fall in line as Election Day nears and the choice between Biden and Trump is more stark.

That is a reckless gamble. The protesters and many voters believe that they are witnessing a genocide aided and abetted by an American president whom they supported. They feel personally implicated in a conflict in which the death toll continues to rise, with no end in sight. This is a moral issue for them, and their position won’t be easily altered.

It isn’t easy to unsee the limp body of a dead child in a mother’s arms, or hungry people scrambling for cover when they come under fire. It isn’t easy to unsee the wreckage after aid trucks came under fire and aid workers were killed.

The level of suffering is unacceptab­le. Young people will make that point clear this summer in Chicago.

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