[NewPacifica] FW: [change-links] Fwd: Bring the Sixties Out of the Closet



About time.  /R

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Date: Thu, 23 Mar 2006 11:37:15 -0500
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Subject: Bring the Sixties Out of the Closet

AlterNet: Bring the Sixties Out of the Closet

       Bring the Sixties Out of the Closet
       By Don Hazen, AlterNet
       Posted on March 23, 2006, Printed on March 23, 2006
       http://www.alternet.org/story/33896/

Late into Dana Spiotta's brilliant new novel,
"Eat the Document," the protagonist, a woman who
has lived "underground" for years, hiding from
the consequences of a 1960s political protest
gone badly awry, flashes back to the moment of choice:

"The question is, do we want to leave action to
the brutes of the world? â?¦ There are some
inherent problems built into acting. It lacks
perfection. But I believe we must fight back, or
we will feel shame all our lives. We, the
privileged, are more obligated. It is a moral
duty to do something, however imperfect. â?¦ If
we don't do something, all our lives we will feel regret."

Lately, I've been thinking a lot about the '60s
(actually the period from '67 to '73) -- that
political era so filled with possibility, so much
a part of the blood and souls of millions of
aging baby boomers like myself. The period was
profoundly effective in the changes it provoked,
yet is so persistently pilloried for its
exaggerated excesses. One reason I find myself
looking back is the pervasive feeling of
political impotence so many of us feel at this
moment in history, and our seeming inability to
act -- to be noticed, to make a difference.

There are some present-day chilling parallels to
the repression of the Nixon era -- and of course
many differences -- but there is a feeling in the
air that smells like the '60s, that sends
paranoid vibes through the body politic. The
events taking place -- warrantless wiretapping,
political corruption, torture, the war in Iraq
with its disgusting profiteering while tens of
thousands of people die -- demand a response
equal to the situation, Yet we sit without a clear path showing us our step.

A short time ago, in a funding appeal to the
AlterNet community, I wrote: "I haven't felt this
angry, frightened or radical in a long time. We
can no longer just do what we have been doing. In
my several decades working in politics and media, the present feels dire."

Those were my emotions; however, I didn't offer
an action plan. The best I could do was ask for
support so AlterNet could continue being a thorn
in the side of the Bush administration. Important, but not sufficient.

In the first draft of my appeal letter, I had
also written: "Not since John Mitchell was
attorney general and a paranoid, anti-Semitic
Richard Nixon at the helm, have we been under an
assault close to what we have today. And we don't
have a Watergate to get Bush out of office." My
editor suggested I take those sentences out --
"No need to go back to the past, and younger
readers probably won't relate to this piece of history," she said. So I did.

But my memory of that time is still so powerful,
because many of us did act -- sometimes wildly,
sometimes irresponsibly -- and we couldn't be
ignored. And who can say that the Bush
administration isn't shockingly irresponsible every day?

I remember so clearly the May Day 1971 protests
in Washington, D.C., glaring at Attorney General
John Mitchell as he stood on the roof of the
Justice Department, puffing his ever-present pipe
and pretending to ignore the thousands of
screaming, chanting masses in the street. The
WikiPedia describes May 3, 1971, as "one of the
most disruptive actions of the Vietnam War era."

The threat caused by the May Day Protests forced
the Nixon administration to create a virtual
state of siege in the nation's capital. Thousands
of federal and National Guard troops, along with
local police, suppressed the disorder, and by the
time it was over several days later, over 10,000
would be arrested. It would be the largest mass arrest in U.S. history.

That's not a typo: More than 10,000 people were
arrested, jammed into jails that resembled
crowded elevators and bused out to RFK Stadium.
It was crazy, anarchistic and perhaps politically
naive, but it was action. It made an impression.
We were noticed. And it was exhilarating to bond
with so many in a cause that felt so just.
Critics may suggest that the protest made things
worse, that it played into the hands of the
Republicans. But I don't think so. Resistance is
important. (There is a parallel today, with some
critics charging that talk of impeaching Bush and
Sen. Russ Feingold's motion to censure are also counterproductive.)

The '60s era was a profoundly energetic mix of
culture and politics. That decade has been
distorted, caricatured and turned into a
black-and-white cartoon -- when not appropriated
to sell cars with Jimmy Hendrix music and pricey
clothing like the Miss Sixty line.

It is time to resurrect the good '60s and help
many people understand much of what has been
hidden. It was an era when millions of people
were clear about their values -- especially
nonmaterial aspirations, and sharing, and ways of
living simply that have long since been
steamrollered by the nonstop tsunami of global
consumer culture. Today, with the looming threat
of diminishing oil supply (often referred to as
peak oil), some people are already revisiting and
experimenting with the best of the "back to the
land movement," in anticipation of harder times down the road.

One example of yanking '60s history out of the
closet is the new film, "Sir! No Sir!," by David
Zeiger. This documentary, which opens April 7,
tells the powerful story of how soldiers rebelled
within the ranks of the U.S. military in reaction
to the insanity of the Vietnam War. It portrays
the culture of the GI coffeehouses and the
barnstorming actors and musicians led by Jane
Fonda, who nurtured the resistance. In the end,
the film makes a convincing case that Nixon and
Kissinger had no choice but to get the hell out
of Vietnam. Toward the end of the war, thousands
of GIs were refusing to do battle -- some
fragging officers who attempted to force them
into hopeless and treacherous situations.

When I saw the film recently in Mill Valley,
Calif., both Jane Fonda and Cindy Sheehan were
present to honor many of the courageous vets who
fought the war from the inside. Fonda made one
crucial point that night that stuck with me. She
said that everyone associated with the successful
soldier rebellion and the powerful themes of the
'60s had to be demonized by the government and
the media or else our military might would be
called into question -- the illusion of power we
need to maintain empire. The result is that
soldiers who had the best of intentions and told
the truth about what was really happening in
Vietnam would be forever labeled as unpatriotic.

At no time were the consequences of this tarring
effort more profound than the "Swift Boat
Veterans'" spurious attack on John Kerry during
the 2004 election, and the corporate media's
inability or refusal to stop its effect. Kerry
was a war hero who came back from Vietnam and
bravely spoke out against the war. Ultimately,
his honesty probably cost him the presidency --
to a phony soldier who escaped service only to
lead us into the brutal quagmire of Iraq.

Corporate America, conservative politicians and
even erstwhile '60s radicals have worked hard to
seal off the decade as an artifact of Charles
Manson, free love excess, bad acid trips and
political mayhem. The generations that followed
the boomers grew sick and tired of hearing about
their exploits, while some suffered the
consequences of bad parenting and backlash. But
the younger generations, often the offspring of
the boomers, are much more eager to examine the
unfinished business of that era; at least it
seems that way from conversations I have had.

Today, many of us feel a deep political malaise.
It is hard to figure out how to act. There are
two traditional paths to social change, and many
of us participate in both. The first is protest.
On the brink of the invasion of Iraq,
demonstrations whose size went far beyond our
expectations filled the streets of cities across
the globe. Tens of millions marched. We knew then
precisely what we know now: that the war was
based on pretense and that it was wrong -- and we
have been profoundly proven correct. Yet our
protests failed to stop it and continue to fail
three years later. When you do your best and fail, it is hard to bounce
back.

Then came the election, our second path to
change. Again many thousands jumped in to
participate in new ways, feeling sure we could
give Bush the boot. Again, shockingly to many, we
didn't succeed and have been in the dumps ever
since. The extra kicker is the unspeakable fear
that, with corrupt politics and electronic voting
machines, maybe elections aren't winnable at all.

In the face of this semiparalysis, '60s values
need to be liberated to give us some inspiration
and updated to fit our present day. These values
don't belong to just one generation, but rather
to a historical river of ideas and ideals that
stretch back into history. They are ready to be
claimed by new generations and reclaimed by those
who remember what it was like the first time around.

I also wrote in my letter to AlterNet readers:
"We forget sometimes that the values we treasure
-- equality, fairness, justice, dignity, and
ultimately kindness and love -- inspired the
greatest moral and political achievements of the
20th century: civil rights, women's equality, the
right to organize and the growth of the
environmental movement. These values make our
society strong and appealing to the rest of the
world. They are what we are fighting for."

It is not going to be easy to pull ourselves out
of this political purgatory. There is evidence
that history is on our side, but it requires that
we act -- not wish, or watch or wax nostalgic,
but do something concrete. Having tens of
thousands of us run around Washington trying to
shut down the government is probably not quite
the right idea. What is necessary is something
that meets the demands of the time, that will
catch people by surprise and give us a way to climb out of the doldrums.

We need to show that we are not down and out,
that we are able to act. Cindy Sheehan has shown
us how standing up and speaking from the heart
can have a big impact. In preparation, let's
resurrect some of the hidden history of the '60s
and get some inspiration from a time when acting,
despite being messy and imperfect, made a lot of good things happen.

Don Hazen is the executive editor of AlterNet.

© 2006 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/33896/

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