Antiwar protests on college campuses are in the news and it’s no longer 1970. In the spring of 2024, young people are objecting to Israel’s handling of the war and the ensuing mass casualties. They also are upset that their universities may be funding Israel’s excesses through investments and other business ties. There are also protests by those who support Israel objecting to a 19-year-old getting involved in politics and saying bad things about Israel. It’s as ridiculous to say that criticism of Israel is antisemitic as its is if you decry Hamas you are Islamophobic.
You don’t have to know every single thing about this war to go
out on the streets and check it out. Young people gather for events all of the
time. It’s exciting. Their friends are there. The police look amazing in their U.S.
Army castoff riot gear and their giant riot trucks once used to quell
disturbances in Fallujah. That’s a lot of adrenaline surging through
demonstrators’ bodies and things happen. Still, most protestors have been
peaceful. I cannot say the same thing about NYC and Boston cops.
I am a Baby Boomer who saw his first antiwar protest in the
spring of 1970. I was a ROTC midshipman and I went to the demo instead of the annual
Navy Ball. My dorm friends were going outfitted with gas masks and scarves to
take the sting out of tear gas and pepper gas. I went with them to campus where
all the action was going to be. Tear gas flew and the S.C. state cops rushed
the demonstrators applying their batons to longhair’s heads.
We fled into the dorm complex and ended up in a restroom
being used as a first aid station. Men and women were jammed in and those with
even a tiny bit of first aid experience helped administer to those with cracked
skulls, eyes blinded by gas, and asthmatics struggling to breathe. One guy had
been a medic in Vietnam this time the year before. Others like me had been Boy
Scouts and knew enough first aid to patch broken scalps.
An ambulance arrived outside and I was drafted (Hah –
drafted) to pick up the wounded in makeshift stretchers and carry them outside.
One was my buddy Pat who’d sliced off the top of his index finger when picking
up a broken bottle to throw at the cops. Yes, there were young people on this
night of nonviolent protest who threw broken bottles at cops and picked up tear
gas canisters and threw them back.
We were demonstrators once, and young.
End of part one
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