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Published on Tuesday, May 8, 2007
by The
Daytona Beach News-Journal
When
a nation perpetrates large-scale violence
abroad and calls it peace-making, as the
United States has since Vietnam , it shouldn't
be surprised when violence goes full circle
and explodes at home, where it was at
least partially seeded. This reasoning
doesn't apply only to Sept.11 or the next
attack, which is a matter of time.
Thirty-seven
years ago last Friday, Ohio National Guard
troops on the campus of Kent State University
pointed their bayoneted M-1 rifles at
anti-war protesters and fired, killing
four students: Allison Krause, 19; Sandy
Lee Scheuer, 20; Jeffrey Glenn Miller,
20; and Bill Schroeder, 19. Eight others
were wounded. The Guard claimed they'd
heard a sniper shot. They were under orders
to return fire. The Ohio Guard's commander
found "no evidence" of sniper fire the
day after the killings. Alan Canfora was
shot in the wrist that day. Last week,
he produced a recording of the shooting
that he claims pins blame on the Guard
as one or more voices are heard saying,
"Right here!" "Get Set!" "Point!" and
"Fire!" The 13-second volley of gunfire
follows.
The
recording proves less than Canfora claims.
But whether it proves that the Guard was
ordered to fire is irrelevant. The original
crime was sending the Guard, armed and
bayoneted, on a university campus to start
with - even a campus where, three days
before, the ROTC building was burned to
the ground. The original crime was, as
James Michener wrote in his book on the
killings, "the obvious obsession with
property values as opposed to human life,"
an obsession that threads through American
history since well before the Constitution
enshrined it as an inalienable right.
Western standards of living being measured
primarily by the accumulation and preservation
of property, it's property value, in the
end, that's being fought for in Iraq (if
it was democracy and human rights, we'd
also be in the Sudan, in the Congo, in
Saudi Arabia and in almost every country
within a thousand-mile radius of the Persian
Gulf).
The
sacredness of property isn't a crazy idea.
John Locke believed (and the Founding
Fathers agreed) that one's property is
an extension of oneself hardly different
from one's limbs: If you worked hard enough
for your house, losing it is like losing
a limb. But all property isn't created
equal, least of all when life is subordinated
to it, as it was at Kent State . Students
there had been protesting Richard Nixon's
broken promise of de-escalating the Vietnam
War. He had just announced invasion plans
into Cambodia and the resumption of the
bombing of North Vietnam . That was the
real, murderous violence. By destroying
the ROTC building on campus (at night,
when it was certifiably empty) students,
many of whom were being drafted, gave
action to anger. The public building most
symbolic of the military devouring theirs
and others' lives was burned. The act
immediately paled compared to the Guard's
fire.
And
yet even that wasn't the end of the worst
of it. The most startling aspect of the
Kent State killings is the enormous outpouring
of hatred for the students that followed,
filling the local paper's letters page
day after day. "Hooray!," one housewife
wrote. "I shout for God and country, recourse
to justice under law, fifes, drums, martial
music, parades, ice cream cones - America
, support it or leave it." An attorney
- an attorney! - wrote, "If the troublemaking
students have no better sense than to
conduct themselves as they do on our university
and college campuses . . . they justly
deserve the consequences that they bring
upon themselves, even if this does unfortunately
result in death." Letters supported a
vigilante movement to fight students.
Letters called them "creeps," "mobs of
dissidents," "so-called educated punks."
Memorials,
like last week's at Kent State , don't
reflect those hatreds. If only the solemnity
of memorials inspired policy. But they
don't. The atmosphere of the moment does,
and in the moment, even Nixon had called
the Kent State students "bums," while
Spiro Agnew, his vice president, had the
stupidity to call the killings "predictable."
How familiar it all sounds in a country
where dissent is ceremoniously ennobled
when there's nothing to dissent about
and loathed, repressed and sometimes shot,
when there is, all in the name of that
"love it or leave it" ideal that belittles
Camus' maxim: "I should like to be able
to love my country and love justice, also."
As one student wrote in the Kent State
paper, a rare voice of reason amidst the
din of hatred, "You people with the 'mow
'em down' philosophy, can you love God
without loving Jeffrey, Bill, Sandy and
Allison?"
Pierre
Tristam is a News-Journal editorial writer.
Reach him at ptristam@att.net
or through his personal Web site
at www.pierretristam.com
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