Wednesday, May 29, 2019
1968 :: American America History
1968An Indignant Generation. With all its disruptions and rage, the idea of black revolution was something many white Americans could at least comprehend, if not oblige with. When rebellion seized their own children, however they were almost completely at a loss. A product of the posts war Baby Boom, nurtured in affluence and concentrated in increasing numbers on college and university campuses. It was a generation marked by an unusual degree of political awareness and cultural alienation. Some shared with the jaw writers and poets of the late fifties, a deep disillusionment with this status quo, a restless yearning for something more than a realistic conformity. Others had been aroused by the southern sit in movement, The first hint, wore a contemporary, That there was a world beyond the campus that demanded some kind of personal response. Not so much ideological as moral, in Jessica Mitfords words, An Indignant Generation.Although an image of arrogance, even ruthlessness, had fol lowed him from his early days as counsel to a Senate committee investigating labor racketeering, Robert Kennedy had shown a remarkable capacity to project the suffering of others. More than this, he had demonstrated an untiring commitment to the welfare of those who had gotten little more than the crumbs of the Great American Banquet. In fact, Kennedy Appealed most strongly to barely those groups most disaffected with American society in nineteen sixty-eight, they believed in him with a passion unmatched for any other national political figure, in part for what he had done, and also for the kind of man he was.The collapse of communications made it impossible to determine the fate of the pacification program, but most assessments were pessimistic. When the communists launched their attacks, the government pulled nearly half of the five hundred and fifty revolutionary development teams out of the hamlets to help defend the cities, along with eighteen of the cardinal army battalion s assigned to protect the pacification teams. In so doing, Saigon abandoned the countryside and dealt the pacification program what many felt was a considerable setback. There ever so was a semi vacuum in the countryside, said one United States pacification worker. Now theres a complete vacuum. By the end of the February, orders have departed out for pacification teams and some troops to return to the hamlets, but progress was slow. Although ninety-five percent of the five thousand RD workers in the Saigon
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