"Black Revolution Isreal" the Coral
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On April 3 at a Gigantic Anti-War Rally on Historic Bos Ton Common, Hundreds of New England Men Will Turn-In Their Draft Cards Wed
resistance m A COPY NEW ENGLAND EDITION ft 1 MARCH 1-15 Resistance Moves Again On April 3 At a gigantic anti-war rally on historic Bos ton Common, hundreds of New England men will turn-in their draft cards Wed. April 3 in soli darity with the Vietnamese, black and poor Amer icans who cannot get deferments or exemptions, and 2500 youths who non-cooperated nationally Oct. 16 and Nov.lb/Dec. 4. In nearly 100 other cities, Resistance groups 111! fill! -11 will move simultaneously against the Selective Service System with demonstrations at draft boards, federal buildings and induction centers. The Boston Common rally will begin at 11 a.m. mm?mt National peace leaders Staughton Lynd, Paul Good • • • ': • . • • •• man, Dave Dellinger, and Howard Zinn have been invited to speak. The day's events will also include marches to other revolutionary sites in the city; an inter-faith service; a concert; and dinners. The following day, all new and old resistors will hold a general conference and divide into organizing workshops to develop the theory and practice of Resistance and to plan for summer action. Since as many as 25,000 people are expected to come to the rally from all across New England the Service of Conscience at which the draft cards are tumed-in will take place outside, or at nearby Arlington St. Church in case of bad weather. v While the Resistance has no official estimate of how many will non-cooperate April 3, the na tional total this Spring will be in the thou sands. -
UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations
UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title The Politics of Experience: Peace Corps Volunteers, Vietnam Veterans, and American Internationalism, 1961 - 1985 Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/24g1x6rc Author Armentrout, Anna Jane Publication Date 2012 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California The Politics of Experience: Peace Corps Volunteers, Vietnam Veterans, and American Internationalism, 1961 – 1985 By Anna Jane Armentrout A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Daniel J. Sargent, Chair Professor David A. Hollinger Professor Scott Saul Fall 2012 © 2012 – Anna Jane Armentrout All rights reserved. Abstract The Politics of Experience: Peace Corps Volunteers, Vietnam Veterans, and American Internationalism, 1961 – 1985 by Anna Jane Armentrout Doctor of Philosophy in History University of California, Berkeley Professor Daniel J. Sargent, Chair This dissertation argues that knowledge based on personal experience came to rival accredited knowledge in American foreign policymaking during the Vietnam War. This shift toward experiential authority transformed American political culture and foreign policy. First-person narratives of Americans who lived abroad became crucial sources for popular understanding and congressional decision-making. In turn, the authority of personal experience in discussions of foreign policy helped enable a movement away from the global projects of development and containment and toward human rights around the world. Focusing on Vietnam veterans and Peace Corps volunteers, this dissertation explores the uses to which these groups put their on-the-ground experience when they spoke publicly about American foreign policy issues. -
Forging Ahead Conference That Veterans for Peace Will Be Holding in New York in November 2018
Exposing the True Costs of War and Militarism Since 1985 VETERANSVETERANS FORFOR PEACEPEACE Organized locally. Recognized Internationally. VFP Newsletter Winter 2018 delegations to Palestine and Okinawa; Mike Hanes and Rory Fanning embarked on a second speaking tour to Japan (the home of our newest chapter); Chapter 67 in Long Beach has initiated a program for developing peace clubs in Long Beach high schools; and in San Diego the NO MAS Campaign (No Miramar Air Show) completed its second successful year of drawing attention to the wasteful and polluting military air show which is a front for mass indoctrination of children and adults that war is a glorious adventure. There is much more we can and must do to sound our own warnings. ELLEN DAVIDSON Get ready to participate. Previously, I told you about an International Veterans Peace Forging Ahead Conference that Veterans For Peace will be holding in New York in November 2018. The conference is planned to coincide A Special Message to Veterans, with the 100th Anniversary of the armistice that stopped the Supporters and Friends from VFP fighting and would finally lead to a peace treaty months later, essentially ending World War I, “the war to end all wars.” The Board President Barry Ladendorf Executive Director of the United Nations Department of Pub- lic Information Executive Committee enthusiastically supports On Friday, December 1, 2017, as my wife and I got ready the conference and has continually been assisting our efforts. to enjoy the last few days of a Hawaiian vacation celebrating In October, our VFP planning committee held a successful our wedding anniversary, we found slipped under our ho- meeting in New York. -
Peace Corps Volunteers, Vietnam Veterans, and American Internationalism, 1961 – 1985
The Politics of Experience: Peace Corps Volunteers, Vietnam Veterans, and American Internationalism, 1961 – 1985 By Anna Jane Armentrout A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Daniel J. Sargent, Chair Professor David A. Hollinger Professor Scott Saul Fall 2012 © 2012 – Anna Jane Armentrout All rights reserved. Abstract The Politics of Experience: Peace Corps Volunteers, Vietnam Veterans, and American Internationalism, 1961 – 1985 by Anna Jane Armentrout Doctor of Philosophy in History University of California, Berkeley Professor Daniel J. Sargent, Chair This dissertation argues that knowledge based on personal experience came to rival accredited knowledge in American foreign policymaking during the Vietnam War. This shift toward experiential authority transformed American political culture and foreign policy. First-person narratives of Americans who lived abroad became crucial sources for popular understanding and congressional decision-making. In turn, the authority of personal experience in discussions of foreign policy helped enable a movement away from the global projects of development and containment and toward human rights around the world. Focusing on Vietnam veterans and Peace Corps volunteers, this dissertation explores the uses to which these groups put their on-the-ground experience when they spoke publicly about American foreign policy issues. By examining veteran testimony before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations and returned Peace Corps volunteer activism about American policy in the developing world, this study finds that the authority of personal experience acquired great persuasive power in the context of a nation reeling from the failure of its foreign policy abroad and wary of its political leaders’ integrity and ability. -
Julius Lester
Mr & Mrs. Grant Cannon fHH-1<. KIt f E 5htJ Frl..ANCI <:CD 4907 Klatte Road V S. ?O ',TAG- E- (ALIF, Cincinnati, Ohio 45244 rA-ID P r:K ,..... \ II tv'Q 8 ~ 0 3 "BLACK REVOLUTION ISREAL" STOKELY IN CUBA By. Julius Lester, Julius Lester was one of the SNCC representatives who visited Cuba along with Stokely Carmichael. In this .. article he talks about that SNCC REPRESENTATIVES TALK TO PRESS IN HAVANA. (l to r) George Ware, Julius Lester, Stokely Carmichael, Cuban visit. interpreter. (Photo: Felix Greene) Stokely Carmichael's visit to Cuba The meeting was like a gathering of raised more comment from the press revolutionary who's who. Regis Debray's and Congress than word that Lynda Bird attractive wife was there, as well as was going to marry Mao Tse-Tung's son. Frantz Fanon's widow, Senora Che Gue To the right-wing it was all the "proof" vara, Wilfred Burchett, Felix Greene they needed that SNCC, Black Power and and a delegation from the National Front the rebellions were Communist and that of Liberation from South Vietnam. THE CORAL SEA indeed, as U.S. NEWS AND WORLD RE Stokely's unexpected appearance hap PORT "reported," Fidel himself was pened to coincide with the insurrection in behind the "riots." To the liberals Stoke Detroit and the analysis that he gave to ly Carmichael had, once again, hurt_the it and the other insurrections was par ASailor Tells THE MOVEMENT: "cause" of the Negro. And meanwhile, ticularly relevant in the over-all context Detroit, Milwaukee, and eight other cities of OLAS and played no small role in the were being devastated and it was too much final resolutions. -
(Title of the Thesis)*
“A New Kind of War”: The Vietnam War and The Nuremberg Principles, 1964-1968 by Luke J. Stewart A thesis presented to the University of Waterloo in fulfillment of the thesis requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, 2014 © Luke J. Stewart 2014 AUTHOR'S DECLARATION I hereby declare that I am the sole author of this thesis. This is a true copy of the thesis, including any required final revisions, as accepted by my examiners. I understand that my thesis may be made electronically available to the public. ii Abstract This thesis explores what Telford Taylor called the “ethos of Nuremberg” and how it shaped antiwar resistance during the Vietnam War in the United States. The Vietnam War was a monumental event in the twentieth century and the conflict provided lawyers, academics, activists, and soldiers the ability to question the legality of the war through the prism of the Nuremberg Principles, the various international treaties and U.S. Constitutional law. As many legal scholars and historians have lamented, the Cold War destroyed hopes for the solidification of an international court empowered to preside over questions of war crimes, crimes against humanity and crimes against peace. In the absence of cooperation among the international community, the antiwar movements in the United States and around the world during the Vietnam War utilized these legal instruments to form what I call a war crimes movement from below. A significant component of this challenge was the notion that individual citizens – draft noncooperators, military resisters, tax resisters, and the like – had a responsibility under the Nuremberg Principles to resist an illegal war.