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To: Snowshoe who wrote (64339)8/26/2004 4:43:56 AM
From: Snowshoe  Respond to of 793914
 
1st Division troops destroy a rice cache found at a Michelin Rubber Plantation, 1969
vietnampix.com



To: Snowshoe who wrote (64339)8/26/2004 5:15:43 AM
From: Ilaine  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793914
 
I remember those monks, too. My parents subscribed to Time and Life and I used to read them voraciously, especially Life, which had really good photos.

So much of what I remember about current events is based on photos in Life magazine. Photos of Dr. King and his group being hosed down and attacked by dogs in places like Selma Alabama.

Remember the photo of the girl putting a flower in the barrel of the rifle?

The screaming girl on one knee at Kent State?

The little naked Vietnamese girl, running and screaming?

The photo of the general shooting the VietCong man in the head?

I remember the peace vigil after the mining of Haiphong Harbor because visually it was so compelling, a sea of people, young, old, students, professors, holding candles in the middle of the parade ground on the LSU campus. My mother was in graduate school, and one of the professors was a close personal friend. I was standing near him and he was talking about "madness." That is Vietnam to me in a nutshell, my favorite philosophy professor telling me that the war was "madness."

Oddly, that same year I heard William F. Buckley lecture on subsidiarity and began my journey towards conservatism.

I went to some SDS meetings but all I remember is men jockying for position. I would bet that a lot of the leaders went on to become lawyers. Probably very few engineers.



To: Snowshoe who wrote (64339)8/26/2004 10:36:44 AM
From: Neeka  Respond to of 793914
 
What a great site......thanks.

Off for the weekend.

Hope my post didn't bring up too many bad memories, but since Kerry brought it up, I think it's not so bad to revisit this period in our history. Maybe there will finally be some closure, although I don't think that will happen until the Vets say so.

M



To: Snowshoe who wrote (64339)8/26/2004 1:18:49 PM
From: KLP  Respond to of 793914
 
I think you're right, Snow....that picture was about the first, and it was right before JFK was killed the next month. I've always thought of that period as America's loss of innocence....

Seeing a monk set himself on fire was shocking....but even more so was the thought that someone would kill a President of the US...(even if I personally didn't always agree with him, he was after all THE President....) Terrible Times.