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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe grim history of using troops against student protesters
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/04/26/kent-state-killings-lesson-protests/
https://archive.ph/a0SQj
House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and Republican Sens. Tom Cotton (Ark.) and Josh Hawley (Mo.) are among the conservative leaders suggesting that the National Guard might be needed to control campus protests across the country against Israels war in Gaza. Such calls stir memories of the tragedy 54 years ago at Kent State University in northeastern Ohio.
On May 1, 1970 a Friday night several hundred Kent State students poured out of downtown bars near closing time and began harassing motorists, smashing store windows and spray-painting buildings with antiwar slogans. Mayor LeRoy Satrom, a conservative Democrat elected by Kent voters six months earlier on a get-tough platform against long-haired students, telephoned the governors office the next day. Saying that outside agitators were fomenting subversion and disorder in his town, the mayor asked that the National Guard be dispatched to Kent.
University officials had a different plan. They preferred to deal with the situation by using university police, with county sheriffs deputies as reinforcements and Ohio State Highway Patrol officers as a last resort. But they were not consulted. That Saturday night, student protesters against the Vietnam War put Kent States ROTC building to the torch. University police in riot gear eventually drove off the protesters with tear gas. By then, Gov. Jim Rhodes had acted on the mayors request, and, a short time later, a line of armored personnel carriers, jeeps and trucks reached campus carrying several hundred Ohio National Guardsmen.
The following afternoon, on May 3, Rhodes met in Kent with state and local officials. Rhodes was in the final year of his second four-year term. Barred by the state constitution from running again, he was seeking the Republican nomination for a U.S. Senate seat in a primary election just 48 hours away. Trailing in the polls, Rhodes had positioned himself as the candidate who would use all the force that was necessary to end campus disturbances throughout the state.
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The grim history of using troops against student protesters (Original Post)
Celerity
Apr 27
OP
Kent State, the "police action" that broke America's support for the war in Vietnam
Model35mech
Apr 27
#3
unblock
(52,438 posts)1. Slight correction, he wasn't barred from running again.
The Ohio constitution bars a third *consecutive* term.
So he was barred at that time but not forever. In face he did run again, and win, twice more for a total of 4 terms.
Yes, he was re-elected twice after Kent state.
Ay-o way to go ohi-o
Jilly_in_VA
(10,041 posts)2. We were very lucky
that Gov. Warren Knowles in Wisconsin had somewhat better sense. He was an idiot but he saw what happened at Kent State and had no intention of having blood on his lily-white hands.
Model35mech
(1,577 posts)3. Kent State, the "police action" that broke America's support for the war in Vietnam
Sending the military against unarmed students was one of the worst decisions in American history.