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elleng

(131,129 posts)
Tue Aug 28, 2018, 10:25 AM Aug 2018

'The Whole World Is Watching': The 1968 Democratic Convention, 50 Years Later

On Aug. 28, 1968, violent clashes in Chicago between demonstrators and the police produced one of the most polarizing showdowns of the 1960s. People are still debating what it all meant.

CHICAGO — Inside the convention hall, the choreography of American politics stumbled on.

Vice President Hubert Humphrey won the Democratic presidential nomination with 1,761 votes to 601 for Senator Eugene McCarthy. The delegates adopted Mr. Humphrey’s platform, which continued President Lyndon Johnson’s unpopular Vietnam policies, and rejected Mr. McCarthy’s antiwar plank. But their attention was on the radios and television screens reporting chaos outside.

A few miles away, thousands of protesters streamed out of Grant Park into a sea of tear gas and billy clubs. Some were caught in a crush against the facade of a Hilton hotel and fell through the plate glass, cutting themselves on shards. People on upper floors threw crystal ashtrays, one of which struck a passer-by and shattered, embedding glass in his eyes. Blood ran from skulls into gutters. Someone tried to overturn a police van. All the while, the crowd was chanting.

“The whole world is watching. The whole world is watching.”

It was on this night, Aug. 28, that all the anxiety and rage of 1968 exploded. Numerous groups were involved, with different motives and tactics. There were Yippies who said they would get high and have sex outdoors, and black and Latino Chicagoans, including the Puerto Rican leftist group the Young Lords, who wanted to challenge police brutality; McCarthy supporters who sought change within “the system,” and Students for a Democratic Society activists who wanted to shred it.

Some protesters taunted the police, and a small number threw bags of feces at them. But an official report found that the police acted out of proportion to the provocations and largely targeted people who had done nothing to provoke officers. It was, the report concluded, a “police riot” driven partly by Mayor Richard J. Daley, who had earlier given the police license to “shoot to kill” in certain circumstances.

Here is a look at that week and its legacy through the eyes of nine people who experienced it, condensed from interviews and from a panel discussion last week at the Chicago Public Library.'>>>

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/28/us/politics/chicago-1968-democratic-convention-.html?

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elleng

(131,129 posts)
2. Oh sorry! I avoided it,
Tue Aug 28, 2018, 03:15 PM
Aug 2018

was in the office, and then to Cook County Jail to help people with various things, including getting out.

elleng

(131,129 posts)
4. Was fortuitous,
Tue Aug 28, 2018, 04:05 PM
Aug 2018

had worked there in a small legal aid project, so met and worked near the warden who became a friend, so allowed me back to help people do things like get their meds and contacts with families.

elleng

(131,129 posts)
6. Oh STUFF!
Tue Aug 28, 2018, 06:17 PM
Aug 2018

P.S. Just remembered, warden let me watch the goings-on 'downtown' on TV in his office.

A while AFTER all this, working for a couple great young lawyers (out of the U. Chicago Law School,) and meeting others, I decided to go to law school myself! SO, seeing this 50 years ago story, brings me to look back on my working years. Retired now (and observing the current chaos, which feels much worse than that of years past.)

stuffmatters

(2,574 posts)
7. Chicago'68 was definitely life changing. So glad it lead you into Law, such a positive response
Tue Aug 28, 2018, 07:21 PM
Aug 2018

Post '69 graduation, attended one other unforgettable demonstration (in DC).Then headed west, back to Ca, for (film) grad school. I'd majored in art history & really believed art could change the world. Not so much, but it sure was fun trying!

Retired too & not so good at walking, so haven't been able to show up, demonstrate physically these days. Lucky the computer has made protesting & supporting still possible. Also like to call my local network stations and ride them over misrepresenting or
omitting facts on political stories. In San Diego "somehow" their mistakes, omissions always swing towards the Repug politicos. But as you say, today seems way worse, more difficult than 50 years ago.

Big wave back & thank you: I've enjoyed your sharing (NYT) and posts here so much over the years from the delish to the political.

elleng

(131,129 posts)
10. Nice to encourage, but watch it!
Tue Aug 28, 2018, 11:15 PM
Aug 2018

Dad, not an overly aggressive type, overly encouraged me to attend law school, foolishly said 'You'll like it!' What a joke! Was only after I'd spent time in the field, totally un-related to his encouragement, that I decided to do it! (P.S., He, 2 uncles, 1 cousin, my brother, and my future husband were all attorneys, something like in the blood!!!)

stuffmatters

(2,574 posts)
11. It was so challenging for a woman get in and finish law school in the late 60's.Huge respect for you
Wed Aug 29, 2018, 01:46 AM
Aug 2018

Even with your Law DNA, it could not have been easy.

elleng

(131,129 posts)
12. Actually it WAS easy (even tho I worked through most of it.)
Wed Aug 29, 2018, 01:53 AM
Aug 2018

Good atmosphere at DePaul U. College of Law, lots of women, no gender-related problems at all.

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