5. Kent State Tragedy
It could never happen in America, right? The president would never call out the National Guard to quell protestors on college campuses, would he? The Guardsmen could never, ever open fire on protestors, their peers and fellow citizens, could they? Well, yes, yes they could. Here’s an image that should fully illustrate just how divisive the war was for America.
After a few days of unrest on campus (protestors held protests, guardsmen broke them up), protestors at Kent State University, both students of the school and supporters, were utterly shocked to find National Guardsmen opening fire on them on Monday, May 4, 1970. It was the height of U.S. involvement in Vietnam and the height of the anti-war movement at home. The governor of Ohio had called out the Guard to deal with what he termed “the worst type of people that we harbor in America.” Yeah, it was that bad. Around noon the Guard broke up a rally on campus and then, supposedly fearing for their lives, twenty-nine of the soldiers fired 67 shots in 13 seconds. When the smoke cleared, four young Americans were dead.
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