phil ochs photographed by michael ochs speaking at the first press conference of the youth international party, aka the yippies, at the americana hotel in new york city on march 17th, 1968

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phil ochs photographed by michael ochs speaking at the first press conference of the youth international party, aka the yippies, at the americana hotel in new york city on march 17th, 1968

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Collage from Do It! Scenarios of the Revolution Eldridge Cleaver, Jerry Rubin, Jim Retherford and Nancy Kurshan, Quentin Fiore 1970 Ballantine Books
Poster for the Conspiracy Stomp, a benefit for the Chicago Eight held in Aragon in 1969, featuring Phil Ochs, Abbie Hoffman, Bob Gibson & more. Art by Robert Crumb
Photos from the 1968 Democratic Convention published in issue 169 of The Berkeley Barb.

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HL2VRAI COMING OUT THIS DECEMBER!!!!! AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHH
Zen priest, Peter Coyote, on protest: "I’m watching the Los Angeles reaction to ICE raids with trepidation and regret.
Three years ago I taught a class at Harvard on the “theater of protest”— designed to help people understand why so many protests turn out to be Republican campaign videos working directly against the interests of the original protest.
A protest is an invitation to a better world.
It’s a ceremony.
No one accepts a ceremonial invitation when they’re being screamed at.
More important you have to know who the real audience of the protest is.
The audience is NEVER the police, the politicians, the Board of supervisors, Congress,etc.
The audience is always the American people, who are trying to decide who they can trust; who will not embarrass them.
If you win them, you win power at the box office and power to make positive change.
Everything else is a waste.
There are a few ways to get there:
1. Let women organize the event. They’re more collaborative. They’re more inclusive, and they don’t generally bring the undertones of violence men do.
2 Appoint monitors, give them yellow, vests and whistles. At the first sign of violence, they blow the whistles and the real protester sit down.
Let the police take out their aggression on the anarchists and the provocateurs trying to discredit the movement.
3. Dress like you’re going to church. It’s hard to be painted as a hoodlum when you’re dressed in clean, presentable clothes.
They don’t have to be fancy they just signal the respect for the occasion that you want to transmit to the audience.
4. Make your protest silent. Demonstrate your discipline to the American people. Let signs do the talking.
5. Go home at night. In the dark, you can’t tell the cops from the killers. Come back at dawn fresh and rested.
I have great fear that Trump’s staging with the National Guard and maybe the Marines is designed to clash with anarchists who are playing into his hands and offering him the opportunity to declare an insurrection.
It’s such a waste and it’s only because we haven’t thought things through strategically.
Nothing I thought of is particularly original.
It was all learned by watching the early civil rights protests in the 50s and 60s.
And it was the discipline and courage of African-Americans that drew such a clear line in the American sand that people were forced to take sides and that produced the civil rights act.
The American people are watching and once again if we behave in ways that can be misinterpreted, we’ll see this explained to the public in Republican campaign videos benefiting the very people who started this.
Wake up.
Vent at home.
In public practice discipline and self control.
It takes much more courage."
— Peter Coyote
Zen teacher and author/narrator, with Ken Burns
Note: Carry an American flag. As the administration creates a fake emergency to justify a state crackdown, it's important to honor the values and vision of democracy for which we're advocating.
When the Enquirer came for pics back in 2017, I smiled a big toothy grin and held a big flag as it felt so empowering and good to stand with my adult daughter, pastors, Franciscans, nuns, kids, parents, grandparents and some women from our women's groups for the values we tried to pass on.
After the protest, we sang and marched to a church where we heard poignant witness of immigrants trying to build a better life for their families against insurmountable odds.
Many Marines, National Guardsmen and vets are over on Threads and Substack expressinging their disagreement over being used by this lawless administration.
— Leslie Flood Hershberger
---- Just some thoughts from Peter Coyote. I'm not disputing anything here or even really analyzing. I leave that to you, because I'm sure various users will champion and/or shred every word above, so...you do that. Coyote is kind of a legend among a certain set of mostly older folks, hippies, yippies and conchies etc. He was a Digger and a member of the San Francisco Mime Troupe before becoming a Zen monk. My dad (in his poor Jesuit law student/philosophy professor days in the 1960s-70s) used to go to his Free Store and chat with him on occasion and described him as one of the more magnetic (thus also polarizing, he'd add quickly, firmly) figures of counterculture San Francisco (he certainly liked him better than Jim Jones (he met him exactly once and said he was 'the Slimiest and Sickest Fucker ever and my dad isn't the type to swear at all) Alan Watts or Alvin Toffler).
-- Today’s Daily New Yorker Cartoon, by Guy Richards Smit.