Where were you May 4th 1970?

Tin soldiers and Nixon coming,
We're finally on our own.
This summer I hear the drumming,
Four dead in Ohio.

Gotta get down to it
Soldiers are gunning us down
Should have been done long ago.
What if you knew her
And found her dead on the ground
How can you run when you know? http://www.thrasherswheat.org/2008/05/ohio-why-todays-students-dont-protest.html

2008-05-04T06:08:25Z

My greatest respect to Adolphusguzman, Mister Ed, Robert W . and The American Patriot. I'm sure it was quite disheartening to be over there and have all the protesting over here. My father did 3 tours over there and his first response well it wasen't very nice.

Donna2008-05-03T11:30:22Z

Favorite Answer

That photo is printed on my mind forever, Who would have thought anything like that could happen in America the land of the free! I remember like it was yesterday. I am Canadian but this upset me more than when Kennedy was assassinated.
My husband had been laid off and we were in the process of moving to a new city, and a new job.
This song always made me think of the Kent State massacre.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=30W3iRL48gQ&feature=related

Anonymous2016-04-03T03:48:07Z

It's disturbing, to say the least. Our government is, perhaps, not quite the evil empire some portray it as, but there are quite a few less-than-honorable conclaves within it. I don't think we are past the point of no return... yet. If we continue to allow the liberal mindset be bred into our youth, though, we will cease to be a force for good, and as a nation we will be a bastion of oppressive government and suffering. This is why gun control is so stupid. So we disarm those who would use guns legally... What do we get? An increase in violence because criminals can now do whatever they wish. I think, hope, and pray that the general population will realize that. Unfortunately, with the liberal brainwashing that occurs in the education system, especially higher education, it's very likely that we will be facing more stringent reforms in the next few years. We can only hope and pray for a return to our roots, as a nation founded upon freedom from oppressive government and as a nation which, by and large, sought its inspiration from the Creator.

sage seeker2008-05-03T15:40:06Z

I was 28...My last child had been born that past December. My marriage was heading to trouble though I didn't realize it at the time. We split in '74.

I lived in a ranch style in N.W. D.C. and I was working at a DC Think Tank in Employment Research and Training. Traveled two weeks out of the month.

My hubby and I partied with the Redskins and froliced with the 'pretty and accomplished people' of DC.' [yeah right!]

I remember Kent State. The continuance of being brought to abject REALISM [since Kennedy, MLK, RFK, etc] in my few years of the violence possible man to man.

I drove a used white Corvair [actually my fav car!]

I was 'cute' - LOL...thin and just beginning to learn who I was - though not who I WOULD grow to be.

My Dad had just been named Deputy of Civil Rights for GSA.

My girls were 5 and 7.

My two grandmothers passed.

I was a clothes horse back then [no longer]

I thought I was happy!...and THOUGHT my life would continue on as it was.

WAKE UP call a few years later.

Such is life in the fast OR slow lane!

Inundated in SF2008-05-03T17:59:06Z

In college in NY, probably protesting the war. I remember when I heard, I sort of took a breath and have yet to let it out (good thing I don't need to breath to live). The police even came and surrounded parts of our college (the dorm predominantly since it was mostly anarchy in there--co-ed living, police were not allowed in so there was a lot of drug activity, lots of parties, forests of pot plants growing on a lot of balconies) and rumor had it that they would open fire on us just like they did at Kent State (and a week later, Jacksonville State). My college declared that "finals" were canceled, grades would be given on a pass-fail system, no graduation proceeding that year, and classes closed down early so the students would go away. It was very intense, scary, angering, morally demolishing, felt like it truly was them vs. us.

curious connie2008-05-03T16:22:50Z

It was my day off and I was home cleaning house and doing laundry. I had the TV on and heard the news come on. I went into the living rm. to watch this. I just sat there. I was so stunned. I didn't finish cleaning, just the laundry. I didn't want to be away from TV to long. It still shocks me that it could happen. That entire Viet Nam era was a terrible time in America. Where are the protesters today? Maybe they could bring an end to the Iraq war.

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