Friday, October 6, 2017

Living through the Vietnam War Era: Personal Reflections

Like millions of others, I watched the Ken Burns/Lynn Novick documentary on the Vietnam War. It was a visceral, frequently gut-wrenching, tearful experience made personal by my having progressed from a teenager to a thirty-something adult during the tumultuous years of the late 1950s through 1975. During at least four of those years, I worried off and on about being drafted into the U.S. military and being pulled kicking and screaming into the great maw of the war machine.

Today, it is all but impossible for people born after the 1960s to comprehend the diametrically opposed emotions generated by the Vietnam War that tore the fabric of America apart so terribly it has never been stitched back together. In this short personal reflection, I’ll try to relate one young man’s feelings about that conflict as they changed over time and under the influence of increasing information as well as increasing exposure to the draft.

As might be guessed, my personal understanding of the Vietnam War evolved a great deal with passing time as I gradually become aware of the many facets of that War. As a young Catholic high school-aged teenager and postulant preparing to become a member of the Society of Mary, it is safe to say that I started out as a gung-ho but unthinking supporter of all things Jack Kennedy, including his anti-Communist militarism and the now justly infamous ‘Domino Theory’ that was applied to French Indochina and neighboring South Asian countries. And with all the furor over the battle for applying the rights granted to all citizens by the Constitution to black Americans, it wasn’t until just before graduating from Saint Louis University in the summer of 1966 that the Vietnam War became personal to me.

Prior to that time, I had plowed through two years of college draft deferments without even a first, much less a second, thought about what the end of that deferment actually would mean to me personally. Suddenly, in the summer of 1964, the start of my junior year at Saint Louis University, it hit me. My II-S student deferment had lapsed. As a result, my skinny ass was hanging out there naked with an official draft status of I-A, meaning I was draft eligible.

Lucky for me, the Vietnam War was still simmering and was nowhere close to boiling over. Plus, my draft board apparently had a surplus of young men, age 18 to 21, who had no deferments and would eventually receive letters of invitation from the Board to get a medical exam prior to induction into the Army. So, like the stupid kid I was, I simply put the possibility of being drafted out of my mind and enrolled for courses like absolutely nothing adverse could happen to me. Though a couple short years later I did discover, to my chagrin, that by 1965 the Selective Service System was inducting an average of about 300,000 young men annually, nearly all of whom wound up in Vietnam.

My initial introduction to Vietnam and what was then called French Indochina was through two spell-binding novels, Graham Greene’s 1955 psychological thriller, The Quiet American, and one that was not nearly so good, The Ugly American, by Eugene Burdick and William Lederer, published in 1958. But it was the Kennedy-Nixon debates that dragged me into the political quagmire that was Vietnam. As a side note, the first three debates I only read about in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch since my TV watching ability was strictly limited since I was boarding at Maryhurst Prep and we were prohibited from watching almost all TV shows. The last debate, broadcast on October 21, 1960, was the only one the entire student body of Maryhurst was allowed to watch live.

In the summer of 1966, only three months short of my wedding date, somehow I became convinced that since I was moving from my parent’s house in north St. Louis to an apartment in the southern part of the City I had to change draft boards. So, one summer morning in mid-May 1966 I called the draft board and told whoever answered the phone that I wanted to change boards. I was told I had to come in and talk to a clerk. My appointment was for the following Tuesday at 10:00 AM at the Federal Building downtown. Great.

That next Tuesday I put on freshly pressed dress shirt and pants, tie, the only decent sport coat I owned, a pair of spit-polished black shoes and off to the U.S. Federal Building I went. When I told a young woman at the information desk I had a 10:00 appointment with a clerk she directed me down the hall to Room whatever. When I arrived I took careful note of the title on the door: Clerk of the Board. Mercy. I wasn’t seeing any old clerk but what turned out to be the Executive Director whose actual title was Clerk of the Draft Board.

I knocked and entered a room as big as a small hockey rink. The proto-typical little old white woman was seated behind an enormous desk at the far end of the room. I walked across the room, introduced myself, and shook her hand. She told me to sit and asked the reason for my visit. I told her blah, blah, blah.

She hesitated a moment and then asked what I was doing with my life. I gave her the short version. I was graduating from SLU in less than a month or so, getting married July, and starting graduate school in the fall. My real goal was to get master’s and doctorate degrees and become a university professor.

She listened patiently and then in a voice devoid of expression told me that if I changed draft boards I would be drafted within two days. Because the board into which I wanted to move had NO young men of draft eligible age without deferments. Holy shit. I nearly had a stroke. Another body to be shoved into the Army’s Vietnam meat grinder.

Then she asked if I wanted her advice. Of course, I said, after pulling my tongue out of my throat and making sure my heart was still beating. She told me I should write a letter informing her of my pending marriage and a temporary change in domicile. I should keep my parents’ address as my permanent residence because, as she said rather grimly, that year alone my draft board had more than a thousand draft eligible young men with nothing better to do with their lives than serve their country. If and when anything changed my status all I had to do was send her another letter detailing those specifics. And she would keep my documents at the back of the draft eligible file. If Congress declared war, she said, you’ll probably be drafted. But, failing an official Act of Congress declaring war, I should be able to pursue my graduate studies. I nearly jumped across the desk and kissed her.

That started my letter writing program with the Clerk, whose name may have been Hazel T_____, though due to the fog of time I’m not 100 percent certain. I sent her a wedding announcement. A letter documenting my move to a “temporary” address in south St. Louis with my new wife. A birth announcement two years later when our son, David, was born. A copy of my acceptance letter to the doctoral program at the University of Florida. And finally, my new “temporary” address in married student housing in Gainesville.

Not long after arriving at the U of F and starting classes I got into a heated argument with a fellow leftist student in the sociology doctoral program who had an infant and was going through a messy divorce. He yelled at me and accused me of taking advantage of the poor black young men in my draft board. I disagreed, saying I wasn’t doing anything but following the law. If the Clerk of the Board was protecting my ass it wasn’t because of anything I had done or asked to be done. It was pure serendipity on my part and I was thankful as hell no matter what reasons she had for protecting me. I had stumbled into a great deal and wasn’t about to fuck it up. He stomped off, visibly steaming.

Several weeks later I learned that as soon as his divorce decree was final his vindictive ex-wife sent a copy to his Selective Service board. He was drafted a few days later. Two or three days after receiving his induction notice he shot and killed himself rather than submit to the draft. When I heard about his death, my first thought was, why the hell didn’t he go to Canada and fuck the draft? I would have in a heartbeat had I found myself in that situation. His death upset me a great deal but . . . what could I or anyone do?

December 1, 1969, marked the date of the first Selective Service (conscription) lottery held since 1942. But, because I was 26, married, and had a child, I was not eligible for the lottery, especially since Congress had never declared war. Had I been eligible, my lottery number would have been 112 and my skinny white ass would have been drafted. But, during those several years that the Vietnam War went from nearly invisible to hot on all burners, that little old lady protected my ass. Without her counsel I would have changed draft boards and exposed my tender body to the terrors of boot camp and then the rigors of military service.

It should be noted that I had started 1966 as vaguely favoring U.S. involvement in Vietnam. During that summer I worked at the St. Louis County Planning Department with a young woman named Ginger Harris, who strongly opposed the War. Arguing with her over our lunch breaks slowly led to a sea change in my position. By the end of summer 1966, I was 100 percent opposed to the War and couldn’t imagine what I’d do if drafted, though Canada beckoned. But, by that time I had been saved by my own personal, white-haired, Fairy Godmother and seldom actively worried about being drafted, though the specter of being forced into the military was never far from my mind.

Many years ago, after thinking long and hard about that situation, I came to the conclusion that the U of F grad student who excoriated me for elitist behavior had been right. No, I had not precipitated what transpired or even thought the possibility existed of suggesting it to the Clerk of the Board. But I had directly benefited from the white privilege shared by the Clerk and me. Of course, I had no way of knowing if a white or black guy from my local draft board had been drafted in my place. So, whether I had benefited unfairly from her action is somewhat up in the air. Though it is certain that my local board had more black registrants than white, thus the chance of a black guy being sucked up in the draft instead of me was high.

Did I ever consider back then that I had benefited unfairly from the Clerk’s unanticipated patronage? Of course I did. But, since I hated the Vietnam War, I rationalized the actions of the Clerk and my acquiescence and simply put the situation out of my mind. I was tremendously relieved at not being forced to join the military or to flee to Canada, a choice I had considered a great deal though I’ll never be certain if I would have followed through since Sandy strongly opposed it. Once safe from being drafted, I did not allow myself to think about how that security had come about.

So, yes, in at least some ways I knew I had benefited from white privilege but didn’t give a shit since I thought my very life was at stake. I rationalized my behavior and refused to acknowledge reality. A great example of white privilege hard at work and how whites like me fail to see it for what it is.

Thursday, October 5, 2017

Reducing Mass Shootings

Another slaughter of innocents by a whacko gunman, this one in Las Vegas. I can hear the anguished outcries from families of lost ones, from outraged citizens who are sick of death by gun-wielding murderers, from politicians who want to be seen as empathetic, at least until the slaughter fades from the front pages. But haven’t we heard all that before multiple times? Remember Columbine High, Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, and many, many others?

Obviously, crafting and implementing a workable solution to this problem has proven far too difficult for us as a society and a country. So, we have shrugged our collective shoulders and agreed that having guns available to every American is far more important than protecting the lives of innocents. Because that’s who we Americans are, gun obsessed people.

Some claim we can reduce mass shootings by writing effective laws that limit the scope of the Second Amendment, just as we have with the First and other Amendments. But I firmly believe the only way to address the problem is to repeal the Second Amendment, universally ban the sale and ownership of handguns and assault rifles, and regulate long guns and the sale of ammunition. Nothing short of that measure will be effective.

Failing that step, we should stop the public weeping, wailing, and gnashing of teeth when innocents are gunned down. It doesn’t reflect well on us. After all, we are the ones who allow these tragedies to happen.