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"Chicago 10": A Visceral, Compelling Look at a Youth Movement [VIDEO]

Posted by Gideon Yago, Huffington Post at 8:28 AM on March 1, 2008.


Check it out. It's worth the $10 bucks and who knows, you may even leave the theater with some ideas of how to start a movement of your own.
CHICAGO 10 trailer

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I have a little bit of a chip on my shoulder against Boomers. I know every generation takes issue with the one that sired it, but my gripe is as much professional as anything else. For the better part of my 20s, I made my living as a correspondent for MTV News. This meant that every four years, when MTV did its "Choose or Lose" campaign coverage, I would be jettisoned to the media circuit to jawbone pundits about the significance (or insignificance) of the youth vote. It was a sweet gig, don't get me wrong, but it got to be a little like Groundhog Day. Inevitably, after I parroted my talking points, the Boomer anchor across from me would roll back his (or her) shoulders, twist his (or her) face into a smug grin and, as if on script, launch into some screed about "how come things aren't like 1968 anymore?" and "why does the current youth movement suck so bad compared to ours?" It took a lot of sheer willpower to keep from smashing my face into their desks on live television.

I had always dismissed Boomer nostalgia for the youth movements of the 1960s and '70s as self-aggrandizing amongst a generation whose current attachment to counterculture was taking retirement advice from Dennis Hopper in his Ameriprise Financial ads. But Brett Morgen's latest film Chicago 10 knocked that chip off my shoulder ... somewhat. I'm not too big to admit when I'm wrong, and frankly, after seeing Chicago 10 I'm inclined to say that those smug bastards may be on to something. So if you've ever felt left down by that one protest march you attended, or that joining a Facebook group was actually kind of weak when it comes to making a difference, I highly recommend you check out Chicago 10. It's a visceral, compelling look at the energy, character and struggles of a youth movement facing real stakes in its mission to stop a war and affect social change.

I got a chance to see Chicago 10 for the first time a few weeks ago during a screening at the USC Film School. At first, it was a bit disorienting. I had expected a traditional documentary and, instead, got a pastiche of animation and archival footage set to a contemporary soundtrack. Brett told the audience that his goal was to make a movie for now, not to contribute to more Boomer mythologizing by polishing up some historical relic. In that regard, he hit his mark. A lot of the struggles the Chicago 10 face seem eerily familiar: the man on the street who can't be bothered by politics, the pro-status quo noise machine, the entrenched political establishment deaf to the sounds of social change. It gives you an immense amount of respect for the 10 and their willingness to put themselves on the line in a very intense prison trial. That kind of devotion to ideals and political heroism does seem in short supply these days (say what you will about the protest movement going to the Internet, it is still largely anonymous). But mostly, you leave the film feeling inspired by the capacity of a small group of kids to do something great and the spirit and energy in which they did it.

Chicago 10 comes out this week and like all fine little movies, it only has a short time to get people's attention before distributors yank it out of theatres for some rote piece of mind-numbing pabulum. Check it out. It's worth the $10 bucks and who knows, you may even leave the theater with some ideas of how to start a movement of your own.

Digg!

Tagged as: film, election68, 1960s, youth movement, baby boomers, chicago 10

Gideon Yago spent 7 years as a correspondent and producer for MTV News. His writing has appeared in Rolling Stone, Spin and Vice Magazines and on NPR's "This American Life." He lives in New York.


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View:
'Back In The Day'...
Posted by: Nebris on Mar 1, 2008 8:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...it was actually pretty easy to get a political demonstration going. Then 'they' started to seriously crack heads and the Moment passed. *sigh*

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: 'Back In The Day'... Posted by: Lauren
» RE: 'Back In The Day'... Posted by: donl51
» RE: 'Back In The Day'... Posted by: Lauren
» RE: 'Back In The Day'... Posted by: SkeeterVT1
A MOVEMENT FOR NOW-CHENEYCARE.ORG
Posted by: crazy carlos on Mar 1, 2008 10:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How many of you have heard about HR676 now being proposed in the U.S. House?? None--why does that not suprize me.

On the back cover of NATION Magazine (3-10-08) is an ad being co-sponsered by the California Nurses Assn. and thre National Nurses Organizing committee to give ALL Americans the same health insurance plan enjoyed by our Congress and idiot in waiting, Dick Cheney for whom the bill is named.

In short, bypassing the money monster Insurance Industry and seriously damaging the Drug Industry. Why you will never see this ad.

This is the first time to my knowledge that someone has given to the "We the People" the means to have some influence in getting a bill that will actually benefit the all us lowlifes.

Where to start: Google CHENEYCARE.ORG, SIGN UP AND FOR ONCE ACTUALLY GET OFF YOUR DEAD ASSES AND DO SOMETHING TO HELP YOURSELVES!!

It won't happen if YOU do not participate. Obviously check it out then forward it to everyone you know. We have a chance to do something if we all act. Pass this along to other Blogs. Don't be afraid to send a C.C. to your Congressman and Senators. Crazy Carlos


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Forgetting Cointelpro and a few earlier events...
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Mar 1, 2008 10:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Oct 1967: The March on the Pentagon produces the famous images of flowers protruding from soldier's rifles.

These massive 1967 peace rallies really marked the rise of popular opposition to the war in Vietnam. Martin Luther King began making speeches like this:

"We are arrogant in our contention that we have some sacred mission to protect people from totalitarian rule, while we make little use of our power to end the evils of South Africa and Rhodesia, and while we are in fact supporting dictatorships with guns and money under the guise of fighting Communism. We are arrogant in professing to be concerned about the freedom of foreign nations while not setting our own house in order. Many of our Senators and Congressmen vote joyously to appropriate billions of dollars for war in Viet Nam, and these same Senators and Congressmen vote loudly against a Fair Housing Bill to make it possible for a Negro veteran of Viet Nam to purchase a decent home. We arm Negro soldiers to kill on foreign battlefields, but offer little protection for their relatives from beatings and killings in our own south. We are willing to make the Negro 100% of a citizen in warfare, but reduce him to 50% of a citizen on American soil. . . .There are twice as many Negroes in combat in Viet Nam at the beginning of 1967 and twice as many died in action (20.6%) in proportion to their numbers in the population as whites.

Thus began a massive movement for serious change in the United States that united people from a wide variety of backgrounds, and at the same time a government backlash began against this new alliance of anti-war and anti-racist movements.

At the time, the Pentagon and the CIA were free to operate on U.S. soil at that time, and in collaboration with the FBI they began a massive "infiltrate and disrupt" domestic political program operating under aliases such as COINTELPRO and CHAOS.

This is all in full swing by the time the 1968 Democratic Convention comes along. Undercover agents are already inside all the main groups that are coming to Chicago:

In the same vein, on September 9, 1968, an instruction was sent to all offices which had sent informants to the Chicago convention demonstrations, ordering them to debrief the informants for information . . ."

Other major events in 1968: The Vietnam Tet Offensive shows that the war is not "almost over"; LBJ decides not to run for re-election in March, and a week later Martin Luther King is assassinated under mysterious circumstances, followed by Robert Kennedy in June 1968.

So, the "Yippies" decide to call a massive protest in Chicago for the Democratic Convention . . . according to a good history of the era, Acid Dreams, "In the months preceding the convention the Yippies flatly predicted violence and spiced up their rhetoric to keep their audience enthralled. "We will burn Chicago to the ground!" "We will fuck on all the beaches!"

All of which, it must be noted, played right into Richard Nixon's plans, who was then able to campaign on his "law and order" platform against Democratic candidates (minus Robert Kennedy).

Coincidence?

Cointelpro is alive and well today, using the same tactics as before. . .

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Assume number 9 & 10 are William Kunstler & Leonard Weinglass?
Posted by: nochicagoboys on Mar 1, 2008 1:51 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One year in particular, I remember my brother returning home from college for the summer. He let me read a couple of paperbacks he brought with him. One was The Trial of The Chicago 8 (with the 8 crossed-out and replaced by a 7). The other was The Strawberry Statement.

I've been a liberal ever since.

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CHICAGO 10-my review
Posted by: pieman420 on Mar 1, 2008 2:25 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
last night while i was in altered state thanks to ganja and a minute dose of lsd, i went to see the flick, chicago 10 at nyc's sunshine theater which is an art form consisting of cartoons, film clips and other cool special effects exposing the merits or demerits of what took place in 1968's chicago riots and the trial thereafter......
in fact i want to go back for seconds .....this film is not a waste of celluloid....it carries a lot of weight...
it is great seeing abbie, jerry rubin, paul krassner,dick daley flash into your face...you feel you and the film have entered into an unholy union of sorts....
scenes such as the mc5 concert, abbie's phone call to bob fass of wbai, the convergence at general logan's statue at grant park along with the presence of the young militant jewish woman decked out in a military uniform (i used to know her, her name is gail carter, formerly of berkeley), leading the charge and riding the shoulders of others as they wind thru the streets of chi-town.......
in retrospect, i recommend everyone see this flick as part of a history course, you feel like you had more than box seats at the riot....jerry rubin would say, "every riot is a party"
now make it to the party and check out
jeff lyons' critique of the film
ARON KAY- http://www.pieman.org
STOP BUSH'S WAR

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Democracy: not for the TIMID Spectatorship
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Mar 1, 2008 4:08 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
of course...

you must wonder how North America got into this corrupt cesspool?

gee... look in the mirror...

now ask yourself: what part DID I PLAY IN ALLOWING THIS SHIT TO HAPPEN?

lots. so stop making frecking excuses & sniveling & GET OUT & NEGOTIATE THE CANDIDATE'S PLATFORMS to your advantage

DEFEND YOURSELVES & stop acting like its someone ELSE'S RESPONSIBLITY...

DEMOCRACY isn't a SPECTATOR SPORT.

just because YOU aren't at the NEGOTIATING TABLE doesn't mean YOUR CANDIDATE ISN'T THERE WITH THEIR CORPORATE BACKERS & LOBBYISTS...



GET OUT
GET LOUD
GET DETERMINED

or bend over & spread those arse cheeks, kiddies


on Determined Pacifism & "Election Madness" Howard Zinn



SNAP OUT OF IT, people.
Nobody is gonna do it FOR YOU, so stop whinging that it hasn't happened for you already.

Its a DEMOCRACY, not Kindergarten.

the REST of the World stopped making excuses for American Apathy... Honestly? who TOLD North Americans that the Revolution for HUMAN RIGHTS was OVER?

thoughts on "Holding the Bully's Coat" & "Obama, Clinton spook Canada’s hardcore free-traders at SPP ministerial meeting"

Dehumanized Cruelty: New Abu Ghraib Pictures Released

~~~
Spread Love...

BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian
~~~
"We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid.
~~~
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"

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Where Have All the Young People Gone.....
Posted by: Turiye on Mar 1, 2008 8:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
..not all, but the majority. We were out in force, kids shot dead at Kent, skulls cracked open, those cops got away, literally, with murder.
What has occurred the last 7 years has ben more horrific than anything I have yet to encounter. You all can type well, talk some fancy jargon, call names but what about putting boots to ground and moving your asses!
We are in our mid 50's and up, you have to do your part now. It is your world that this is happening to, I will be long gone so I should think perhaps you might care.
While you're at it watch 'Taxi to the Dark Side'.

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» No Child Left Behind. Posted by: Prairie Waif
Let's Move Forward
Posted by: Dianka on Mar 2, 2008 11:08 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There isn't one individual who represents the Boomer generation anymore than there is one who represents the generation before or after. For the most part, the "Boomer Generation" is a media myth, with a tidy and "acceptable" ending where all these rebellious youth grew up, got nice office jobs, and conformed to the corporate structure.

That said, the "inconvenient truth" is that a whole lot of us have continued the struggle, a struggle familiar to every American generation. As routinely happens in our history, we went through a period when corporate interests took the lead, this time promoted by a willing mainstream media rewriting reality to fit its goals. We found ourselves effectively silenced, blocked out of the public/political discussion, but that didn't stop the ongoing struggle. Those "old boomers" in large part taught another generation to ask questions, and NOT to passively accept the answers they were given. And that is what today's youth is doing.

Most of us here in the real world aren't into nostalgia, and certainly aren't expecting our children to be clones. Today's youth is taking their own path, finding their own solutions, doing things their own way. One thing that has changed is that today, millions of the older generation are strongly supporting the youth movement. They don't need our support, but it's a very hopeful fact (for the country/our collective future)that they don't have our opposition. In large part, our youth are better educated, certainly more media-savvy, as idealistic but less naive.

Sorry, but as a Boomer, today's "generational war" appears to be nothing but fluff. I don't personally know anyone who wants our children to follow our agenda as it applied to the times decades ago. It's good to learn from the successes and failures of the past, and I personally find a great deal of pleasure in listening to the music from my youth, but beyond that, the '60's simply has no relevance today. Let it go, and let's move forward already!

What we are seeing of youth today's is something powerful, and unique to this generation. It gives me tremendous hope.

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1968 was a . . .
Posted by: covalentbonded on Mar 3, 2008 8:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
precursor to 2008. While the whole world watched, people tore the mask off America and showed it for what it is - a war-mongering, anti-freedom, and anti-life force building toward empire and security statehood. Thousands of Federal troops and more thousands of police forces, tear gas and barbed wire couldn't hide that fact. But . . .

The draft ended, the vote was given and they killed 6 students within three weeks and that "bought off" the Revolution. I think we got the short end of the stick.

In 08 the "Establishment" will again nominate people that will continue the war, keep the security state at home, and generally act as their masters wish them to. And the media ignores it this time round. The sound track sucks, the health Nazis don't like LSD and reefer and the kids stay home with their Wi-Fis talking to no-one incessantly on their I-phones while trying to "cut a deal" with their masters in the schools and universities of their choice.

Personally? I think most Americans (regardless of age or sex or race) will go along as injustice prevents disorder and we can all get on with our lives. At least until someone asks to "See your papers please?". Then it is way too late.

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Did you see Walker Cronkite in that trailer?
Posted by: nc green on Mar 3, 2008 9:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You want to know what the difference is between now and 1968? The media paid attention in 1968. It didn't know what else to do.

And I don't know where the huge crowds of Boomers have been since 2001, but people of many generations have been in the streets and in courtrooms around this country opposing this war and this administration.

We had a half million people on The Mall in D.C. in 2006. Got 10 seconds on the "news."

If we want to free this country, we're going to have to free the press first.

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I haven't seen the movie yet...
Posted by: s.duplantier on Mar 3, 2008 3:49 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...but I was there!

My life changed that afternoon in Grant Park at the band shell, listening to the speeches of many who would later be called the Chicago 10.

It was a peaceful rally.Norman Mailer and Dave Dellinger had just spoken when Rennie Davis and Carl Oglesby took over the mic and warned us that trouble was coming.

I turned around and my heart sank! There was a phalanx of Chicago cops marching in a solid semi-circle toward us, beating their batons in their hands. Cops with tear-gas grenade launchers were interspersed. Behind them were National Guardsmen in jeeps with machine guns pointed at us.

It was a frightening few moments. No one knew what to do or stop doing since we weren't really doing anything but sitting down listening to speeches.

Rennie and Carl announced that if people wanted to avoid getting hurt, they should leave now. He said a group of militants would confront the cops to try to stop them.

I was in the group that decided to escape. It wasn't an orderly retreat however because seconds later the tear gas canisters landed among us and people panicked and ran.

The cops charged, wildly swinging at everyone within reach with no provocation.It was an unbelievable feeling--simlutanously avoiding injury and dodging blows, with the adrenalin-boosted attemnpts at figuring out what was going on and why were these crazed cops attacking ME? I didn't do anything.

I had been a sprinter in high school and could outrun any Chicago cop, especially cops wearing gas masks, and carrying sticks and guns.

You know the rest of the story. The Kerner Commission later called it a police riot, and this was the opening skirmish.

I learned plenty lessons that day. The major conclusion was that this truly seemed like the beginning of the end. The antiwar marches, McCarthy rallies, the endless discussions about the state of the country where we only thought and talked about revolution now seemed academic.

We were in the middle of the beginning of the revolution. What I didn't know then, but became abundantly clear over the the next 40 years was that this was the wrong revolution. This was a fascist revolution, and the bastards won.

Hope springs eternal: maybe we can try again in 2008. Maybe it's not the progressive revolution we really need, maybe the Puppet Masters are allowing us a slight swing to the left. Maybe we really are living in a Fascist Matrix.

Keep your running shoes on.


Here is a picture taken of the speakers on stage just as the cops were rioting.

Click here

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» RE: I haven't seen the movie yet... Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE: I haven't seen the movie yet... Posted by: s.duplantier