David Gergen, the genial centrist wiseman whose has served as high counsellor to presidents of both parties, argued on CNN on Monday night that the recent surge of anti-Trump protests was disruptive than the political protests of the 1960s and 1970s. “It is extraordinarily divisive,” Gergen said. The anti-war movement in Vietnam, the civil rights movement in the 1960s and early ’70s, both of those were more civil in tone. Even the anti-war movement was more civil in tone but certainly the civil rights movement among the people who were protesting.”
"The Anti-War movement in Vietnam ... The Civil Rights movement ... both of those were much more civil in tone": @David_Gergen on the 'uncivil discourse' of politics in 2018 compared to other historical divides https://t.co/7tlX0riUCG https://t.co/AWsCwQwRwG
— CNN Newsroom (@CNNnewsroom) June 25, 2018
Nor is Gergen alone in thinking this. Politico ran an article arguing that “In the Donald Trump era, the left is as aggressively confrontational as at any time in recent memory.”
These claims are so at odds with easily verifiable history that it’s hard to know what to do with them. Historians have taken to Twitter to document just how wrong it is to remember the 1960s and 1970s as a period of greater civility.
As Harvard University’s Stuart Schrader noted, between 1965 and 1970 there were 1,391 bombings, shootings and attacks in the United States, many of them outgrowths of the anti-war movement and civil rights struggle:
Since every historian on earth is currently refuting that guy on TV who said the movement against the Vietnam War was “civil,” allow me to join the party with this table, published in 1971: 1,391 bombings, shootings, or other attacks in 6 years. And the peak was yet to come. pic.twitter.com/9ojzVMBOgp
— Stuart Schrader (@stschrader1) June 26, 2018
Bombings were alarming common in the era:
This afternoon I went looking in the NYT archives for info on left-wing bombings in the US in the late sixties and early seventies. They were really common. Like multiple times a week for years in a row common.
— Angus Johnston (@studentactivism) June 26, 2018
Dynamite attack in a Harlem police station in November 68. "Firecracker" broke a window at another cop house the previous week. Explosives pulled from two different cop-car gas tanks in two different precincts in two days in December. pic.twitter.com/buPDQpf9ZS
— Angus Johnston (@studentactivism) June 26, 2018
In 1968, Secretary of State Dean Rusk was confronted by a crowd in San Francisco yelling “Dean Rusk: Wanted for Murder.”
You got heckled at a restaurant?
— Nicole Hemmer (@pastpunditry) June 26, 2018
Dean Rusk appeared in San Francisco and was greeted by 400 people chanting “Dean Rusk: Wanted for Murder.”
Then they hurled “rocks, eggs, and blood-filled balloons” at the hotel where he was speaking. pic.twitter.com/CP6mV7V20r
The re-writing of history to make current protests seem like outliers is based on a complete whitewashing not just of history but of memory. After all, David Gergen was born in 1942 so he was an adult all through the 1960s. But he’s chosen to willfully forget the period he lived through in order to bash contemporary protesters.