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Riots and Rebellion in America
          The 1960s




              Playwright LeRoi Jones arrested in Newark for possessing two
  1 Riots and loaded pistols – mid-July 1967
              Rebellion in America | The 1960s
View the Video



Text and Image source: http://www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/03_The-World-since-1900/11_The-Bewildering-60s/11c_Johnson%27s-
%27Great-Society%27-2.htm




                                   “The Revolution of Rising Expectations”

Things seemed to be getting just as confusing at home as well. Despite quite visible progress in
getting a cultural shift moving in America that would finally make way for Blacks to come into full and
equal participation in American society – it was never fast enough for young Blacks that now began to
voice their deep hostility to the White society around them. And that hostility began to take the form
of attacks on White businesses in their neighborhoods, even pillaging and burning them in
demonstration of the outrage that was growing in their hearts against White injustice.

Idealistic or Liberal Whites could not understand this strange response of the Blacks to White efforts at
reform. They probably had never heard of "the revolution of rising expectations." They did not
understand that people long compliant to oppressive authority do not just automatically rise up to
throw off their chains just because the oppression is great. Marx thought this is how the noble human
spirit would automatically and inevitably produce the great revolution that would one day usher in the
class-less, state-less, totally egalitarian, totally voluntary society (voluntary with respect to a person’s
willingness to work hard for the common good). As oppression worsened people would begin to move
automatically to move toward revolution, even violent revolution. A nice, humanistic idea.


      2 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
But things just do not work out that way. People actually are quite able to accommodate themselves
to their chains. This is not a very noble picture of human nature. But it is an accurate picture. Action
moving people to change things does not happen until the people begin to have reason to begin to
believe that change is possible. They will not throw off the way they have learned to live with
oppression – until they are fairly confident that change, that some kind of release from the oppression,
is possible. And once they see the system bending or cracking, then they begin to become more bold
in their push for change. As the oppressing system begins to back down then they become irate and
indignant at the injustice of the way things were. Once they finally see that things are moving in their
favor then they become bold – defiant, even heroic in that defiance. But not until then. But this is
how “the revolution of rising expectations” actually works.

Thus the more that the White society began to accommodate Black interests, those interests began to
gather momentum, until they became truly a storm of passion. It was not because just at that point
that oppression was just starting to get severe, but because at that point the severity of it seemed to
be lightening. Then all the impatience at the slowness of the momentum began to set in. Then the
anger mounted, then the violence picked up. This was the phenomenon the Whites were observing –
rising Black militancy in response to the White’s honest interest in seeing an improvement in the Black
situation.

                                    Liberal Idealism and White guilt

But the Whites had no idea of why the more they tried to improve things, the more indignant and
resentful the Blacks became. It was just human nature. But American Idealists had (and still have)
very little accurate insight into human nature. They had made man into a rational, loving man-God.
But this man-God was behaving neither rationally nor lovingly in the American streets as the 1960s
rolled along.

The White effort to make sense of their Idealistic universe gradually took the form of either a rising
self-hatred and the deep need to apologize for their ancestors having left such a horrible legacy of
racism (the typical response of the Boomers) – or a rising bitterness about Blacks’ inability to maintain
a decent sense of law and order among themselves (the typical response of the Vets). Political lines
were beginning to be drawn up as the situation in America worsened. Inner cities began to burn to the
refrain of "Burn Baby, Burn" and police sirens answering back in refrain as 'Black Power' advocates
were carted off to jail, either as self-sacrificing heroes or mere criminals, depending on which side of
the ideological divide you found yourself on.




     3 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
Malcolm X, 1925-1965.
                                          Bob Adelman
                                   Jennings and Brewster, p. 404




4 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
Malcolm X
                                                UPI
                                      Athearn [Vol. 16] p. E585




  Blacks demonstrate their new freedoms by torching the world around them
               (what exactly was the logic in this behavior?)




5 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
Rioting and arson in Watts - 1965
                 (less than a week after the passing of the Voting Rights Act)
                                     Co Rentmeester / LIFE
                                          LIFE, p. 296




6 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
Black looters in the Watts section of Los Angeles – August 1965
                                      Joe Flowers - Black Star
                           The Vietnam Experience: A Nation Divided, p. 65




7 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
Detroit – 1965: Black summertime rioting and pillaging.
                                      Dennis Brack/Black Star
                                   Jennings and Brewster, p. 403




8 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.; President Lyndon Johnson in background
 (the breakdown of social order was not at all what either of them expected or
              wanted the civil rights movement to develop into)
                        By Yoichi Okamoto, Washington, DC, March 18, 1966
                         Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, National Archives


9 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
Blacks lining up for the vote in rural Peachtree, Alabama – May 3, 1966
                                        Corbis / Bettman-UPI
                                            LIFE, p. 252




     For many young Blacks, 1967 was yet another summer for looting and
                                     burning
              (giving rise to the new mantra: "Burn baby, burn")




10 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
Looters in Newark's riots – mid-July 1967
                                              UPI
                           Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, p. 57




11 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
National Guardsmen and police arresting looters in Newark's riots – mid-July
                                   1967
                                              UPI
                           Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, p. 52



12 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
A boy wounded in the Newark riots - 1967
                                      (26 died)
                                           Bud Lee / LIFE
                                            LIFE, p. 303


13 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
Playwright LeRoi Jones arrested in Newark for possessing two loaded pistols
                             – mid-July 1967
                                              UPI
                           Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, p. 59



14 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
The arrest of a Black cab driver in Newark, NJ, set off a rampage by Blacks. Firebombs
 and looting degenerated into sniper shooting. A curfew was imposed on the city, which
 slowly restored order. But 11 people had been killed, 600 wounded or injured and whole
 sections of the city were completely gutted by fire.

 When several days later a pre-scheduled National Unity Conference was held in the city,
 the language was one not of unity but of declared war. Black-power advocate H. Rap
 Brown urged the gathering to "wage guerrilla war on the white man." Los Angeles Black
 Nationalist Ron Karenga stated "Everybody knows Whitey's a devil. The question is what
 to do about it." Moderate Black leaders such as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Roy
 Wilkins , Whitney Young, Jr. avoided the conference.

 In late July, violence broke out in Detroit. Learning from Newark, Detroit mayor
 Cavanagh immediately called in the National Guardsmen. But seven thousand
 Guardsmen, complete with tanks and armored cars, could not restore order. Governor
 George Romney (who was understood to be a potential Republican candidate for the
 Presidential election in 1968) contacted President Johnson for assistance. Johnson held
 back until Romney confessed before the public that he had lost control of the situation.
 Then Johnson sent in US paratroopers to retake the city house-by-house, block-by-block -
 - similar to a Vietnam military action. When a week later the troops had brought Detroit
 back to order, 33 people had been killed and over a thousand injured.




15 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
Blacks rioting in Detroit – July 1967
                                         The Detroit News
                                      Athearn [Vol. 16] p. 1411




16 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
Black district in Detroit set afire – July1967
                        Declan Haun, Life Magazine, 1967 Time Warner, Inc.
                                     Peck and Deyle, p. 698.




17 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
One of the many burned-out sections of Detroit – late-July 1967
                                              UPI
                           Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, p. 58




18 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
A burned out Black middle class section of Detroit - 1967
                                (43 people died)
                                        Declan Haun / LIFE




19 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
National Guardsmen in Detroit – July 23, 1967
                                          Corbis-Bettmann
                                           Evans, p. 547




20 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
A National Guardsman standing watch in Detroit as firemen battle blazes set
                        by rioters – late-July 1967
                                              UPI
                           Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, p. 58




21 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
Meanwhile the violence spread to New York City where a 28,000-man police with
 experience in riot control restored order to East Harlem after three nights of violence.
 Two people were killed.

 H. Rap Brown had in the meantime moved on to Cambridge, MD, and following a Black-
 power rally there, the town was subjected to looting and arson. Brown was arrested for
 inciting a riot. As he was led away by FBI agents, Brown challenged: "We'll burn the
 country down."




22 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
H. Rap Brown arrested for inciting the Cambridge, MD riot – late-July 1967
                                              UPI
                           Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, p. 57



23 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
Black Panthers in a defiant mood
                                         Hap Stewart/Bethel
                                      Time - 75 Years, p. 92-93
                                      Athearn [Vol. 16] p. 1399




24 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
SNCC leader Stokely Carmichael at a University of Texas gathering,
                        denouncing US imperialism
                                          Wide World
                           Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, p. 56




 The White community began to divide over the Civil Rights issue -- some Whites
 demanding a strict clamp-down on Black defiance, others urging reforms to meet Black
 complaints. Johnson appointed a study commission to investigate the root causes of the
 violence. What it announced in its preliminary report in late February of 1968 was a
 situation of high expectations among the Blacks for social reform -- met with little
 practical chance that such improvements would actually come about. This is what was
 producing the mood of angry despair among poor Blacks. The inner cities abandoned by



25 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
White flight to the suburbs left Blacks who had migrated to the northern cities with no
 jobs and a rapidly deteriorating urban infrastructure. Educational levels were very low --
 with poor schools able to provide no remedies. It quickly became the assumption within
 Johnson's 'Great Society' government that huge amounts of governmental money were
 going to have to be poured into the inner-cities where Blacks had congregated to correct
 these problems of jobs, schooling and housing.

 In the meantime everyone looked on wondering what the summer of 1968 would hold for
 America in terms of race relations.

                         [Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, pp. 53-55]




 Although this problem did not present itself in as dramatic a form as other events of the
 times, nonetheless a huge financial problem was brewing, one that threatened the health
 of the government and the nation. By 1967 the amount of government spending involved
 in both Johnson’s Great Society and his heavy military investment in Vietnam was way
 outpacing the government’s income from all of its tax sources. A huge deficit or
 government debt began to build up as a result. In that year a Commission on Budget
 Concepts studied the problem and concluded that a proposed 1968 national budget was
 going to entail a (what was then huge) deficit of anywhere from $2 to $8 billion in size.

 Creating the ‘unified’ budget.’ Using the justification of ‘rationalizing’ the entire
 national or ‘federal’ government budgeting process – including the Social Security budget,
 which at that time was largely self-running and not considered part of the national budget
 (or 'off-budget') – the Commission recommended integrating the Social Security budget
 with the regular operating budget of the federal government. At that time the Social
 Security program, originally focused on retirement or pension benefits of Americans but in
 1965 adding also Medicare (health insurance for the elderly) and Medicaid (health care for
 the poor, shared as a joint expense with the States), was running a huge surplus – taking
 in each year in the form of Social Security tax revenue more than it was spending for its
 various programs. By combining the deficit-running federal budget with the surplus-
 running Social Security budget, the government’s budget deficit run up by Johnson’s
 programs could be recast as now greatly ‘reduced,’ or even be shown as running a
 ‘surplus.’

 Thus in January 1968 Johnson introduced the new unified budget. Even with the inclusion
 of the Social Security surplus with the regular federal budget Johnson admitted that the
 new unified budget would still be running up a $8 billion deficit (the government’s
 expenditures were turning out to be vastly greater than anticipated in 1967). But the
 figure was a lot lower than it would have been without adding in the Social Security
 surplus.




26 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s

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Riots and Rebellion in America |The 1960s

  • 1. Riots and Rebellion in America The 1960s Playwright LeRoi Jones arrested in Newark for possessing two 1 Riots and loaded pistols – mid-July 1967 Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 2. View the Video Text and Image source: http://www.kingsacademy.com/mhodges/03_The-World-since-1900/11_The-Bewildering-60s/11c_Johnson%27s- %27Great-Society%27-2.htm “The Revolution of Rising Expectations” Things seemed to be getting just as confusing at home as well. Despite quite visible progress in getting a cultural shift moving in America that would finally make way for Blacks to come into full and equal participation in American society – it was never fast enough for young Blacks that now began to voice their deep hostility to the White society around them. And that hostility began to take the form of attacks on White businesses in their neighborhoods, even pillaging and burning them in demonstration of the outrage that was growing in their hearts against White injustice. Idealistic or Liberal Whites could not understand this strange response of the Blacks to White efforts at reform. They probably had never heard of "the revolution of rising expectations." They did not understand that people long compliant to oppressive authority do not just automatically rise up to throw off their chains just because the oppression is great. Marx thought this is how the noble human spirit would automatically and inevitably produce the great revolution that would one day usher in the class-less, state-less, totally egalitarian, totally voluntary society (voluntary with respect to a person’s willingness to work hard for the common good). As oppression worsened people would begin to move automatically to move toward revolution, even violent revolution. A nice, humanistic idea. 2 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 3. But things just do not work out that way. People actually are quite able to accommodate themselves to their chains. This is not a very noble picture of human nature. But it is an accurate picture. Action moving people to change things does not happen until the people begin to have reason to begin to believe that change is possible. They will not throw off the way they have learned to live with oppression – until they are fairly confident that change, that some kind of release from the oppression, is possible. And once they see the system bending or cracking, then they begin to become more bold in their push for change. As the oppressing system begins to back down then they become irate and indignant at the injustice of the way things were. Once they finally see that things are moving in their favor then they become bold – defiant, even heroic in that defiance. But not until then. But this is how “the revolution of rising expectations” actually works. Thus the more that the White society began to accommodate Black interests, those interests began to gather momentum, until they became truly a storm of passion. It was not because just at that point that oppression was just starting to get severe, but because at that point the severity of it seemed to be lightening. Then all the impatience at the slowness of the momentum began to set in. Then the anger mounted, then the violence picked up. This was the phenomenon the Whites were observing – rising Black militancy in response to the White’s honest interest in seeing an improvement in the Black situation. Liberal Idealism and White guilt But the Whites had no idea of why the more they tried to improve things, the more indignant and resentful the Blacks became. It was just human nature. But American Idealists had (and still have) very little accurate insight into human nature. They had made man into a rational, loving man-God. But this man-God was behaving neither rationally nor lovingly in the American streets as the 1960s rolled along. The White effort to make sense of their Idealistic universe gradually took the form of either a rising self-hatred and the deep need to apologize for their ancestors having left such a horrible legacy of racism (the typical response of the Boomers) – or a rising bitterness about Blacks’ inability to maintain a decent sense of law and order among themselves (the typical response of the Vets). Political lines were beginning to be drawn up as the situation in America worsened. Inner cities began to burn to the refrain of "Burn Baby, Burn" and police sirens answering back in refrain as 'Black Power' advocates were carted off to jail, either as self-sacrificing heroes or mere criminals, depending on which side of the ideological divide you found yourself on. 3 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 4. Malcolm X, 1925-1965. Bob Adelman Jennings and Brewster, p. 404 4 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 5. Malcolm X UPI Athearn [Vol. 16] p. E585 Blacks demonstrate their new freedoms by torching the world around them (what exactly was the logic in this behavior?) 5 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 6. Rioting and arson in Watts - 1965 (less than a week after the passing of the Voting Rights Act) Co Rentmeester / LIFE LIFE, p. 296 6 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 7. Black looters in the Watts section of Los Angeles – August 1965 Joe Flowers - Black Star The Vietnam Experience: A Nation Divided, p. 65 7 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 8. Detroit – 1965: Black summertime rioting and pillaging. Dennis Brack/Black Star Jennings and Brewster, p. 403 8 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 9. Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.; President Lyndon Johnson in background (the breakdown of social order was not at all what either of them expected or wanted the civil rights movement to develop into) By Yoichi Okamoto, Washington, DC, March 18, 1966 Lyndon Baines Johnson Library, National Archives 9 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 10. Blacks lining up for the vote in rural Peachtree, Alabama – May 3, 1966 Corbis / Bettman-UPI LIFE, p. 252 For many young Blacks, 1967 was yet another summer for looting and burning (giving rise to the new mantra: "Burn baby, burn") 10 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 11. Looters in Newark's riots – mid-July 1967 UPI Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, p. 57 11 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 12. National Guardsmen and police arresting looters in Newark's riots – mid-July 1967 UPI Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, p. 52 12 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 13. A boy wounded in the Newark riots - 1967 (26 died) Bud Lee / LIFE LIFE, p. 303 13 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 14. Playwright LeRoi Jones arrested in Newark for possessing two loaded pistols – mid-July 1967 UPI Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, p. 59 14 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 15. The arrest of a Black cab driver in Newark, NJ, set off a rampage by Blacks. Firebombs and looting degenerated into sniper shooting. A curfew was imposed on the city, which slowly restored order. But 11 people had been killed, 600 wounded or injured and whole sections of the city were completely gutted by fire. When several days later a pre-scheduled National Unity Conference was held in the city, the language was one not of unity but of declared war. Black-power advocate H. Rap Brown urged the gathering to "wage guerrilla war on the white man." Los Angeles Black Nationalist Ron Karenga stated "Everybody knows Whitey's a devil. The question is what to do about it." Moderate Black leaders such as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Roy Wilkins , Whitney Young, Jr. avoided the conference. In late July, violence broke out in Detroit. Learning from Newark, Detroit mayor Cavanagh immediately called in the National Guardsmen. But seven thousand Guardsmen, complete with tanks and armored cars, could not restore order. Governor George Romney (who was understood to be a potential Republican candidate for the Presidential election in 1968) contacted President Johnson for assistance. Johnson held back until Romney confessed before the public that he had lost control of the situation. Then Johnson sent in US paratroopers to retake the city house-by-house, block-by-block - - similar to a Vietnam military action. When a week later the troops had brought Detroit back to order, 33 people had been killed and over a thousand injured. 15 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 16. Blacks rioting in Detroit – July 1967 The Detroit News Athearn [Vol. 16] p. 1411 16 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 17. Black district in Detroit set afire – July1967 Declan Haun, Life Magazine, 1967 Time Warner, Inc. Peck and Deyle, p. 698. 17 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 18. One of the many burned-out sections of Detroit – late-July 1967 UPI Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, p. 58 18 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 19. A burned out Black middle class section of Detroit - 1967 (43 people died) Declan Haun / LIFE 19 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 20. National Guardsmen in Detroit – July 23, 1967 Corbis-Bettmann Evans, p. 547 20 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 21. A National Guardsman standing watch in Detroit as firemen battle blazes set by rioters – late-July 1967 UPI Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, p. 58 21 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 22. Meanwhile the violence spread to New York City where a 28,000-man police with experience in riot control restored order to East Harlem after three nights of violence. Two people were killed. H. Rap Brown had in the meantime moved on to Cambridge, MD, and following a Black- power rally there, the town was subjected to looting and arson. Brown was arrested for inciting a riot. As he was led away by FBI agents, Brown challenged: "We'll burn the country down." 22 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 23. H. Rap Brown arrested for inciting the Cambridge, MD riot – late-July 1967 UPI Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, p. 57 23 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 24. Black Panthers in a defiant mood Hap Stewart/Bethel Time - 75 Years, p. 92-93 Athearn [Vol. 16] p. 1399 24 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 25. SNCC leader Stokely Carmichael at a University of Texas gathering, denouncing US imperialism Wide World Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, p. 56 The White community began to divide over the Civil Rights issue -- some Whites demanding a strict clamp-down on Black defiance, others urging reforms to meet Black complaints. Johnson appointed a study commission to investigate the root causes of the violence. What it announced in its preliminary report in late February of 1968 was a situation of high expectations among the Blacks for social reform -- met with little practical chance that such improvements would actually come about. This is what was producing the mood of angry despair among poor Blacks. The inner cities abandoned by 25 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s
  • 26. White flight to the suburbs left Blacks who had migrated to the northern cities with no jobs and a rapidly deteriorating urban infrastructure. Educational levels were very low -- with poor schools able to provide no remedies. It quickly became the assumption within Johnson's 'Great Society' government that huge amounts of governmental money were going to have to be poured into the inner-cities where Blacks had congregated to correct these problems of jobs, schooling and housing. In the meantime everyone looked on wondering what the summer of 1968 would hold for America in terms of race relations. [Grauer, NBC News Picture Book of 1968, pp. 53-55] Although this problem did not present itself in as dramatic a form as other events of the times, nonetheless a huge financial problem was brewing, one that threatened the health of the government and the nation. By 1967 the amount of government spending involved in both Johnson’s Great Society and his heavy military investment in Vietnam was way outpacing the government’s income from all of its tax sources. A huge deficit or government debt began to build up as a result. In that year a Commission on Budget Concepts studied the problem and concluded that a proposed 1968 national budget was going to entail a (what was then huge) deficit of anywhere from $2 to $8 billion in size. Creating the ‘unified’ budget.’ Using the justification of ‘rationalizing’ the entire national or ‘federal’ government budgeting process – including the Social Security budget, which at that time was largely self-running and not considered part of the national budget (or 'off-budget') – the Commission recommended integrating the Social Security budget with the regular operating budget of the federal government. At that time the Social Security program, originally focused on retirement or pension benefits of Americans but in 1965 adding also Medicare (health insurance for the elderly) and Medicaid (health care for the poor, shared as a joint expense with the States), was running a huge surplus – taking in each year in the form of Social Security tax revenue more than it was spending for its various programs. By combining the deficit-running federal budget with the surplus- running Social Security budget, the government’s budget deficit run up by Johnson’s programs could be recast as now greatly ‘reduced,’ or even be shown as running a ‘surplus.’ Thus in January 1968 Johnson introduced the new unified budget. Even with the inclusion of the Social Security surplus with the regular federal budget Johnson admitted that the new unified budget would still be running up a $8 billion deficit (the government’s expenditures were turning out to be vastly greater than anticipated in 1967). But the figure was a lot lower than it would have been without adding in the Social Security surplus. 26 Riots and Rebellion in America | The 1960s