THE EVE OF
DESTRUCTRION: HOW 1965 TRANSFORMED AMERICA
By James T Patterson,
Winner of the Bancroft Prize (New York: Basic Books…,2012)
Rev. by Hugh Murray
What’s
wrong with history today? This book
provides an illustration of the narrowness and distortions of establishment
history. The blurbs on the book jacket
from well-known historians, supplemented by much praise written by yet more
prominent historians on amazon indicated that this book is regarded in high
esteem by scholars. That the author is a
recipient of the prestigious Bancroft Prize, and a Ford Foundation Professor
Emeritus only adds to the luster. One
naturally concludes that this book is excellent history.
But it is not! It is not good history because of what it omits. Because it is well-written, including cultural features on music, television programs, films, theater, and popular books, the major omission may go unnoticed. In reality, this is sleight-of-hand history. Before discussion the omission, the elephant in the room, let me discuss what the book contains.
But it is not! It is not good history because of what it omits. Because it is well-written, including cultural features on music, television programs, films, theater, and popular books, the major omission may go unnoticed. In reality, this is sleight-of-hand history. Before discussion the omission, the elephant in the room, let me discuss what the book contains.
1965 was
pivotal because President Lyndon Johnson had won an overwhelming victory the
previous November over conservative Republican Barry Goldwater. The Democrats substantially increased their
majorities in both the US Senate and the House of Representatives. Johnson, aware that political power might
slip slowly away, was determined to push his agenda through Congress as quickly
as possible. Furthermore, he hoped to
outdo his idol, Franklin Roosevelt, in enacting progressive legislation. Johnson also sought to build on the momentum
following passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, extending government to
guarantee equal opportunity and social justice.
He was extremely successful cajoling Congress to pass new laws that
would effect the lives of millions of Americans. In 1965 these included the Elementary and
Secondary Education Act (April), the Medicare/Medicaid Act (July), the Voting
Rights Act (Aug.), the Clean Air/Water Act (fall), Highway Beautification Act –
“Lady Bird Bill” – (Oct.), the Immigration Act of 1965 (Oct.), that
establishing the National Endowmen of the Arts, and the National Endowment of
the Humanities, and the creation of a new Cabinet post of the Secretary of
Housing and Urban Development. Patterson
has a point when he writes “The high-water mark for postwar liberalism had
crested in early August [1965], never to rise again during Johnson’s presidency.”(p.
201)
Patterson
might have aided his readers by including a short chronology of the major
legislation enacted during Johnson’s time in office.
Patterson
concentrates some of the pivotal year into the pivotal months of late summer
1965: passage of the Voting Rights Act followed a few days later by the rioting
in the Watts section of Los Angeles – burning, looting, and killing which
lasted nearly a week. By late 1965
Johnson faced more problems about implementing the War on Poverty and also the
Civil Rights Act of 1964. Jurisdictional
disputes erupted between mayors and other local elected officials on one side
and “community organizers” on the other, both seeking to capture control of newly
established boards that were to direct and disperse the federal funds to end
poverty. Yet, as government expanded,
such disputes might have been considered inevitable. Meanwhile, the newly established Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission was unsure how to handle the many complaints
of racial discrimination connected to the Civil Rights Act. Moreover, the EEOC displayed no interest in
acknowledging discrimination against women, even though women were specifically
mentioned in the legislation.
Patterson
includes a chapter “A Credibility Gap,” as Lyndon decided not to “lose” South
Vietnam to the Communists. His advisors
promised not victory, but sought to maintain the stability of the Saigon
government by increasing ever more the number of American military
“advisors.” Johnson reiterated his
determination to defend freedom in SE Asia, but did little to warn Americans of
the escalation in the number of troops and in their growing role beyond
advising into direct military combat.
With America’s larger role, there were larger numbers of casualties.
Patterson
reminds the reader of the highly successful American intervention in 1965 in
the Dominican Republic, quickly overthrowing a Leftist government. Though American troops remained until a new
election was held the following year, the operation was the type most Americans
hoped for in Asia. A Gallup poll of May
1965 reported, Americans supported LBJ’s Dominican intervention by a wide
margin – 76% to 17%.
In Vietnam
most Americans also supported LBJ’s actions.
Patterson’s statement below seems inaccurate: “…:the [Vietnam] war was
rousing popular alarm…Moreover, the credibility gap Johnson had opened in the
spring [of 1965] remained wide. Though
polls continued to show substantial support for the president’s policies, they
did not measure the extent of popular unease that had been growing over the
course of the fall.”(233) Patterson
quotes Gallup for Oct/Nov 1965 that Americans favored military involvement in
SE Asia by a margin of 62% to 21% and 62% also approved of the way Johnson was
conducting the war.(226) This approval
occurred when the numbers of American troops in Vietnam was rising from 23,000
to 184,000. There were no polls I know of on “unease,” but
Patterson states that by July 1966 only 33% believed Johnson was conducting the
war properly. Yet, that does not mean
that 2/3s of Americans were against the war, only against LBJ’s conduct of that
war. Alabama’s fiery Gov. George Wallace
would be running for President in 1968 with Gen. Curtis LeMay, a leading
military figure as his running mate, demanding more pounding of the
Communists. Even in 1966 a song topped
the charts for 5 weeks, the “Ballad of the Green Berets,” which many heard and
hummed as a support-the-war song.
Lyndon led
the US Government to expand dramatically in his term in office. Patterson maintains the crucial issues in the
transforming year of 1965 were the Watts riots and Vietnam escalation. Before that year, America was basically an
extension of the 1950s. After 1965, we
entered what was to become the image of the angry 1960s.
Why am I so
critical of this book? Patterson writes,
“Meanwhile, at a the Matrix nightclub in San Francisco, a new group, Jefferson
Airplane, received local notice. Though
they were far from headliners at that time, later in the decade they would
become famous…”(193)
In early
1964 attorney Mark Lane published an article in the Progressive National Guardian questioning the view
that Lee Harvey Oswald was the assassin of President John Kennedy in Dallas the
previous November. He would represent
the mother of Oswald, and attempt to defend the slain accused in hearings
before the Warren Commission. Like the
Jefferson Airplane, Lane was not a major headliner in 1965, but he was
preparing the groundwork. In 1966 when
his book on the assassination, Rush to
Judgment, was released, it was on the New
York Times best seller list of some five months. In time, 2/3s of the American people would question
the official version that a lone nut, Oswald, had alone killed Kennedy. This is where the credibility gap was
greatest. If you could not believe the
government about Dallas where there were numerous witnesses and people taking
pictures, how could you believe the government about the incident in the Gulf
of Tonkin, or anything else on the other side of the world?
It is the
assassination of Kennedy, and the unease with the official story, the magic
bullet theory proposed by attorney Arlen Spector, and the many other strange
incidents that excavated the credibility gap.
LBJ, the great giver, the leader of the War on Poverty, becomes the
great villain of the play MacBird, a MacBethian version of the killing of
Kennedy. By the time New Orleans
District Attorney Jim Garrison launched his investigation of a conspiracy, and
indicted businessman Clay Shaw for involvement with the murder, it was obvious
that the Federal Government was doing everything possible to sabotage the
prosecution. The national media joined
in the anti-Garrisonian chorus.
Garrison
lost the case, but many of the jurors acknowledged that they believed there was
a conspiracy – though they thought there was insufficient evidence to convict
Shaw. At the trial I recall a doctor
involved in the autopsy, Dr. Pierre Finck, who when asked about probing the
path of the bullet from Kennedy’s back to the exit in the throat (others
believed that the throat wound was an entrance wound, so the bullet could not
have come from the Texas Depository), the doctor declared he did not probe the
path. Why? He was ordered not to do so. Who ordered you not to perform this
task? I do not know, for there were many
generals and admirals present. They were
my superiors and I had to follow orders.
And such was the autopsy performed on President Kennedy! And there are still many questions about the
case, and still the government has not released all materials related to this
murder in Dallas some 50 years ago.
My point is
that no issue caused greater unease with government, no issue caused a wider
credibility gap, than the government’s handling of the murder of Kennedy. If Patterson could mention Jefferson
Airplane, he certainly should have mentioned the disputes about the Warren
Commission, Mark Lane, whether Oswald was a government operative, etc. Yet, nowhere in this book is there mention in
the text of Mark Lane or Lee Oswald or the controversy concerning the Warren
Report.
Let me give
one tidbit of information. In October
1963 in New Orleans there was a raid by the Louisiana Un-American Activities Committee
on the offices of the Southern Conference Education Fund, its leader James
Dombrowski, and two attorneys associated with SCEF, which was an organization
promoting integration. Agents appeared
at the home of attorney Ben Smith and used an axe to knock down the front
door. It was not easy to be an
integrationist in New Orleans at the time.
Yet, in the summer of 1963, Lee Oswald, who had defected to the USSR,
returns to New Orleans, and broadcasts on the radio on behalf of
“socialism.” He was arrested for handing
out pro-Castro leaflets, but quickly released, after an interview with the
FBI. And he was seen producing the pro-Castro
leaflets in the office of former FBI man, former acting Superintendent of the
New Orleans Police, Guy Banister.
Indeed, some of the leaflets contained an address so had anyone mailed
to the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, it would probably have ended up in the
office of the vehemently anti-Castro, anti-Communist Banister. Many in New Orleans, knowing more of the
backgrounds, found the official version too implausible. So did many, yea, most Americans.
Some
maintain that newspapers provide the first draft of history. Reading Patterson’s book is something like
browsing through 1965 volumes of Time
and Newsweek magazines. Unfortunately, the book seems more superficial than some of the articles that appeared in those magazines. Yet, Patterson utterly ignores the Kennedy
controversy. And the prominent
historians praise this book! I think the
“proper” historians will not admit that on some issues, the first draft of the
real history was written not in the New
York Times but in the National
Enquirer ! Most intriguingly, some
of the names mentioned in the who-killed-Kennedy literature would later
resurface as names who were involved in the Watergate break in.
There is a
line of distrust in government that begins with Mark Lane and the conspiracy
theory crowd, which continues into the Watergate cover-ups, and onto additional
investigations of the Kennedy assassination in the 1970s, including the Senate
probe that concluded that there probably was a conspiracy that killed Kennedy.
Even if
Patterson personally believes every word of the Warren Commission report that
Lee Oswald was a nut who alone shot President Kennedy from the Texas School
Depository Building, even if Patterson believes everyone who questioned that government
document was a charlatan, a publicity seeker, and a con artist, still Patterson
should have included material about the skeptics of the Warren Report. These skeptics made the credibility gap wider
thatn the Gulf of Tonkin. And their
skepticism would go beyond that jeer-leading “Hey Hey, LBJ, How many kids did you kill today?” to a far deeper
fear that elements in the American government were sinister and dangerous. And the skeptics would push the Congress to
have another inquiry into the assassination, one that came to a different
conclusion from the Warren crowd.
Patterson
writes of the growing credibility gap on Vietnam; but never mentions the even
larger credibility gap on Dallas. They
were intertwined. I suspect the skepticism
on Kennedy was even more important.
However, there is no doubt both were important to the history of the
US. By ignoring the Dallas deniers,
Patterson distorts history. In deleting
Dallas, Patterson may have written a more comfortable, comforting liberal
history. He also wrote a distorted
history.
It is
hardly a secret that most people teaching at university are liberal and believe
in the good works that government can do.
They do not want to believe in the possible sinister side that a
democratic government might engage in, especially a government that proclaims
itself liberal and seeks social justice.
So delete the dark clouds and present the sunshine. I suspect that is why Patterson’s book has won
such praise. It may be deserved praise
by liberals. But it is not deserved for
this work as history.
Even if Patterson believes every
word of the Warren Commission Report to be true, he should have discussed the extremely
important brewing controversy over the topic of Kennedy’s murder. Omitting it, Patterson distorted history.
The
elephant in the room is the dead President in Dallas, Mark Lane, and questions about the Warren Report.
LBJ is not
the only one with a credibility gap! Some historians have a credibility gap too.
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