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Activism United States of America

October 1, 1964 – The Free Speech Movement kicks off in Berkeley

Sixty years ago, on this day, October 1st, 1964, the Free Speech Movement is launched on the campus of University of California, Berkeley.

The amount of carbon dioxide in the air was roughly 319ppm. As of 2024 it is 4xxppm, but check here for daily measures. 

The context was that the black civil rights movement was underway. The upsurge had been going on, especially since sort of ‘57, didn’t pause: the sit ins and SNCC. And white people had gone (in relatively small numbers) to the Deep South, to help with voter registration, and education, and so forth. And then these people had come back and wanted to continue campaigning on university campuses. And those in control of university campuses, especially University of California Berkeley, weren’t having any of it. And this confronted the activists with a dilemma. They were battle-hardened. They had been arrested and brutalised in the South. So what campus cops and so forth could dish out was not as big a deal as it had been. They’ve also been battle-hardened by the House UnAmerican Activities Committee and its roadshow, which by the way, had not come to California since 1960 because they’d been basically beaten out of town with their tail between their legs. But I’m digressing.

What we learn is that the histories and I think they’re right, suggest that the Free Speech Movement on Berkeley campus is that kind of bridge incident and bridge organisation between the black civil rights movement and what would come next. Of course, people involved didn’t know what would come next, but it would be anti-war, feminism, gay rights. And yes, also the environment, not to mention Indian rights, Puerto Rican rights, etc. And these bridge moments, you don’t know that you’re in them, probably.

What happened next, Mario Savio gave his “throw your body on the gears of the machine” speech. 

The issue became not just free speech on campus, and black civil rights, but also the war in Vietnam, which in a few months would pick up serious momentum with Operation Rolling Thunder. 

What do you think? Does this pass the ‘so what?’ threshold? Have I got facts wrong? Interpretation wrong? Please do comment on this post, unless you are a denialist, obvs.

Also on this day: 

October 1, 1957 – US Oil company ponders carbon dioxide build-up…

October 1, 1997 – Global greens gather in Melbourne, diss Australian #climate policy

2 replies on “October 1, 1964 – The Free Speech Movement kicks off in Berkeley”

I think this is not only a reasonable, correct assessment, I think it’s an important, timely one.

Activists involved on many different issues–including the environmental polycrisis, poverty, anti-racist, and Indigenous rights–have recently also become vocal on behalf of Palestinians. The reaction of universities has broadly been to call in police, to limit speech by treating it as if it were violence, and especially to intentionally limit speech by conflating justifiable expression that deserves protection (criticism of a state and its violence) with prohibited, bigoted speech (anti-semitism). Where I am (Canada) students have had their graduation threatened, they’ve been charged criminally, campus clubs have been de-certified, and student protestors have been libelled, all for objecting to a military campaign that can plausibly be argued to be a genocide according to the International Court of Justice.

This is revolting, especially since the arguments for it are so often disingenuous.

The battle over speech on campus, about the nature of the university, and about the relationship of the institution to its students, will presumably have to be fought again.

Thanks Cai!!

I wrote this post about a year ago (it’s a long process, this website) and so totally missed the very correct parallels you have drawn.

I hope you find other pages on the site useful. If you are looking for a great book about the Civil Rights Movement and its internal fissures etc, I would URGE you to track down “And We Are Not Saved” by an African American participant in it called Debbie Louis. She was, naturally, harassed by the FBI etc. Her work is absolutely top-notch, and has so much to teach us all.
(If you google, ignore the Kirkus Review take.). I wrote a bit about it here – https://peacenews.info/node/7682/defiant-ones

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