Not a diary.
I just saw a superb documentary produced by Wisconsin Educational Television back in 1979 called "The War at Home." It tracks the anti-Vietnam War movement in Madison, Wisconsin from 1963 (Yes, that was the first protest) through the Army Math Building bombing. Since it was done in 1979, the interviews with the participants take place when the events are relatively fresh in their minds.
An extraordinary amount of archive film was collected and used, including:
1) students shouting down Teddy Kennedy as he attempted to defend the Johnson Administration's conduct of the war;
2) the Madison police riot in response to the shutdown of Dow Chemical's recruiting on campus;
3) the Cambodian invasion/Kent State mass demonstrations.
There is a serious exploration of the most challenging questions of people's movements: the role of electoral politics (McCarthy campaign); militant confrontation; alliances across racial and gender groups; and the appropriateness of violence.
The film itself is part of that post-Watergate flowering of America when, for a brief, shining moment, we looked with open eyes at the truth about our country.
It's on Netflix. I cannot find it on Youtube. But it's worth seeking out, especially if you're from Wisconsin.
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