What I learned today about demonstrations in Britain during the Sixties:
There were three protests held at Grosvenor Square in '67 and '68. During the last one, protesters broke into the American Embassy. One of the men who was behind the protests, Ali Jordan, said he wanted the Embassy occupied “for just as long as the Vietcong held the American Embassy in Saigon.”
Although the people involved were more interested in having a "weekend revolution" than in peace, these protests were considerably more tame than in other parts of Europe.
In June of 1968 the London School of Economics and the BBC hosted an international debate called "Students in Revolt." Several of the speakers were stopped by immigration, but were ultimately allowed to enter the country.
There is a Pinky and the Brain episode in which the Brain uses a circle of hippies as some sort of transmitter, maybe for a radio signal. Anyway, he reveals that his plan has worked because all hippies have braces. They have rich parents.
It is kind of funny to think about all these college kids discussing Marx at the pub and trying to change the world with their idealism and half-formed philosophies. Not that different from what college kids do now, actually. Well, with more debates and less breaking into Embassies.
BIG CHANGES AFOOT.
10 years ago
3 comments:
I love that you worked Pinky and the Brain into your column today. Brilliant!
Thanks Rachel! I used to watch Pinky and the Brain before school every day. Very educational. ;)
Last time we were in London, with your Grandma Mary, we stayed at the Marriott Grosvenor Square, across from the US Embassy. A beautiful park with a great statue of FDR.
Could have done without the 10 ft chain link fence and machine gun toting guards at the embassy.
Great part of town.
Close to Hyde Park where you can hear (or give -- hint) interesting soap box "talks" on Speakers Corner Sunday afternoons.
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