Note—I know I promised to wind up this series on my Vietnam era Draft, justice
system, and prison experiences with yesterday’s tenth post. Evidently, I lied. Actually, I left a few loose ends
dangling. This one ought to take care of
that.
In
my just completed series, I neglected to tell you how my sentence for Draft Resistance finally played
out. My bad.
When
my sentence was reduced from three years to six month minus good time, I was placed on supervised probation for the unserved
balance of the original sentence. That
meant I had to report to a Federal
probation officer once a month and was theoretically subject to random
visits to inspect my living quarters and arrangements. In point of fact the latter never happened.
But,
because I worked a day job at Dietzgen
Corporation, I was required one evening a month to schlep to the Loop and the nearly deserted Dirksen Federal Building to report to a
bored functionary in a cramped office. A
youngish man who acted half the time as if he was serving a sentence, he
suspected I that I was neither a
hardened criminal nor a threat to society.
After
the first visit where I had to fill out a lengthy form with my address, living
arrangements and partners, family address, job details and “three persons who
know of your whereabouts at all times,” most of each 10 to 15 minute visit was
consumed by confirming that all of that information remained correct and
questions about if I had been arrested
on any other charges.
Finally
I would be questioned about associating
with known felon, the offence that got more probation violation citations than any other. Most people who do Federal time have family,
friends, and live in neighborhoods rife with ex-cons and felons. It was almost impossible to violate probation
in this way. In my case, I was warned,
my continued association with known radicals
could put me at risk. And so it
could—at the IWW I co-edited the Industrial Worker with Carlos Cortez, a pacifist who had been a World
War II Draft resister—and worked regularly with my mentor Fred W. Thompson who was convicted and
served hard time for Criminal Syndicalism—essentially just
being a member of the IWW and selling newspapers on the streets—in California in the ‘20’s.
But
I quickly realized that my probation officer didn’t give a rat’s ass about any
of it unless I was actually busted for
something as long as he could put his rubber
stamp on my monthly report forms and get on to the next meaningless meeting
and interaction.
So
it went every month for over a year until one snowy and miserable night when I just skipped the appointment. And didn’t call or anything. After that, I never went back again.
I
was now in probation violation and
theoretically subject to arrest at any time.
But I did not get any notification of violation in the mail—a regular
procedure—and my probation officer never called me or attempted to find me by a
field visit to my residence. I was
hardly in hiding. My by-line appeared regularly in the Industrial Worker and my name popped up
occasionally in the daily papers in
connection with this or that demonstration,
picket line, or meeting.
My
best guess is that rather than being bothered with the extra work of an
investigation, my probation officer just went on stamping my monthly reports as
if nothing had happened. But I could
never be sure.
Most
people thought that Gerald Ford pardoned
Draft offenders as part of the political cover of “national healing” along with
his Get-out-of-jail-free-card to Richard Nixon who was in danger of
multiple felony indictments. He did
not. He offered conditional release to those who had fled to Canada, gone underground,
and military deserters. And those folks had to commit to two
years of community service. His offer did not extend to those who had
been charged, convicted, and/or served
time for Draft offences. That left
me out. And, by the way, few of those
eligible surrendered for two years servitude.
It
was not until Jimmy Carter’s first
day in office in 1977 that an actual blanket pardon of all Draft offenders was
issued. Presumably that did mean
me—unless a warrant had been issued on a separate probation violation charge. I never received any paperwork for the
pardon. Turned out no one did. You had to turn in more paperwork proving you
were convicted to get a pardon document from the Department of Justice. Sounded
like a hassle to me.
Any
way, if the Feds ever really wanted to find me, I wasn’t hiding. I was registered to vote and cast a ballot in
every single election—local, primary, and general—first in Chicago and later in Crystal Lake. After I moved
to bucolic McHenry County I even ran
for office three times—and was soundly drubbed each time. My name was frequently in the local
newspapers. I published a book of poetry. And eventually I became a blogger and a presence in social media. I never used a pseudonym or alias or in
any way tried to disguise my identity—or my past.
In
the mid 2000’s at the urgings of the American
Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), I even filed a Freedom of Information (FOI) request for my old FBI files.
You may remember them as that thick folder on the prosecution table that played a silent
but significant part in my trial. It took two years for the Feds to
respond.
When
they did answer back it was in a thin business
envelope, not the bulging manila
envelope I had envisioned. The FBI regretted
to inform me that my old file had somehow been destroyed. But with my
request they were glad to open a new one on me and send me the contents—my own
letter requesting my files with my own name and address redacted with a heavy black
marker. Ah, the Feds. Gotta luv ‘em.
I
do remember being mildly insulted that they didn’t think I was still dangerous
enough to be monitored despite a lot of anti-war
activity against the messes in Iraq and
Afghanistan and protests against the
Patriot Act. Guess they have me down as a harmless, eccentric
old crank and geezer.
That
takes care of one lose end.
The
second one involves a promise to a jerk.
I
regularly posted links to this blog series to a number of places on Facebook, on Twitter, and on Google Plus.
One such place and pleasant hangout is the Chicago Bughouse (Washington) Square
Facebook page. I got mostly positive
feedback and encouragement from friends there.
But I really ticked off one guy.
Big time. He started about mid-morning and his rage built all day. He was posting every ten minutes or so
calling me a coward and a traitor and daring me to try to explain
“what I was afraid of” and a bunch of other stuff. He would just not let it go. He only paused to snarl at other page commentators
who asked him to calm down and chill out.
Eventually, I wrote him that I would answer all of his questions in my
last post. And then I didn’t, because it
was getting long and I wanted to post bright and early yesterday as promised.
But today is a new day and an opportunity
to keep a promise to a troll.
What was I afraid of? Well, of being killed, among other
things. But I was not alone in
that. Every young man who was not
delusional was afraid of that back then whether they enlisted with patriotic fervor,
were drafted, “dodged” the Draft
in some way, or like me refused induction.
But I don’t think the very rational fear of being killed was a motivator
one way or another for most of us.
I was afraid of killing people with whom I had no argument and as far as I could
see were no immediate or direct threat
to my country. I was afraid of being
used as a pawn in what I had come to believe was an unjust and possibly criminal
war. I was afraid that the war was
turning the country that I genuinely loved into something brutal, ugly, and almost unrecognizable.
I was just one of thousands upon
thousands of young men who were compelled by the circumstances of the times to
do some moral heavy lifting,
something that most young men are manifestly unprepared to do. How could I respond and remain true to my
deepest convictions?
I looked for an out. I really did.
I considered conscientious objector
status. Some local Draft Boards handed CO status
out like penny candy. Others would not grant it unless you were
a life-long Quaker or baptized member
of an historic peace church. My Board in Skokie was somewhere in the middle.
They would generally grant status to anyone who could bring in a letter
of support from a clergyman of any denomination attesting that my
opposition to war was genuine and rooted in religious conviction. And in
fact I knew several anti-war ministers who were eager to provide just such
letters even if evidence of religious conviction was slight or non-existent. No Draft Board would grant an exemption on
the moral claims of Humanists,
agnostics, or atheists. But I
had more scruples than good sense.
I was not, in fact a total
pacifist. I believed then and now that I
would have lined up at the enlistment office the day after Pearl Harbor, just as my Dad
did. My objection was not to all war—but
to this war. And I would not claim a
religious faith that I did not at
the time have. I was such a Boy Scout that I wouldn’t lie to the government.
That left me with few good choices—leaving
the country, going underground, or resisting the Draft. For a lot of reasons that I mentioned
earlier, I chose the latter. If I was going to stand up for what I believed in,
I was going to do it openly and take the consequences.
Over the years I got to know and often
become close to Vietnam veterans. Many of them returned bitterly opposed to the
war they fought in. But even among those
who thought they served in a righteous
cause, I never found one that didn’t respect that decision even if they did
not agree with it. Arm chair warriors, ever eager to send someone else to do the
killing and dying for them, of course, are another matter.
Do I think I was some sort of a damn
hero? Short answer, no. Oh as a callow youth always playing the previews of the movie of my life in my head.
I briefly entertained the idea that I would be lauded by my friends and
Fellow Workers. But reality wasted no
time in disabusing me of that notion.
And in point of fact my “sacrifice” was not all that great or impressive—I
gave up a few months of freedom and was neither tortured nor abused. I was merely inconvenienced. Not the
stuff of heroics in any way.
Then why do I tell the story? I’m just boasting, aren’t I? I tell the story because it is mine to tell
and telling is what I do. But everyone
back then had a story, whether in the rice
paddies or on the run. Every one of
those stories deserves to be heard. It
is up to the reader to decide what to make of them.
Finally, what do I think now? That’s a harder one.
Back then, in addition to opposition to
the war, we couched our opposition to the Draft in libertarian terms. The Draft
was involuntary servitude and an Unconstitutional tax on labor. All of that was true.
But historically the Draft democratized the forces sent to
fight. It was far from perfect, but the
sons of rich men, local merchants, and professionals slogged through the mud and gore cheek to jowls with the sons of poor men. They called it shared sacrifice. That even continued in the peace time drafts of the ‘50’s and
early ‘60’s until the early Vietnam era when student deferrals changed the game
again. The Vietnam War was fought mostly
by those who could honestly sing, “I ain’t no fortunate son.”
Of course when I refused induction, some
other sap took my place—someone likely
poorer, less privileged, and perhaps much darker than me. There is a survivor’s guilt in that which never goes
away.
When the Draft, monumentally unpopular
across social lines, was finally suspended the result was just as critics of
the move predicted. The All-Volunteer professional army was
recruited almost exclusively from among the poor, marginal, and those with dim
prospects. What middle class kids did
enter the service opted for sophisticated technical
training offered by the Navy and
Air Force and support units of the Army.
Grunts on the ground, as always, were plebian and expendable.
The services found the volunteers more
pliable and reliable than perpetually dissatisfied draftees.
There was a brief, patriotic uptick in
enlistments by middle class kids
after 9/11 but that has largely
subsided, though it has left a residue among senior non-commissioned officers these days. The economic crisis of the later part of the
decades and its lingering aftermath have once again filled the ranks with the
poor and displaced. Only the wide-spread
use of middle-of-life National Guardsmen
and Reservists, most of whom had
enlisted for educational and other benefits injected many middle class
troops to the war zones.
Today, I am ambivalent about a possible return to the draft. Perhaps it would be fairer. And I often think that the draft as part of national service requirement might do a
lot to combat the rising class divisions
in our society. Or maybe not.
Whatever, I am an old man now. My fat is no longer in the fire. Perhaps I don’t deserve a say.
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