Behind Bars Again

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

I’ve written about my time in the US Army, and about spending time behind bars getting out of the Army, in my story called It’s Not About Me. In that story, I discussed a bit of my view on the Vietnam war, the view echoed by many who have studied it since—that it was the wrong war, in the wrong place, at the wrong time. My experience was that the Vietnam war damaged every single person it touched, on both sides of the Pacific, and more than anyone it damaged some of the veterans who’d actually done the fighting. I know that because I spent months in the nuthouse assisting the physically crippled and the memory damaged. My friends there were the shell-shocked refuse of the carnage. It’s not my wish to refight the war or what I did regarding the war, just to tell my story about it, so please, let’s not turn this into a referendum on some imaginary “right” response to the Vietnam War—there weren’t any of those, just levels of wrong responses, plus pain and suffering enough for all.

mymummie small

Christina Dorothea Dyer Greene, and looking at that lovely old granny, you’d never guess she’d once put a voodoo death curse on a middle-aged man … and he died within the week. Another story I should tell sometime.

A couple years after I got out of the nuthouse and the Army, I went to live with the Captain’s Daughter, my beloved grandmother we called “My-mummie” whom I’ve written about before. It was a great experience for me. It was after my grandfather’s death, and my oldest cousin was living there as well. She and I have always been close. We cooked dinner and washed and dried the dishes and kept up the grounds and did house maintenance and such for My-mummie. The best part was that I could hear her stories again (and some for the first time) as an adult and not as a seven-year-old kid. I lived with her about a year, it was fascinating, I’ll write more about her sometime.

After a while, though, I wanted my own place. I loved My-mummie, but eventually, I had to move out on my own. A friend of my cousin’s said she needed someone to caretake a tiny one-room cabin she owned near Santa Cruz, totally enclosed by a state forest. I said sure and moved out there. It was an enchanted place. It always reminded me of Snow White’s pad. It was quite close to Santa Cruz but totally hidden. You’d drive through the protected forest, and there was a little clearing with a little house in the sunlight, the famous “bee-loud glade”. I continued making and selling sandals.

This was also the first time I ever made money from my art. I mean as opposed to my music. I started making and selling mobiles. I made light fixtures that were mobiles, using glass, and candelabras, and railroad lanterns, and pieces of cut steel, and crystals, and found objects. They moved and spun, casting an ever-changing, entrancing light. They were beautiful, and they were easy to make and sell, people snapped them up as fast as I finished them, so I generally had a bit of money, not much, but enough.

Of course, the Vietnam War was still going on; it hadn’t stopped because I’d managed to get my invitation canceled. I met some people who were in a loose confederation called “The Resistance”. The Resistance was founded by David Harris, who was married to the singer Joan Baez at the time. Some of us Resistance guys rented a house just behind the Santa Cruz Boardwalk on Second Street. We called it the “Resistance Commune”. We were hippies, we were opposed to the Vietnam War. We believed in peace and love. Bored middle-aged housewives brought food to the house and gave money, so we’d be free to work to end the war. And we did work, we did what we could, and we worked hard at it.

It was a strange time. We believed in something vague called “The Revolution”. We weren’t sure what that was, but we knew we were at the forefront of it. It involved throwing out everything that our parents believed. That much was obvious from the terrible hole it left behind. Beyond that, we were making up the song as we were singing it.

It was also the time of “free love”. I later learned that (for me at least) love is rarely free, but we were young and didn’t know that yet. At the time I was sexually involved with three women. Not at the same instant or in the same bed, you understand, but at the same time. They all three lived in a commune called the “River Street House”. They all knew each other, they were good friends, they all knew about me, there were no secrets between us. None of us thought much about it, it went on for a couple months, it was great … well, it was actually fantastic until I came down with the clap, and I had to tell all three of them.

Gonorrhea. Ugly word, I know, and an ugly reality, but I have to be honest about the bad as well as the good. I’ve said I am telling my tale warts and all, and having the clap definitely qualifies as more than a wart in my world.

I got the usual symptom, a leaky faucet, went to the doctor, got tested, and I got the bad news. So I called the three lovely ladies all together and told them all at one time, so there was no misunderstanding and we could get it clear. I said that I had the clap and that I must have gotten it from one of them, because I hadn’t had sex with anyone else, and I was willing to swear to that.

Now, after I published my story about hopping freight trains, people wrote in the comments to say I should issue clear warnings in my stories, so fools don’t try to follow my path. They said I should do that to keep a bunch of maroons from cluttering up the rail yards with their corpses and body parts and drowning in the Kenai and the like trying to follow my lead. Seemed excessive to me, like the sign on my aluminum foil reflective car screen that keeps the sun off of the dashboard when I park, covering the front window entirely. The sign says, no bull, it says

“WARNING! Do not drive the car with this sunscreen in position”.

Really? We’ve fallen that far?

In any case, to keep folks from complaining about this story, here’s my Official Warning—kids, don’t try this one at home. Do whatever you have to do in order to avoid telling three women at the same time that one gave you gonorrhea and you might have given it to the other two. I assure you, Miss Manners classifies it as a major social blunder.

Plus it’s not an easy subject to bring up, regardless of how you lay the groundwork, and I’ll tell you, gonorrhea is a real bitch to just casually slip into a conversation without groundwork. Like “Oh, yeah, guess what, dearest ladies, funniest thing happened to me yesterday, I was passing by my doctor’s, and I thought I’d drop in, you’ll never believe what he told me …”

That wasn’t the hardest part, though. As uncomfortable and painful as it had been for me to tell the three of them that I’d gotten the clap from one of them and I might have passed it on, there was worse to come.

First, though, we all had to walk on eggshells around each other, no sex for anyone until they got their results back from the lab, from memory that took three-four days.

injection

Now, for those men out there who have had the unfortunate luck to be falsely accused, and who have had to try to convince a furious woman of your actual innocence, that you have been true to her and only her, you have not been cheating on her, and that you are telling her the 100% facts of the case, I’m sure you all can testify how just how hard and painful that is …

Well, just be thankful that you have not had to try to convince three furious women, who have just gotten out of the car after driving back from the clinic together, three furious women who have been discussing your shortcomings and lack of honesty because all of their tests turned out negative. Consider trying to convince them that you have been true to them and only them, that you haven’t been unfaithful to the three of them in either thought or word or deed, and that you’re telling God’s own truth. I don’t recommend it for the weak of heart.

Of course, they didn’t believe a word of what I was saying; understandably, they had the medical proof. The three of them got in my face all at once, shouting, punching my shoulders … it was truly not a pretty picture, folks, your narrator did not appear in a good light at all. First, my faucet starts leaking, then my sacred word is being seriously questioned, and now I’m in the doghouse and getting thumped on by not just one but all three beautiful women that I care about … it was a very bad week for me.

Much battered in spirit, not to mention somewhat bruised about the upper torso, I went to the library and studied up on the tests they’d been given. As always, the science helps. It turned out that the test they used for men back then was pretty good, but in women, you got a false negative about one time in four. That is to say, for one woman in four who actually had gonorrhea, the test didn’t show it. I’d always been a good mathematician, I took out my pencil and figured that if there was one chance in four of a false positive for any one of them, there was an excellent chance that one or more of them had a bad test result.

So I went back and told that to the good ladies. They were skeptical, but they all went and got retested. It turned out that one of them actually did have the clap, so my honor was restored, I had been telling the truth. I really had been faithful to the three of them and the three of them alone just like I’d sworn to them, and the very best news was … I hadn’t given the disease to either of the other two. And in the end, they all told me they forgave me, although I’m still not clear what I’d done that needed forgiving. But I accepted it with an open heart anyhow, they were wonderful women … however, I digress, I’m just happy I was young after penicillin and before AIDS …

As part of our Resistance work, we arranged all kinds of protests against the war, against imperialism, against poverty. We thought of ourselves as Dadaist revolutionaries, though. I liked to carry random signs in the marches, signs advertising weird stuff, signs just with pictures, strange signs. On one march, I was face to face with the riot police, with everyone waving signs to end the Vietnam war, and yelling slogans. Everyone had their signs, “END THE WAR”, “END THE INVASION”, that kind of thing.

Me, I was in front, hollering at the cops, and I was waving a lovely international orange road sign with black letters I’d found mounted on a post along the protest route, and had brought with me … I was a bit unclear on the “let’s all protest something” concept, I guess, but I knew how to have fun. I used to say that a Revolution you couldn’t laugh at wasn’t worth having.

end road work

The Vietnam War went on and on. In December, The Resistance leaders, based in Palo Alto, arranged for the second big mass sit-in at the Alameda Induction Center. At the first Resistance sit-in, everyone had gotten arrested, it was all peaceful, and they all had to do five days at the Santa Rita prison farm. The papers picked it up, it was a one-day wonder, we were all abuzz about how the war machine was cracking and how the Resistance was famous and we were starting to win …

However, the first sit-in had had absolutely no larger effect of any kind that I could tell. After the one day of news, that was it; no follow-up articles, the entire sit-in and the arrests and the jail time just vanished, and the war rolled on without the slightest change.

So the decision was made to do the exact same thing again, another identical sit-in, same time, same place.

Hey, don’t look at me like that. They didn’t solicit my opinion, although at the time I might have agreed. I likely was dumb enough then to do something a second time expecting a different result. So the Santa Cruz Resistance Commune (those of us who could) went up to Oakland for a sit-in at the Army Induction Center to see if we could raise a public outcry and get arrested. “Clog up the gears of the war machine”, I believe was the catchphrase of the time.

I gotta confess, I wasn’t crazy about the whole idea. After spending a month or so locked up in the Navy nuthouse, and then five months behind bars in the Army nuthouse, I was kinda over the whole razor wire and cells and bars and guards experience—the thrill was gone. I’d done my time. But I went along. We were part of The Revolution, so no sacrifice was too great.

Our friends drove us up to Oakland early in the morning. We all got together around six AM, maybe 120 people or so, and we all sat down and blocked the doors of the Induction Center. It was funny, that’s exactly where I’d been inducted a couple of years before. I was one of the few guys in the crowd who’d actually been inside. I’d spent hours in the place.

A “sit-in” is a non-violent event. It’s also, for that very reason, boring as hell. First off, we figured they’d open at eight, but they didn’t even open until nine … so we sat around and told each other stories about how noble our cause was, and how wrong the pigs and the war merchants were, and how much difference we were making. Like I said … booooring.

Eventually, the cops came. The Oakland Police were practiced at the action by then; it wasn’t their first rodeo. They backed up the paddy wagon, the police prisoner van, right up to the mass of sitting people, and just started tossing us in the back. As one wagon got full and left, another pulled right in. It was assembly line arrests; Henry Ford would have been proud. We thought we’d clog up the gears of the war machine? No worries, they had them well-greased. By noon, we were all hauled away, and they were back to inducting draftees into the Army with no sign that anything had happened.

induction center

I’d never been in a paddy wagon, the “Black Maria” van the cops use to transport prisoners. But as you know, I’m always up for new experiences. The main thing I remember about it was that it smelled like vomit, no surprise there; it served as the rolling drunk tank most nights of the week. Given a choice, I’d advise taking alternate transportation. They hauled us away to the Justice Center by the packed van load.

We were put in a big cell. No windows, kind of dark. We waited for hours and hours. Waiting bothered some people a lot; they walked and paced, rattled the bars. I’d been locked in rooms like that before in the nuthouse, so I knew waiting of old, waiting was a good friend of mine. I could wait with the best of them. One by one, people left the room to go before the Judge. None came back. We had no idea of our fate.

When my name was finally called, after the darkness of the holding cell, the courtroom was blindingly bright. I blinked and looked around. The Judge was on a high dais; I had to look way up to him. He said, “You are charged with Disturbing the Peace. How do you plead?” Like all of us, I plead guilty to Disturbing the War. The Judge looked just like a frog, puffed up, obviously frustrated by the unending long line of people waiting to come before him and mock his court. He sentenced me to twenty days like everyone else before me, and they started to take me … wait! say what? Twenty days?

Twenty days? We’d figured on getting five days like the last bunch … and since that day was December 13th, that meant we wouldn’t see freedom until the second of January. We’d miss both Christmas and New Year. Pinche cabrón, I hadn’t planned on that, but there it was. My choices were either to dig it or bitch about it, and besides, no sacrifice was too great because we were making such a difference. It just made us more noble. Plus any mathematician could tell you, if we stayed in twenty days we’d make four times the difference that the folks made who stayed five days … of course, that had been zero difference, but we were comforted by the thought that we’d do four times as much.

So I reset my mental retirement clock; my next retirement wouldn’t be in time for Christmas, no, no. I reset for twenty days. No problem, I’d done months inside, I could do twenty days “standing on my head” as they say.

They took us, busload by busload, out to Santa Rita Prison Farm. They had two big connected barracks set aside for us, likely to avoid trouble with the cons. Or maybe to keep us from talking to them about sit-ins, I don’t know. I believe they’ve torn those barracks down since and built something else. We were over 100 guys, including David Harris, the founder of The Resistance. The much smaller number of women went elsewhere.

Being locked up this time wasn’t too bad. I was in a big barracks surrounded by like-minded friends. And best of all, I never once woke up lashed down to a bed, as had happened before several times, and that’s always a huge plus in my world. We talked story and compared lies.

The best day in jail for all of us was Christmas, but not for the usual reason. I woke up and my friend Rodney said, “Hey, check this out!”, with a big grin. He held out a box and told me to look inside. Damn, it was a treasure chest!

What happened was that some guys from the San Jose Resistance had broken into the jail late Christmas eve. That’s right, not out of the jail, but into the jail, like some lifer’s fantasy of Santa Claus for cons. They cut through the outer wire, came across an open area dodging the searchlights, cut through another fence around the barracks area, made it to our barracks, cut through the wire around our barracks, and came right inside.

Zowie. Tip of the Hat.

I talked later to one of the San Jose guys who had done it. He said going that direction was much easier than the alternative because they’re never looking for people breaking into jail. He tried to downplay the whole thing, but I was still very impressed because even if getting in was easier, the guys still had to get back out again … which took some serious stones. I told him what a great gift it had been and what a difference it had made.

In any case, I woke up Christmas morning, and Rodney said that the San Jose guys had awakened him about 2 AM. They had brought in boxes and boxes of cookies, along with several cigarette packs full of joints. Damnbetcha, regular cigarette packets full of neatly-rolled cigarettes of the mystery herb of the ancient Hindus, the eponymous “Indian Hemp”. Plus, there were a few tabs of blotter acid (LSD).

Of course, at that time marijuana and LSD were very illegal, particularly in jail, duh.

But we were in a funny place. Our barracks were the last two in a long row of similar barracks. There was only one way to get to us. It was a long path visible all along its way from the main street to us, and it had four locked gates with long walks in between. So they couldn’t rush us or do anything fast, it took them a couple minutes from when they appeared at the end of the row, out at the far end of the path with four locked gates, to the time when they arrived at the barracks after they had walked and unlocked and relocked and walked and …

So we made no attempt to hide the dope. Instead, we distributed all the joints as fairly as possible, then we all went outside to the veranda. We all lit up at once and stood around sharing joints and eating cookies. We knew that we’d have plenty of time to laugh at the guards if they tried to stop us, and that the cookies and joints would be long gone by the time they got there. The guards did finally show up, late to the party as usual, the weed and the cookies were gone, the acid well hidden. We razzed them, told them they’d missed the party, if only they’d come half an hour earlier we’d have given them cookies and offered them a joint … somehow they didn’t see the humor in it. They ran us all back inside, and lectured us, and searched the veranda area, and then ran us all outside again, and shook down the whole barracks, and found nothing …

The best story of the whole Santa Rita farce, though, happened to one of my friends. He was put in solitary confinement for fighting, not his fault, somehow he’d ended up in a regular cell and his cellmate had attacked him. We smuggled in messages to him, letting him know he wasn’t forgotten.

After Christmas, through our contacts in the joint, we were able to smuggle him one of the tabs of blotter acid that the San Jose guys had brought in. My friend figured, hey, solitary confinement is the best place in the world to drop acid, nobody can mess with me. What are they gonna do … throw me in solitary?

He liked to meditate, that’s what he’d been doing in solitary the whole time. So he took the LSD and figured he’d spend his time doing some really intense meditation. Sat down on the floor, crossed his legs, and pretty soon he was soaring.

Just as the main rush was starting to come on to him, and the cell walls were starting to melt, and the paisley colors were starting to appear on the backs of his hands, he had the very realistic hallucination that his cell door was opening. Of course, being on acid, from the time he first hallucinated hearing the aliens coming towards his door to the time he hallucinated the door finally opening was something like five or six weeks … at least it sure seemed that long, but it was hard to tell, there was that whooshy-whooshy noise that kept coming and going that distorted time too.

It seemed to him in his elevated state that two aliens came in, they looked kinda like guards, he said, but you could tell the difference — he knew they weren’t guards. They said they had a directive from the home planet or something; their words kept echoing and bouncing around his head, or maybe it was just the echoes in the cell, but they were very hard to understand. They said to come with them, so he followed them meekly, wondering vaguely, where were the aliens taking him?

But he didn’t wonder long, because the prison walls of the corridor were so interesting. How come he’d never noticed before that prison walls flex slightly inward and outward when you breathe? He tried to tell the aliens about his discovery, but they told him to shut up.

alien prison guards

The faces of the aliens kept changing and melting, but he said he wasn’t afraid; he could tell they were friendly. At one point, the aliens lost the form of guards and then assumed the form of prison officials standing behind a counter. They put a paper bag on the counter and had him sign some papers. One of the alien official people talked to him. He couldn’t hear him at all, but there were little cartoon balloons over the alien’s head. He tried to read them, but they were hard to follow. They said something about how the warden was letting him out two days early because my friend was such a wonderful person, or that he got extra credit for meditating while in the hole, or something; he was never clear on that part, but the aliens walked him right out of the front gate of the prison and left him there. He said he thought they had some power over the guards to let him go.

So before he knew it, there he was in front of the prison farm, let out two days early because of getting credit he didn’t know about for good behavior, all alone, peaking on acid, holding a paper bag with all his possessions, and gazing at the world in total wonder as the miraculous sun shone, and the grass grew, and he was free, free, free! He sat down in the grass right there in front of the Santa Rita prison farm and started talking to the grass, and in a while, the grass grew right through him, he could hear the grass taking over his body, and he became just another part of the very grassiness of the world … and after while he fell asleep.

In the morning, he woke up next to the paper bag containing his wallet and his possessions and didn’t know where he was. He sat up, looked around, saw he was outside the prison, and the memories of the acid trip and his miraculous escape and the aliens came back to him. He got up, walked to the road, and hitchhiked back to Santa Cruz.

And ever after that, he was convinced that LSD could do anything, melt steel bars, open jail doors, and nothing we could say about time off for good behavior would ever convince him differently. The belief never seemed to do him any harm, he never tried to fly off of buildings on acid or anything stupid. He just had an unshakeable faith that everything would turn out right for him … and as is sometimes the case for folks who believe that, for him it always did. Go figure, he was the only one of us who got out in time to celebrate New Year’s Eve.

They let the rest of us out the day after New Years, a cold windy day. The year had turned while we were away, we’d given stopping the War our best shot, and the War didn’t seem to notice at all. We’d missed Christmas. We’d missed the New Year’s party. We’d even missed our fifteen minutes of fame, we were in the slam the next day when the newspapers hit the streets … and by the time we were let out, after twenty days, the world had totally forgotten the sit-in, the story was dead on arrival …

“Oh, you were in a sit-in? I didn’t realize there had been one. Was it exciting?”

On that last day, we went through the standard drill, lines for this, sign here, lines for that, initial the form, put our civilian clothes back on, they handed us our wallets and belts and out the door with you, boyo.

Two of my three girlfriends picked me and a couple of other Santa Cruz Resistance guys up outside the jail, and we all went back to Santa Cruz to plan the next step in the noble fight against the war. One thing was clear, though.

Throwing my skinny okole in jail, whether they did it or I did it to myself, didn’t seem to change the war one bit. I’m a slow learner sometimes … but I never tried that brilliant plan again.

w.

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jc
February 26, 2013 2:46 pm

Willis Eschenbach. Feb 26th 2013 at 2.18 pm.
My god you really are a case study in the art of manipulation.
Right down to the implication of deceit and underhand behavior in those who simply reflect your own statements back to them and point out your evasions.
A lifetime spent just keeping the talk up in the hope of getting the sale.
I am way, way, beyond seeking or accepting claims to sincerity of intent from those who have repeatedly demonstrated they have none.
It is completely pointless expecting you to do be other than you have demonstrated, you don’t know how.
Oh, and by the way don’t try to accrue support from others by pretending I was referring to anyone else but YOU, and if you actually think this requires a “high moral horse” then you clearly failed to even get to the moral development of a 10 year old.
Great Karma. Good luck with it.

February 26, 2013 3:03 pm

w.
I give you an A+.
You have memorized all the 60’s radical anti Vietham war talking points and know how to slip in a dirty dig with the best of them. Worthy of notice which seems to be the thing you seek the most, just notice me,, just notice me, se what I have done, look its me, w..
Thing is you sort of stand out, you know over noticed.

jc
February 26, 2013 3:03 pm

Luther Wu. Feb 26th 2013 at 2.15 pm.
The Wal-Mart that was 1968. Some have moved onto other stores, some haven’t.
Those that haven’t merely drape whatever variations on the original theme have come to hand since over the original purchase.

jc
February 26, 2013 3:27 pm

Willis Eschenbach Feb 26th 2013 at 2.18 pm
Since I sent through a response which has not been listed and have subsequently responded to Luther Wu above which has, I assume that it was considered “inappropriate” in some way by the moderator, who may well be you for all I know.
I wont bother trying to repeat or rephrase myself, other than to say I know manipulation when I see it, and that I have no intention of treating someone as sincere who demonstrably isn’t.
I will add that amongst the various characteristics you have revealed in this post that I had not mentioned is shown in your complete (apparent) inability to distinguish between being held to account for something you wish to assert and an attack on you as a person. I wont give a specific example: this post and others you have made are replete with them.
Pathological narcissism.
And I will repeat my closing comment of the earlier unlisted post.
Great Karma. Good luck with it.
[Reply: Your last comment was in the Spam folder. That often happens for known and unknown reasons. — mod.]

February 26, 2013 3:54 pm

More to the point, who appointed you the judge of the actions of an entire generation? Was there a special election for the post of inter-generational judge, or did you win the judgeship by acclaim?
Look around you today, it is the result of what your generation put into motion, aided and abetted by the pointy headed intellectuals of the rich white northeastern elite. Look at the utter confusion in our government today, which for the most part is run by fellow travelers of your generation.
I have had the pleasure of spending some time hanging out on this old ferry, the S.S. Vallejo in Sausalito.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vallejo_(ferry)
There is an interesting historical tidbit about a meeting between some of the luminaries of the counter culture movement as it was called at the time…
Zen Buddhist Alan Watts bought Ford’s share of the houseboat in 1961.[5][6] Varda’s parties and salons continued. The most famous party, thrown in 1967, was known as the “Houseboat Summit”, and featured Timothy Leary, Allen Ginsberg, Gary Snyder and Watts discussing LSD; it was featured in the counterculture magazine the San Francisco Oracle.[7] The Vallejo deteriorated heavily during the 1960s. Varda died suddenly in 1971, as did Watts in 1973.[3]
There were other more political conversations that happened there related to the dark direction that Leary, Watts, Ginsberg, and Snyder saw coming. There was an incipient split in the movement between those what wanted nothing to do with the dominate culture (Leary, Watts, Ginsberg, and Snyder) and those that wanted to forever change society by infiltrating the political class until they took it over and used it to help change things “for the common good”. Those ware those like Alinsky, John Kerry, and even a then unknown named Hillary Clinton. We see the ultimate expression of that movement in our current dysfunctional government. It is as easy as the lyrics to the Ten Years After song by Alvin Lee “I’d love to change the world”
I would love to change the world, but I don’t know what I’d do, so I leave it up to youuuu”
The next line is the ominous one.
“Tax the rich, feed the poor, till there are no, rich no more”
All of that mindset started by your generation or at least part of your generation. The subculture that did not fall for that were the ones working on technology, the Apollo program, nuclear power, who after the death of Apollo gave us our current technological world by building silicon valley out of the ashes of the 70’s.
The 60’s generation see our current administration as their last best hope to remake society in their image, to tax the rich, to redistribute wealth, to break down suburbia, to finally rend the ties that bind us together as a nation by divisive politics that pit brother against brother because it is only in chaos that opportunity arises. You see that chaos playing out in Washington today, with the lurching from crisis to crisis breeding further instability by using the bludgeon of climate change to turn the young against the old, the anti-humanist movement that sees humans as a waste and a blight.
The funny thing about this is that I got to meet and talk to Timothy Leary in the last couple of years of his life at the Electronic Cafe in LA during the early explosion of the Internet. We hosted a teleconference between Leary and students at the University of Toronto as Leary was still persona non grata in Canada. Leary waxed poetic about how the Internet (1995) and Virtual Reality (Mark Peche, one of the inventors of VRML was there) was bringing about the opening of consiousness that he had preached about in the 1960’s. I may have had a bit of influence on him as well as he became a believer in the opening of the space frontier by those of us who wanted private spaceflight (I helped Dennis Tito the first space tourist six years later on his trip to ISS). He wanted to colonize the galaxy and lamented that he would not live to see it (he had already been diagnosed with Prostate cancer by then).
So no your ENTIRE generation was not at fault, just the meme that you laid out that I responded to as we as kids had to listen to all the pontificating and pissing on the good things that were all around us that none of you saw.
We are reaping that whirlwind today and I see almost everything that you guys were preaching for back then dominating the political discourse today. This is why it is so hard to have a conversation about climate change as it has become the religion of the left. Read Gore’s Earth in the Balance” It is almost an exact copy of Meadows Limits to Growth. Data is adjusted in the climate community and models fudged because it is for the good of the cause, damn the truth. Our secretary of state today said that Americans have the right to be stupid. He is talking about most of the people on this blog who post.
Pretentious, Arrogant, uttery convinced of how right they are, look no further than John Kerry, Hillary Clinton, Steve Chu, and even Barak Obama, that absorbed all the bad lessons of the 1960’s and few of the good ones.
Am I right or wrong? Look around you at the world today, it is a testament to that sixties credo that your generation lived by.

February 26, 2013 4:57 pm

First off, I am writing my autobiography because literally dozens and dozens and dozens of people have begged me to do so. Yes, I talk of what I’ve done … it’s an AUTOBIOGRAPHY, who do you expect me to talk about? You?
Please let me say that I enjoy your recollections of your past. That we disagree vociferously on some things does not make it less entertaining.
It is just that the thing that I read there struck a nerve as it goes to something that I strongly feel started to lead to the unraveling of our nation.

jc
February 26, 2013 5:08 pm

denniswingo. Feb 26th 2013. 3.54 pm.
An excellent precis of the direct connection between the “culture” of the 1960’s and its consequences, largely in what you describe from being conciously applied, but also in effect by osmosis.
And as you rightly make clear the original proponents of all this were those of a previous generation who came out of the woodwork as societal reference points collapsed and found ready adherents in the ambitious and credulously self-interested.
A core element – or the core element – underpinning it all is the creation of a culture where the implications of actions either cannot be seen or that no one is interested in seeing them.
Todays world.

Philemon
February 26, 2013 5:11 pm

Willis, keep your stories coming, please. They are very well told, and, judging from the comments, they touch nerves and elicit strong responses, as good stories should.

markx
February 26, 2013 5:25 pm

Dennis Ray Wingo says: February 26, 2013 at 8:41 am (italics)
Fast forward in time and we know how completely corrupt and repressive the Soviet Union was and that these trips like this were carefully orchestrated campaigns by the Russians to sew a meme that it was the U.S. warmongers that were the world’s creeps.
You forget that very very few fully embraced the doctrines of communism, and probably deliberately ignore the fact that very very few believed the picture painted. If it had in fact been ‘the whole generation’ the USA would only be now climbing out of its own ‘communist hole’…
Another article was by a Village Voice writer that had gone and spent time with the Viet Cong and was extolling their back to nature type lifestyle and contrasting that with the materialistic and imperialistic Americans with all of their technology who were fighting against basically the people of the Earth.
This was a good and necessary thing to do. It to some extent countered the good military practice of ‘de-humanizing’ the enemy (which makes it a lot easier to get our young men to kill them, and a lot easier to draft the necessary cannon fodder). And truly, this was in fact truthful reporting: the technologically advanced, massively air-supported Americans were fighting a people in their own lands, who were living in and living from the land (no airdropped C rations for them).
I still remember a comic from the Village Voice showing a picture of Buzz Aldrin on the Moon with a sign saying “So What”.
Oh, the horror …….Man, you gotta get out a bit more … comics, cartoons, satirists always have their say, and always will. And should do so (and that’s damn funny, too …. Go, on. Put down ya flag, take ya hand of ya noble heart and grin!)
….and money shifted to anti-poverty programs, mostly at the insistence of your generation that could not see the value of mankind’s move into the solar system. …How much better off would we be today if the technological progress of the 1960′s in opening the solar system not been thwarted? We would have colonies on Mars, industries on the Moon, and our fears of energy and resource depletion would be quaint alternative fiction about what could have happened….
Bozo, you are dreamin’, bigtime…. If you can’t afford to do something, you can’t afford to do it. I’ve driven through your mighty nation, and, with my poor navigating skills, managed to get lost in the outskirts of small towns, and discovered that America is full of ghettos …. A great nation genuinely holding out the promise of hope to its citizens and falsely telling them anyone can succeed, if only they work hard.
Those who discover that hard work can be trumped by bad luck, a few bad or ill-timed decisions simply vanish, erased by time and poverty.
The very same processes that Willis’ generation were reacting to (yes, and you could say overreacting to) ARE STILL GOING ON TODAY! Powered by the same military industrial structures: Don’t you see this NEED to keep a war or two ticking over somewhere in the world at any time? Soon you will have to pull out of Iraq because public opinion weighs more and more heavily against it … but don’t worry, we’ve got Iran lined up and we can PROVE they are bad guys, so THIS time it’s REALLY justified!
(Hey, are those flower children over there peacefully protesting? Ah, no, it is a different era so the memes and the themes and the ideas are a bit different, but the desire to right perceived wrongs is still there).
…. your generation …. your generation…. at the insistence of your generation.. This attitude that flowered in your generation….. that your generation embraced…..
This is one of the most misguided, shallow thinking, blame allocating bits of indoctrinated thinking I have ever seen.
Every generation reactes to the events of their time, and to the events preceeding their time. Each is subject to all the effects of the government propaganda of the time, the societal beliefs and values of the time, and the happenings of that time.
And they react and respond to those events. Sometimes correctly, sometimes they overreact, and sometimes (often) react wrongly.
Think for a moment: Should the ideas of the CAGW crowd prevail, and the taxes are established, and expensive energy sources are built, and the economy tanks, etc etc, how are you going to feel in 50 years time as the masses point at you and proclaim how “your generation” (because, yes, you were here, and an adult, and active then) f***** it all up with such a stupid concept?

markx
February 26, 2013 5:39 pm

Dennis Ray Wingo says: February 26, 2013 at 8:41 am
The very funny thing is that had they NOT gone to war (yes, the very war that many of Willis’ generation were correctly opposing ) they probably could have gone to settle on the damn moon!
Instead, it was easier to maintain the status quo rather than try to dismantle an every expanding cold war indoctrinated military structure and all the lobbying, wealth churning industrial structure needed to support it.

Philemon
February 26, 2013 5:48 pm

Markx has a point. War is a racket. Some people make good money off of it.
Also, I ain’t no psychiatrist, but I doubt jc is either…
Willis, as psychological defense mechanisms go, I don’t think you have the narcissism going for you.
A narcissist would only trust their autobiography to people they could pressure or manipulate to agree with them, even just in the comments. And the only ones they would respond to would be the ones agreeing with them. (The others would disappear.)
You may be full of yourself in other ways, but I’ve known narcissists, and you are no narcissist!

Bill Curry
February 26, 2013 6:50 pm

Sir, as a child born in 1968 of hippie parents, I find it hard to express how much I detest your narcasistic generation. The damage you have caused around the world far exceeds what you imagined you were protesting.
It is hard to swallow your story, told with a certain pride despite the sheer horror your thinking unleashed. You abandoned your parents. Your abandoned the people of South East Asia to hell and let millions die. You abandoned your children in divorce and self gratification. And even now you abandon your grandchildren to financial malaise.
You will die thinking you did something good with your life. The same narcisism taken to your graves. And you will leave it to us to clean up your mess.
You should be ashamed. If you were to march down my street I would spit on your old and broken frame just as you spit on those brave men who did the right thing.
You deserve all the criticism you face here. We will never let you get away with perpetuating the fantasies of having done good things. You’re history is being written by your children and we will not be kind.

Bill Curry
February 26, 2013 8:08 pm

And your cloaking of your actions as somehow offset by movements that had nothing to do with your generation is frightening. Again, a distorted sense of self if your think that movements that began decades or centuries before your verbatim somehow came to fruition because your code to reject wholesale your parents values.
Women and blacks have no reason to thank your generation. They improved their lot before you guys were born and will continue to after you die.
Do you not see how this myth you have sold yourselves about what good you did is false? Is it STILL all about you?
Shame.

February 26, 2013 8:15 pm

You forget that very very few fully embraced the doctrines of communism, and probably deliberately ignore the fact that very very few believed the picture painted. If it had in fact been ‘the whole generation’ the USA would only be now climbing out of its own ‘communist hole’…
Very few where? The readers of the village voice and the protesters on the west coast were obviously not convinced. If there is a spread in Life Magazine that echo’s that sentiment there has to be some currency for it.
And truly, this was in fact truthful reporting: the technologically advanced, massively air-supported Americans were fighting a people in their own lands, who were living in and living from the land (no airdropped C rations for them).
Uh huh, tell that to the families that had relatives fighting over there.
Bozo, you are dreamin’, bigtime…. If you can’t afford to do something, you can’t afford to do it. I’ve driven through your mighty nation, and, with my poor navigating skills, managed to get lost in the outskirts of small towns, and discovered that America is full of ghettos …. A great nation genuinely holding out the promise of hope to its citizens and falsely telling them anyone can succeed, if only they work hard.
So now we are already down to name calling. You missed the point with your excerpt, we could afford to do it, but we shifted resources to programs that frankly after an entire generation have proven themselves to be completely useless for anything other than buying votes. You don’t bring people out of poverty by giving them money, you bring people out of poverty by creating the conditions whereby they can gain employment. All giving money does is make them your dependent, and of course a reliable voter for your policies. If the resources that have been wasted on failed social programs had been instead channeled into technological investments the problems that we have with energy, resources, and poverty would mostly be quaint relics of a bygone age. The problem would be that these people would not be dependent on hand outs and thus not reliable voters.
ARE STILL GOING ON TODAY! Powered by the same military industrial structures:
The so called military industrial complex is a pale shadow of what it was in the 1960’s. In the mid sixties the military budget was fully half of federal expenditures. Today it is barely over 22%. However, we do have the medicare industrial complex and we do have the welfare industrial complex that both of them are larger than the military budgets. The generals did not want any of these wars over the past decade that have been foisted on them and the current occupant of the whitehouse is executing a proxy war of drones across half the planet, supported by their fellow hippies. Ironic isn’t it but the facts are that up until the 1990’s every single war the U.S. got into was done by a democrat administration. When congress wanted to go to war in Vietnam in the 1950’s Eisenhower required that they pass a formal declaration of war before he would order troops into a combat zone. The dems waited until they had a do gooder in the white house before trying to justify it on humanitarian grounds.
Every generation reactes to the events of their time, and to the events preceeding their time. Each is subject to all the effects of the government propaganda of the time, the societal beliefs and values of the time, and the happenings of that time.
It turns out that generation basically chucked the baby with the bathwater. It was the first generation that never had the pressures and the problems of our forefathers. It was rich, bored, and with the stupid move to war in Vietnam the excuse was there to chuck it all. We live with the after effects of it today as their children and grandchildren have no concept for the most part on how to raise a child. We have 20 MILLION children on ADD drugs because parenting is a lost art and drugs are the way to keep kids quiet. We have tens of millions of adults on pharmaceutical drugs provided by doctors and psychologists that have become little more than pill pushers to deal with depression, repression, or whatever the hell it is that makes your generation and now their children and grandchildren to think that they can’t get through a day without some kind of mind altering drug.
Think for a moment: Should the ideas of the CAGW crowd prevail, and the taxes are established, and expensive energy sources are built, and the economy tanks, etc etc, how are you going to feel in 50 years time as the masses point at you and proclaim how “your generation” (because, yes, you were here, and an adult, and active then) f***** it all up with such a stupid concept?
Actually I would agree with them! It IS OUR RESPONSIBILITY to not allow this to happen. There is much that can be done by a small but committed group of people. Anthony Watts, Steve MacIntyre, John Christy and a few dozen more have brought the entire edifice of the AGW movement to a point to where it is very difficult for them to make the progress in deindustrializing the world that they want to do. I tell my friends in the commercial space business that if we had half the commitment of the anti-abortion crowd we would be half way to Alpha Centauri by now.
It is not a stupid concept at all to blame our generation IF we fail in stopping the AGW political juggernaut. It just so turns out that the climate is helping us, thus helping to show who is right. The same thing about space.
Tomorrow at 1:00 pm Eastern time space tourist Dennis Tito will announce that he is committing his wealth to put together a private flyby of humans to Mars. I have had a very very small part in this effort and I will continue working on advanced space concepts. That is our future and our means to transcend the limits to growth and the limited viewpoint that you represent.

Bill Curry
February 26, 2013 8:18 pm

Errors from my phone. I am saying that smoking pot and free love had nothing to do with women and blacks. Taking credit is part of your narcasism.

Mark Bofill
February 26, 2013 8:28 pm

Willis,
Just writing express moral support. I don’t really understand the venom and outrage being expressed against you. Maybe I’m an idiot, but it seems to me that those who are throwing stones must have either sprung like Athena from Zeus’s forehead as teenagers and young adults, fully armed and wise, or they are indulging in a fairly vicious form of hypocrisy.
I don’t think I’m a cowardly person or an evil one. Yet I can’t say I’ve always followed my conscience. I’ve done things I knew perfectly well were wrong in the past for various reasons. At least, if you were adhering to your convictions and what you believed to be right, you’ve done better than I. And while I don’t think I’m a coward I know I don’t have the balls to put my past and my life (warts and all) up on display for fools like these to spit on. For that I applaud you.
I don’t have the first damn clue whether your past is admiral or despicable. Frankly I don’t care. Thanks for sharing your story with me, this one and the others. I can’t easily express the value I’ve find in reading them, but at least I can say I very much appreciate it.
Best regards.

Greg House
February 26, 2013 9:10 pm

Willis Eschenbach says, February 26, 2013 at 8:36 pm: “And if Communists helped them kick out the latest occupying foreign army, because you cannot deny we were that,”
==========================================================
Really, America occupied South Vietnam?
Unbelievable.

Bill Curry
February 26, 2013 9:25 pm

OK Willis:
“If you have a problem with something I said, quote my words so we know what we’re talking about, and tell me why you think I’m wrong. That way we can have a conversation.”
I am now at a keyboard and not on a phone where quoting you is more difficult. I am going to take the time to educate you on a history you were too high to understand. I may break this into several posts (to avoid losing too much) and will explicitly indicate when I am done.
Take the time to read what I write. It is only fair as I invest in writing it.
“Please, I invite you to take a deep breath, reboot, and enter the conversation in the manner of a gentleman”
Would that be similar to how you approached the conversation on the vietnam war when you were protesting? I am sure you were the perfect gentleman.
“I’m not guilty of the crimes you think “my generation” committed, and I dislike being falsely accused of them.”
Perhaps not, but you ARE guilty of providing a defense for them. A false veneer of coolness to what was disgusting behavior. And these accusations are valid and the problems arose out of the same mentality you hold now.
Therefore, you are guilty by proxy. If you choose to defend doing drugs or abandoning the people of South East Asia, then you are one of those who took the shameful path. Your continuing defense of the indefensible only clarifies why you should be detested.
More in the next post.

Bill Curry
February 26, 2013 9:43 pm

“I have not abandoned my parents or my wife’s parents. I spent two hours yesterday reading to my 85-year old blind father-in-law … can you say the same?”
No. My father in law died (in South East Asia) before I was born.
But your generation DID abandon its parents. You spit on their values and wanted a “revolution”. You sent them to nursing homes while you partied to disco and snorted coke.

Bill Curry
February 26, 2013 9:59 pm

“we would never win the war.”
And here is the beginning of where I have to say you don’t have a clue what you are talking about. Let me be clear. I am (now) ex-military. I saw combat and led men in Desert Storm, Iraq, and Afghanistan. I know war. And you know only your distorted view.
More importantly, in the 1990’s – for nearly a decade – , between Desert Storm and Iraq, I was stationed South East Asia and lived and traveled that region extensively. I speak Bahasa fluently (Malaysia and Indonesia) and I spend about 1 month a year in South East Asia to this day.
I have spent extensive time in Vietnam and have discussed the war with many Vietnamese. I have seen the captured American equipment and toured the tunnels.
“Ask any military man if the war should have been prolonged given the surrounding political reality.”
I am a military man. And I have spoken to many. The war was more than “winnable” and in fact – there was no “war” at the time of the American withdrawl. We had protected South Vietnam. A stabilizing force was in place. It was withdrawn too quickly.
” not to communism or any ism, that was an accident of history … but to throwing out foreign invaders.”
You have no idea what you are talking about. They were completely dedicated to communism. In fact there were communist insurgencies throughout SEA. And they were viscious. The British were fighting one in Malaysia for example. The Chinese and Russians were dedicated to the expansion of Communism and the dominoe theory was not a theory. It was the deliberate strategy of the Soviet Union.
For you to deny the reality of communism as part of the motivation only shows how little you know. Go to Saigon today. Go to the museums to the war. And then tell me that they did not fight for communism.
” And if Communists helped them kick out the latest occupying foreign army, because you cannot deny we were that”
I CAN deny that. You are conflating things that are beyond your comprehension. You cannot call the invited support of an ally in a war an “occupation”. We did not occupy any part of Vietnam. You can’t make up your own words.
“all the poor buggers ever wanted was for everyone to just get the hell out of their country.”
NO THEY DIDN’T. And this is where you show your absolute ignorance of the region and its history. They begged us to stay. I remember talking to a taxi driver in Saigon, who was 8 at the time of the fall. He told me about his parents being summarily shot by the invading communists and the decade of hell he went through. He asked me why the Americans abandoned them so quickly and without support. He was not angry. Just mystified.
YOU are personally responsible for that 8 year old boys parents being killed. YOU pressured the US into an unnecessary withdrawl before stabilization and demilitarization. YOU may not have pulled the trigger, but you cared nothing of what would happen to him when the war “ended”.

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