User:Tule-hog/Political violence in the United States during the Cold War
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Political violence in the United States during the Cold War
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The United States faced multiple waves of political violence during the Cold War. The first would occur as a result of the reemergence of the Ku Klux Klan in 1950, in opposition to the growing civil rights movement, which sought an end to racial segregation and other forms of institutional racism. The new Klan also gained a new anti-communist and neo-fascist element, in response to the rise of anti-communist ideas in American society as a result of the Red Scare. Other white supremacist organizations would arise at the same time, such as the American Nazi Party. In Puerto Rico, the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party would launch a series of revolts throughout the 50s, including an attempted assassination of Harry S. Truman. In the early 60s, standoffs between federal and state governments would result in events such as the Little Rock Crisis and the Ole Miss riot of 1962.
Political violence in the United States would increase throughout the 60s and 70s, which included the rise of many left-wing militant groups such as Weather Underground, the Black Panther Party, the Symbionese Liberation Army, and the May 19th Communist Organization. Some of which (chiefly the WUO and M19), would launch a series of bombings against various targets, mainly those associated with the federal government. Clashes between demonstrators and the police would be a major aspect of the protests against the US' involvement in the Vietnam War, culminating in the Kent State shootings and the Jackson State killings, both perpetrated by the National Guard. Events dubbed the "Ghetto riots" would occur throughout the 60s as a backlash against racial discrimination in impoverished mostly-African American neighborhoods.
Racist backlash against the civil rights movement and the Black power movement would continue in the form of the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing by four members of the KKK and the later Greensboro massacre in 1979. 1968 is often highlighted as a particularly chaotic year in American history,[5] which included an escalation of the Vietnam War, the widely televised 1968 Democratic National Convention protests, and the assassinations of both Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr.
The federal government would commit acts of illegal surveillance against movements considered subversive as part of its COINTELPRO operation from 1956 to 1971, which allegedly backed militant anti-communist organizations, such as Secret Army Organization. Clashes between police and organizations associated with the Black Power movement would culminate in the 1985 MOVE bombing, committed by the Philadelphia Police Department, resulting in the deaths of 11 and the partial destruction of the neighborhood of Cobbs Creek. Attacks committed by left-wing organizations would largely end the same year, with the dissolution of M19. The rise of white supremacist and Neo-Nazi prison gangs throughout the 70s and 80s would result in multiple murders motivated by antisemitism including the murder of the Goldmark family and of Alan Berg.
Leftist political violence mostly died down by the end of the 20th-century. Some far-right organizations founded in the late 20th century would continue to operate.
This period is often known for the number of assassinations that occurred, including those of Medgar Evers, John F. Kennedy, Malcolm X, George Lincoln Rockwell, Martin Luther King Jr., Robert F. Kennedy, Fred Hampton, Huey P. Newton, and Alan Berg.
Events and incidents
edit- Jayuya uprising (1950)
- San Juan Nationalist revolt (1950)
- Utuado uprising (1950)
- Attempted assassination of Harry S. Truman (1950)
- Assassination of Harry T. Moore (1951)
- 1954 United States Capitol shooting (1954)
- Mansfield school desegregation incident (1956)
- Little Rock Crisis (1957)
- Hebrew Benevolent Congregation Temple bombing (1958)
- Battle of Hayes Pond (1958)
- Ax Handle Saturday (1960)
- University of Georgia desegregation riot (1961)
- Birmingham bus attack (1961)
- Ole Miss riot of 1962 (1962)
- Assassination of Medgar Evers (1963)
- 16th Street Baptist Church bombing (1963)
- Assassination of John F. Kennedy (1963)
- Cambridge riot of 1963 (1963)
- Murders of Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner (1964)
- Murder of Frank Morris (1964)
- Murder of Lemuel Penn (1964)
- Harlem riot of 1964 (1964)
- 1964 Rochester race riot (1964)
- Dixmoor race riot (1964)
- 1964 Philadelphia race riot (1964)
- Assassination of Malcolm X (1965)
- Watts riots (1965)
- March Against Fear (1966)
- 1966 Chicago West Side riots (1966)
- Hough riots (1966)
- Waukegan riot of 1966 (1966)
- 1966 Dayton race riot (1966)
- Hunters Point social uprising (1966)
- Assassination of George Lincoln Rockwell (1967)
- Long, hot summer of 1967 (1967)
- March on the Pentagon (1967)
- Orangeburg Massacre (1968)
- Glenville shootout and riots (1968)
- 1968 Democratic National Convention protests (1968)
- Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy (1968)
- Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. (1968)
- King assassination riots (1968)
- 1968 Chicago riots (1968)
- 1968 Columbia University protests (1968)
- 1969 York race riot (1969)
- Weather High School Jailbreaks (1969)
- Tate–LaBianca murders (1969)
- Days of Rage (1969)
- Assassination of Fred Hampton (1969)
- Greensboro uprising (1969)
- Southern University shootings (1969)
- Occupation of Alcatraz (1969–1971)
- Stonewall riots (1969)
- Flint War Council (1969)
- San Francisco Police Department Park Station bombing (1970)
- Greenwich Village townhouse explosion (1970)
- Kent State shootings (1970)
- Jackson State killings (1970)
- Sterling Hall bombing (1970)
- Marin County Civic Center attacks (1970)
- New Haven Black Panther trials (1971)
- Attica Prison riot (1971)
- Delta Air Lines Flight 841 hijacking (1972)
- Mark Essex shootings (1973)
- Wounded Knee Occupation (1973)
- Murder of Marcus Foster (1973)
- Kidnapping of Patty Hearst (1974)
- SLA Shootout (1974)
- Crocker National Bank robbery (1975)
- Attempted assassination of Gerald Ford in Sacramento (1975)
- Attempted assassination of Gerald Ford in San Francisco (1975)
- Murder of Leo Ryan (1978)
- Jonestown massacre (1978)
- Greensboro massacre (1979)
- Fort Chaffee crisis (1980)
- 1981 Brink's robbery (1981)
- 1981 Muñiz Air National Guard Base attack (1981)
- Miracle Valley shootout (1982)
- 1983 United States Senate bombing (1983)
- Murder of the Goldmark family (1984)
- Murder of Alan Berg (1984)
- Murder of Alex Odeh (1985)
- MOVE bombing (1985)
- Assassination of Tscherim Soobzokov (1985)
- Fort Smith sedition trial (1988)
- Murder of Huey P. Newton (1989)
- Castro Sweep (1989)
- Assassination of Meir Kahane (1990)
Aftermath
editThe Greensboro massacre has been credited by some as having resulted in the convergence of disparate white supremacist ideologies in the United States and forming the precursor of modern far-right movements, such as the alt-right.[6]
See also
edit- Terrorism in the United States
- List of incidents of civil unrest in the United States
- Mass racial violence in the United States
- COINTELPRO
- Operation Gladio
Similar conflicts
editNotes
edit- ^ a b c d e f g Dissolved
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Members arrested
- ^ a b c d Fractured
- ^ Members joined M19
- ^ Dissolved by police
- ^ Vietnamese Organization to Exterminate Communists and Restore the Nation
- ^ Assassinated
- ^ Assassinated
- ^ Killed by member of the Black Guerrilla Family
- ^ Assassinated by police
- ^ Burned to death
- ^ Disappeared
- ^ a b Died in shootout with police
- ^ Assassinated by former ANP member
References
edit- ^ Bryan Laplaca. Aug. 15, 2023. "Back in the Day, Dec. 12, 1965: KKK back in action. NorthJersey.com. http://www.northjersey.com/community/history/back_in_the_day/111768899_KKK_back_in_action.html
- ^ Teepen, Tom (29 March 1998). "Mississippi panel terrorized blacks". Deseret News. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ Sack, Kevin (18 March 1998). "Mississippi Reveals Dark Secrets of a Racist Time (Published 1998)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
- ^ "Global Terrorism Database". www.start.umd.edu.
- ^ McLaughlin, Katie (31 July 2014). "Eight unforgettable ways 1968 made history". CNN.
- ^ "The Massacre That Spawned the Alt-Right". Politico.