EDITOR’S NOTE: There has been a lot of comment on this post which ran earlier, so we’re moving it up for afternoon readership. There are NEWER posts underneath it so please SCROLL DOWN when you’re through.
In October 1967, I covered an anti-Vietnam War protest March on the Pentagon for my college newspaper. That historic event, considered a turning point in opposition to the war, is perhaps best remembered by photographs of protesters slipping flowers into the muzzles of the rifles of the Army troops who ringed the Pentagon.
On Saturday, some 40 years later, I retraced my steps at another March on the Pentagon, this time a protest against the Iraq War on its fourth anniversary and a commemoration of the 1967 march.
Please click here for a then-and-now report at Kiko’s House.