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Showing posts with label Kent State. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kent State. Show all posts

11 September 2025

National Guard documents show public ‘fear,’ veterans’ ‘shame’ over D.C. presence 10SEP25



 Those of us old enough to remember the murder of 4 and the wounding of 9 Kent State students on 4 May 1970 have good reason to not trust the deployment of National Guard on our streets. To those who say this is ancient history and it was only 13 casualties let karma make it be someone from your family the next time it happens, and it will happen because National Guard troops are not thoroughly trained in civilian policing...

National Guard documents show public ‘fear,’ veterans’ ‘shame’ over D.C. presence


Internal documents reviewed by The Post show how domestic missions rooted in politics risk damaging Americans’ trust in the military.


Updated
September 10, 2025 at 3:23 p.m. EDTyesterday at 3:23 p.m. EDT

The National Guard, in measuring public sentiment about President Donald Trump’s federal takeover of Washington, D.C., has assessed that its mission is perceived as “leveraging fear,” driving a “wedge between citizens and the military,” and promoting a sense of “shame” among some troops and veterans, according to internal documents reviewed by The Washington Post.

The assessments, which have not been previously reported, underscore how domestic mobilizations that are rooted in politics risk damaging Americans’ confidence in the men and women who serve their communities in times of crisis. The documents reveal, too, with a rare candor in some cases, that military officials have been kept apprised that their mission is viewed by a segment of society as wasteful, counterproductive and a threat to long-standing precedent stipulating that U.S. soldiers — with rare exception — are to be kept out of domestic law enforcement matters.

Trump has said the activation of more than 2,300 National Guard troops was necessary to reduce crime in the nation’s capital, though data maintained by the D.C. police indicates an appreciable decline was underway long before his August declaration of an “emergency.” In the weeks since, the Guard has spotlighted troops’ work assisting the police and “beautifying” the city by laying mulch and picking up trash, part of a daily disclosure to the news media generated by Joint Task Force D.C., the military command overseeing the deployment.

Not for public consumption, however, is an internal “media roll up” that analyzes the tone of news stories and social media posts about the National Guard’s presence and activities in Washington. Government media relations personnel routinely produce such assessments and provide summaries to senior leaders for their awareness. They stop short of drawing conclusions about the sentiments being raised.

“Trending videos show residents reacting with alarm and indignation,” a summary from Friday said. “One segment features a local [resident] describing the Guard’s presence as leveraging fear, not security — highlighting widespread discomfort with what many perceive as a show of force.”

A National Guard official acknowledged the documents are authentic but downplayed their sensitivity, saying the assessments are intended for internal use and were inadvertently emailed to The Post last week. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity, citing an unspecified policy. It is unclear how many people mistakenly received the documents.

Col. Dave Butler, an Army spokesman, said the summaries have a singular purpose: to keep the military connected to Americans.

“Of course the Army pays attention to the media. It’d be irresponsible not to see what they’re saying about our service members and the missions they’re assigned, especially those that are in direct service to American citizens,” Butler said. “We have a responsibility to keep the American public informed, and that includes verifying the facts are accurately represented in the media.”

Butler’s statement did not address the public discussion on social media that is summarized in the reports.

A National Guard assessment measuring public sentiment accidentally provided to The Washington Post on Friday. (The National Guard)
Social media posts about the military mission in D.C. summarized on Friday were assessed to be 53 percent negative, 45 percent neutral and 2 percent positive, the documents say.

While officials have insisted that troops are not policing, their actions have sometimes blurred the lines between soldiering and law enforcement, including detaining criminal suspects until police have arrived. One soldier has been credited with helping the apparent victim of a drug overdose by giving them Narcan, officials have noted.

For most Washington residents and tourists, though, the troops often are most visible at Metro stops and federal monuments, looking bored and absorbing both praise and insults from passersby.

Friday’s assessment highlights “Mentions of Fatigue, confusion, and demoralization — ‘just gardening,’ unclear mission, wedge between citizens and the military.”
The National Guard was ordered to this mission and does not have a responsibility to make it palatable to the public, said Jason Dempsey, a former Army officer who studies civil military affairs for the Center for a New American Security. But, he said, military leaders should think about how deployments with political undertones could have implications for recruiting and sustaining the force.

The themes raised in these assessments, Dempsey said, also should give pause to American citizens. National Guard troops are overseen by governors, who almost always provide their approval when those forces are mobilized for federal service overseas or within the United States. But the mission in Washington, and an earlier deployment to Los Angeles, both occurred against the consent of civil authorities in those jurisdictions.

“When elected representatives say, ‘We do not want them,’ but the federal government sends them, and then you see these kinds of numbers,” he said, “it does raise existential questions for the health of the National Guard, for how America views its National Guard and how America uses the military writ large.”
Such concerns also were spelled out in a separate cache of internal documents that outlined another Trump administration initiative: the creation of a “quick reaction force” of National Guard troops to respond to civil unrest anywhere in the United States. In that case, first reported by The Post as Trump’s D.C. deployment got underway in mid-August, military officials voiced concern about “potential political sensitivities” and “legal considerations related to their role as a nonpartisan force.”

Trump has since signed an executive order directing formation of the quick reaction force.

In examining public opinions online, Guard officials last week highlighted the sentiments shared by people who self-identified as veterans and active-duty troops, who, the documents show, say they viewed the deployment “with shame and alarm.” The assessment also homed in on how people are reacting to various court cases challenging Trump’s domestic military deployments.

A federal judge last week ruled Trump’s mobilization of nearly 5,000 U.S. troops to Los Angeles in June was an illegal use of military force to conduct law enforcement. An appeals court later granted the Trump administration’s motion for a stay in the case until its argument could be heard in greater detail — allowing the military mission there to continue. About 300 National Guard troops remain in the area.

The D.C. deployment, which includes troops not only from the District but from eight Republican-led states as well, is the subject of a lawsuit by city officials who argue that Trump broke the law by putting Guard troops into law enforcement roles. The public reaction being monitored by military officials focuses on “debate about the legality of the mission, whether it’s needed and if it has been successful,” one assessment reads, noting that there is ongoing criticism of the mission as “federal overreach and politically motivated.”

Others viewed the ongoing lawsuit in Washington as “unreasonable,” the assessment shows.

The National Guard has sometimes struggled to highlight significant impact from their presence. The public summary from Tuesday, for instance, noted a sole example of troops providing undescribed support to police at Union Station when a person was “acting aggressively.” The person was ushered out the door, the Guard noted.

In another update, the Guard indicates troops “continue efforts to restore and beautify public spaces across the District” and have “cleared 906 bags of trash, spread 744 cubic yards of mulch, removed five truckloads of plant waste, cleared 3.2 miles of roadway, and painted 270 feet of fencing.”

Those statistics may be among the most consequential takeaways of Trump’s use of the military in D.C., Dempsey said, and should prompt scrutiny of whether this mission was ever necessary in the first place.

“That is such a suboptimal use of military training that we should all be asking, ‘Why are they here?’” Dempsey said. “If they’re picking up trash, they’re not here for a security emergency. There’s no clearer metric than that.”

Trump’s D.C. takeover

The latest: See what has happened in the 30 days since President Trump’s federal takeover. D.C.’s attorney general sued Trump and his administration over the deployment of the National Guard in the nation’s capital. The Trump administration is also expected to approve an extension of U.S. troops’ deployment in D.C.

How we got here: President Donald Trump announced a federal takeover of D.C. police and deployed National Guard troops in the city. He painted the nation’s capital as overrun with crime, despite data that contradict his claims. Here’s how D.C. residents are reacting.

What you should know: See where federal agents have been spotted patrolling D.C. These are your rights if you’re stopped by local or federal authorities. D.C.’s tourism and image are taking a hit with the National Guard and ICE in town, analysts say.

Help us report on the Pentagon

The Washington Post wants to hear from Defense Department civilians and service members about changes within the Pentagon and throughout the U.S. military. You can contact our reporters by email or Signal encrypted message:
Tara Copp: tara.copp@washpost.com or taracopp.06 on Signal.
Alex Horton: alex.horton@washpost.com or alexhorton.85 on Signal.
Dan Lamothe: dan.lamothe@washpost.com or danlamothe.30 on Signal.
Read more about how to use Signal and other ways to securely contact The Post.
By Alex Horton

Alex Horton is a national security reporter for The Washington Post focused on the U.S. military. He served in Iraq as an Army infantryman. Send him secure tips on Signal at alexhorton.85



Posted by Bucknackt at 03:21 No comments:
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Labels: D.C., D.C. Home Rule, D.C. National Guard, democracy, fake national emergency, fascism, federalized National Guard, freedom, Kent State, NOT MY pres drumpf / trump, Posse Comitatus, US Constitution

21 May 2010

KENT STATE 4MAI1970 & JACKSON STATE 14MAI1970 from NPR

I was 12 years old when the murders at Kent State took place, and I remember being angry at the pigs who murdered these students and the government and even a little at my father, because at the time he was your usual vet,  blue collar, union working man who believed in "America, love it or leave it" propaganda. He didn't express joy at these tragedies, but he did express the opinion that the students shouldn't have done what they did. Mom was a union member, working in the local hospital and she didn't say anything other than how sad it all was. I believe she was conflicted because her brother, Bud, was in Vietnam.That whole situation, the war, the 10s of thousands of American lives wasted, the millions of Vietnamese, Cambodian and Lao lives wasted, the politics, the protest....ugly days, ugly years....it is a wonder this country didn't explode in civil war. My mom's brother....he came back alive, thank God, after surviving the Tet offensive trapped in Pleiku, and died a horrible death from a bizarre form of leukemia from exposure to Agent Orange. Special note here, no thanks to the Army and the Vets Administration, any treatment Uncle Bud got from them he had  to fight for, I know the stress from their neglect hastened his death.
Click the header to go to the kentstate1970.org website.

by Noah Adams
May 3, 2010

Listen to the Story

Morning Edition
[7 min 46 sec]
 

Audio Slideshow: A Kent State Retrospective

Ohio National Guardsmen stand in front of the Army ROTC 
building.

View WKSU's Audio And Visual Look Back

Mary Ann 
Vecchio screams as she kneels over the body of Jeffrey Miller at Kent 
State on May 4, 1970.
Courtesy of John Filo via WKSU Mary Ann Vecchio screams as she kneels over the body of Jeffrey Miller after he was shot during an anti-war demonstration at Kent State University in Ohio on May 4, 1970. Four students were killed when Ohio National Guard troops fired at some 600 anti-war demonstrators. This photo, taken by John Filo, won the Pulitzer Prize.

May 3, 2010
Out in the world, when people talk about the shootings at Kent State University on May 4, 1970, they call it "Kent State." But in the small town of Kent, 35 miles south of Cleveland, and on the university campus, they call it "May 4th."
It was 40 years ago Tuesday that the shootings — which killed four people and wounded nine others — stunned the nation. Even at the height of the Vietnam War protests, no one imagined that government soldiers would fire real bullets at unarmed college students.
"I saw the smoke come out of the weapons, and light is faster than sound, and so I knew immediately [they] were not firing blanks. So it was almost instinctive to dive for cover," remembers Jerry Lewis, who was 33 and teaching sociology at Kent State in 1970.
Often, at tense times, Lewis served as a faculty marshal. He had some Army training and was worried about bayonet attacks and butt strokes with M-1 rifles. He hadn't thought about live fire.
Lewis says that when he takes people to the scene of the shooting on the Kent Commons, he likes to point out a particular mark — a perfectly round bullet hole in a steel sculpture.

Jackson State: A Tragedy Widely Forgotten

Just 10 days after the deaths at Kent State, shots rang out at a predominantly black college in the South. Two youths were killed and a dozen wounded in the shooting by police at Jackson State in Mississippi.

Little-known off Jackson State's campus, the tragedy came amid increasing racial tensions among students, local youths and law enforcement.

Read More

"This is what an M-1 bullet, .30-caliber bullet, does to steel," he says. "And the artist, to his credit, has refused to fix this. So, ironically, the [National] Guard created their own memorial."
A Lingering Question
Shots rang out for 13 seconds that day, killing Jeffrey Glenn Miller, Allison Krause, William Knox Schroeder and Sandra Lee Scheuer. More than 60 shots came from 28 guardsmen. Some fired into the ground; some fired high on purpose.
The students had gathered for an anti-war rally, and the Guard command had wanted them to go away. Tear gas was fired, and then the canisters flung back. The youths gathered were screaming insults, giving the guardsmen the finger. Rocks were thrown.
Then a group of guardsmen moved in formation to the top of a small hill. Some of them turned in unison, aimed and fired. They could have just kept going over the hill. Most of the students were in a parking lot downhill, more than 100 yards away.
A scene from May 4, 1970, at Kent State University.
Enlarge Courtesy of Kent State University via WKSU A scene from May 4, 1970, at Kent State University. It was 40 years ago Tuesday that the shootings stunned the nation.
A 
scene from May 4, 1970, at Kent State University.
Courtesy of Kent State University via WKSU
A scene from May 4, 1970, at Kent State University. It was 40 years ago Tuesday that the shootings stunned the nation.
For Lewis, after 40 years, that is still the question: Why did the Guard start shooting?
'The Worst Type Of People'
"Obviously, if you turn together in close quarters with bayonet, there must be some coordination, but I've always interpreted as that they planned to fire but fire high — because they were angry ... they were poorly led ... their tear gas masks didn't work properly," Lewis says. "But many people have used the turning together — and there were lots of eyewitnesses to that — as [a sign] that there was a rough agreement to do that, or that there was an order. But I haven't seen any evidence yet that there was an order."
The issue for the students that day became soldiers on their campus.

More From WKSU




  • Explore A New Online Archive Of Audio, Photographs And Video





  • More From Political Junkie

    40 Years After Kent State: Remembering Ohio Gov. James Rhodes
    The noontime rally had been scheduled to protest President Nixon's plan to expand the Vietnam War into Cambodia. That news came the previous Thursday. On Friday night, there was trouble, spilling out of the downtown bars. By Saturday night, when the campus ROTC building was set on fire, the National Guard was already on the way.
    Ohio's governor, James Rhodes, a Republican running a law-and-order campaign for the U.S. Senate, was in town on Sunday morning. He was critical of the radicals traveling the country causing trouble.
    "They're worse than the brownshirts and the communist element and also the night riders and vigilantes," Rhodes said. "They're the worst type of people that we harbor in America. And I want to say this: They're not going to take over a campus."
    Teaching History
    The first card that I opened up in the intensive care unit was a very nice-looking card ... but the note in it said, 'Dear communist hippie radical, I hope by the time you read this, you are dead.'
    - Dean Kahler, who was paralyzed during the shootings
    "The first card that I opened up in the intensive care unit was a very nice-looking card," recalls Dean Kahler, who was paralyzed during the shooting. "But the note in it said, 'Dear communist hippie radical, I hope by the time you read this, you are dead.' "
    Kahler was a freshman at Kent State in 1970. He was from a farm family and wanted to be a coach. He was against the war, but on that day, he was mostly curious — about the Guard, about his rights.
    When Kahler heard the shots, he lay on the ground. Then he was hit in the back. He has been in a wheelchair for the past 40 years.
    After he graduated and became a history teacher, he would tell his high school students, "Go home and ask your parents about Kent State."
    Many of the reactions were positive and supportive. Sometimes, a youngster would tell Kahler it was a bad idea: "They told me not to talk to you about it," the students would say.
    Dean Kahler, who was paralyzed during the 
Kent State shootings
    Enlarge Noah Adams/NPR Dean Kahler, who was paralyzed during the shootings, went on to become a high school teacher and covered the events of May 4 in his classes.
    Dean Kahler, who was paralyzed during the Kent State shootings
    Noah Adams/NPR
    Dean Kahler, who was paralyzed during the shootings, went on to become a high school teacher and covered the events of May 4 in his classes.
    "I said, 'Well, you know, I'm teaching American history, so we're going to touch on it,' " Kahler recalls. " 'If you need to be removed from my room and go to another teacher to talk about it, go see the principal and the guidance counselor immediately.' "
    Moving On
    As the 40th anniversary of the shootings approaches, the Kent student TV station has had stories to cover all over campus.
    For Heather VacLav and Eric Snitil, two students who work at the station, the events of May 4, 1970, meant "not much" when it came to choosing a school. They were impressed with Kent State's academic reputation.
    Snitil says he came for the broadcast journalism program — "it's one of the best in the country."
    And VacLav believes the university has turned around what is kind of "Kent State's claim to fame" by being open and creating a memorial.
    "The original May 4 was very sad and tragic," she says. "I think now, looking back at it, the university's kind of just taken something that was negative and tried to turn it into something positive."
    On Monday night, students, faculty, family and friends will honor the four who were slain and the nine who were wounded four decades ago with a candlelight march and a silent vigil.

    Jackson State: A Tragedy Widely Forgotten

    by Whitney Blair Wyckoff
    Two 
students at Jackson State College peer from a window that was shot out 
by police on campus.
    Enlarge Jack Thornell/AP Two students at Jackson State peer from a window that was shot out by police on campus in May 1970.
    Two students at Jackson State 
College peer from a window that was shot out by police on campus.
    Jack Thornell/AP
    Two students at Jackson State peer from a window that was shot out by police on campus in May 1970.
    May 3, 2010
    A group of angry students. A burst of gunfire from authorities. Young lives cut short.
    It sounds a lot like the Kent State shootings on May 4, 1970, but it happened 10 days later at a predominantly black college in the South.
    Police fired for about 30 seconds on a group of students at Jackson State in Mississippi, killing two and wounding 12 others.
    The tragedy was the culmination of increasing friction among students, local youths and law enforcement. On the evening of May 14, African-American youths were reportedly pelting rocks at white motorists driving down the main road through campus — frequently the site of confrontations between white and black Jackson residents.
    Tensions rose higher when a rumor spread around campus that Charles Evers — a local politician, civil rights leader and the brother of slain activist Medgar Evers — and his wife had been killed, according to Lynch Street: The May 1970 Slayings at Jackson State College. The situation escalated when a non-Jackson State student set a dump truck on fire.
    Police responded to the call. A group of students and non-students threw rocks and bricks at the officers. Police advanced to Alexander Hall, a large dorm for women.
    According to a 1970 report from the President's Commission on Campus Unrest, police fired more than 150 rounds. And an FBI investigation revealed that about 400 bullets or pieces of buckshot had been fired into Alexander Hall. The shooters claimed that there was a sniper in the dorm, but investigators found "insufficient evidence" of that claim.
    The two young men who were gunned down in the melee were Phillip L. Gibbs, a junior at Jackson State and the father of an 18-month-old; and James Earl Green, a high school senior.
    Jackson State Today
    The event continues to leave a mark on the university. Even today, passers-by can see the bullet holes in the women's dorm. A plaza on campus commemorates the victims of the shooting.
    All Jackson State students learn about the shooting in a mandatory orientation class, and professors evoke the event as a teaching tool.
    C. Liegh McInnis, who teaches creative writing and world literature at Jackson State, says the story of the shooting is integrated into the curriculum of several liberal arts departments.
    In McInnis' own freshman composition class, students are required to see the bullet holes in the women's dorm themselves while researching a critical analysis paper about the shooting.
    On Thursday, Jackson State held a 40th anniversary memorial to pay tribute to the victims of the shooting. The event brought back 24 alumni who attended Jackson State in 1970, some of whom had been injured that night.
    "The tragedy showed the resolve of the students," McInnis said.
    McInnis said all of the alumni — who had traveled from places like Houston and Detroit — ended up being leaders in their fields and their communities.
    "What the shooting did is that it showed, even through this heinous act, black intellect could not be stopped," McInnis said.

    Related NPR Stories

    Kent State Victim Claims Evidence Of Order To Fire May 1, 2007
    The Kent State Shootings, 35 Years Later May 4, 2005
    Kent State Remembered May 4, 2000
    Posted by Bucknackt at 14:16 No comments:
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    Labels: 4 Dead In Ohio, Cambodia, Jackson State, Kent State, Laos, National Guard, protest, Tet Offensive, Vietnam
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    Bucknackt
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    Love my family & friends, the outdoors, camping, hiking, wandering in the woods or on the beach, concerts at Wolf Trap, the Smithsonians and the Mall in D.C. Enjoy all kinds of music except rap and scat jazz. Read a lot, history and politics, murder mysteries, crime and espionage books. Love PBS and NPR and yes, I support my local stations each year. And bears....I love bears! And my name, Bucknackt? It is from an episode of Seinfeld...Jerry and George are talking about porn and George said if he was ever a porn star his screen name would be Buck Naked. That just struck me as hysterical...so I made it my screen name, auf Deutsch!
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