Boston Massacre Vs. Kent State ShootingsJoin now to read essay Boston Massacre Vs. Kent State ShootingsIt is often said to remember important mistakes, crimes, declines, anything negative so that, “History does not repeat itself.” Some of the notable mistakes include strategic errors in wars; such as the French, in World War I, stacking the Maginot Line while the Germans marched around it, and in World War II doing the exact same thing. Other mistakes include incidents on domestic soil in which protests turn violent such as the Boston Massacre in 1770 and the Kent State Shootings in 1970. Other than each happening on Mondays and occurring almost two hundred years apart, the two draw deeper comparisons to one another which caused widespread protest leaving marks in American history. Upon reviewing these two cases it triggers the question, did history repeat itself?

There is a similarity between the events building up to these two tragic incidents. A series of government actions brought up large crowds of hostile crowds which resulted in the bringing in of government officials to contain the situation causing a tense relationship among the two groups which was eventually snapped as lives were taken.

The Boston Massacre was started by a series of events that included citizens of the colonies tangling up with British soldiers leading up to the March 5th event with soldiers trying to maintain order against the angry, violent protesters. While it is still controversial as to which party is to take the blame for this incident, the violent but non-fatal crowd or the threatened soldiers. Either way, there is no question this event had a major impact on the new nation and as John Adams put it:

On that night the formation of American Independence was laid… Not the battle of Lexington or Bunker Hill, not the surrender of Burgoyne or Cornwallis were more important events in American history than the battle of King street on the 5th of March, 1770. (1)

A few acts by the British government would eventually ignite hostilitiesbetween the colonists and British soldiers. In July, 1766, in hopes of bringing in more revenue, the British decided to increase the number of customs officials as well as deciding to pay governors, judges, and revenue officers directly from the king in order that they become independent from the colonies in any way. In addition, more military forces were brought in, especially in Boston. Furthermore in October, 1767, a new set of taxes on colonial imports were enforced angering the colonists even more. (2) In early March, 1770, disputes between colonists and soldiers began. On March 2nd, 1770, a roper maker by the name of William Green asked a passing by British soldier if he would like some work. When the soldier replied yes, Green then told the soldier that he could clean the bathroom. This caused a fight between the two men which Green ended up winning. The soldier then left and brought back more soldiers and they fought against Green and other rope makers, losing again. When the soldiers brought more back the second time, the owner of the rope yard stopped the fighting. (3)

The Kent State shootings, like the Boston Massacre, involved authorities brought in to maintain order against protesters and ending in violence; similarly the days before the shootings there were confrontations between the testy guardsmen and violent protesters provoking the fateful day on May 4th, 1970. Contentious questions arose from these shootings as well. Why did the guardsmen shoot upon the crowd when there were obviously no lives in danger? Who was responsible for these shootings? “Kent State is listed by The National Examiner as #51 in its list of top on hundred scandals of the twentieth century.” (4) According to the Grand Jury report, it was concluded that:

The fact that we have found those Guardsmen who fired their weapons acted in self-defense is not an endorsement by us of the manner in which those in command of the National Guard re-acted. To the contrary we have concluded that the group of Guardsmen who were ordered to disperse the crowd on the Commons were placed in an untenable and dangerous position. (5)

The catalyst to the shootings began on April 30th, 1970 when President RichardNixon announced to the public that the United States would be invading Cambodia in order to attack the Viet Cong headquarters. President Nixon stated, “We take these actions, not for the purpose of expanding the war into Cambodia, but for the purpose of ending the war in Vietnam, and winning the just peace we all desire.” (6) Widespread protests spread like wildfire all across the nation, especially on colleges campuses. At Kent State University in Kent, Ohio, student protesters gathered on May 1st, 1970 at noon in the middle of the campus at a large, grassy area known as the Commons where rallies and demonstrations had previously been held. Organized by

Nathaniel Miller, a journalist and the director of the KSU Center for Security Studies at KSU, protestors began gathering at the campus. The protest began by announcing the establishment of a National Guard Reserve the first Sunday of August. The guards told them that all the National Guardsmen would be deployed to the compound and the building would be shut down in an hour. In total, there were approximately 17,000 National Guard positions at the site. The protesters and their allies attacked two of these guards: and . “The U.S.-Cambodia Agreement of 1970” was signed by Ambassador William B. McClintock and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. McClintock and by Secretary of State William Mitchell on a Sunday. On Monday, July 23, Mr. McClintock wrote an article for The Boston Globe in which he stated, “[t]he U.S.-Cambodia agreement is the United States Government’s attempt to give the Vietnamese communists control over the Cambodian military base, while the Cambodian government insists that it is the United States that seeks to be the sole legitimate government of the Khmer Rouge. The last thing the Khmer Rouge wish is to build Cambodia as its own. However, the U.S.-Cambodia deal is no different, because the U.S.-Cambodia agreement does not include the Cambodian government saying its goal is to use its control over the base “to force the Cambodian government to pay compensation to the Cambodian people for the deaths of its own workers.
On April 30th, the Vietnamese military launched a strike against the Phu Bonshi Base. It has been documented that from November 1 to the 20th, Vietnamese counterinsurgent attacks have killed nearly 20,000 people from Phu Bonshi alone. While Cambodian officials have claimed that some of the attacks have been directed from North Phu Bonshi, the Vietnamese claim the victims are all women, children and men.  The Vietnamese military’s claims have been rejected by the Vietnamese Embassy in Washington as inconsistent with their own history and history.  What the Embassy says about these attacks, however, does not stand in stark contrast to what the Vietnamese have claimed about what they are accusing the government of. As the Associated Press of Phnom Penh has documented, the Vietnamese government maintains that all of the attacks by Cambodian forces are politically motivated.  The Vietnamese ambassador to the United Nations, Dr. Nguyen Hung Ho, asserted that the Cambodian government’s official account of the attacks came from a military press

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