Tomorrow, the 4th of May is a
sad day in American history. It is a distasteful memory and inimical to the
liberty for which we stand. However, there are profound lessons in the
remembering.
1970 Kent State, a college in Ohio. It was
a time of great tension and confrontation in this country over our involvement
in Vietnam. It was a moment of regrettable action in our history. Four young
lives were lost when Ohio National Guardsmen opened fire on a crowd of anti-war
protesters.
Dissent, through the right of assembly, is
a guaranteed freedom of our constitution, but on that day frazzled nerves and
ambient fear prevailed and tragic mistakes happened.
Democracy, for those who practice it and
for those who seek it, can sometimes be painful in its quest for fulfillment.
Russia knows it.
Lithuania knows it.
Poland knows it.
Hungary knows it.
The students of China’s Tienanmen Square
know it and Kent State knows it.
Perhaps a proof that the four students did
not die in vain is the fact that America remembers a terrible event in the
continuing expression of freedom and a demand that it never happen again.
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