’60s Antiwar Leader Carl Oglesby, RIP 




http://www.antiwar.com/blog/2011/09/14/60s-antiwar-leader-carl-oglesby-rip/ 




Eric Garris, September 14, 2011 



I was sad to read this morning of the death of Carl Oglesby, one of the great 
leaders of the early Vietnam antiwar movement. 

Oglesby was a leader and one-time president of Students for a Democratic 
Society (SDS). SDS was the leading antiwar students group in the 1960s until 
factional politics caused the implosion of the group in 1969. Another SDS 
leader once described the makeup of SDS: “We have within our ranks Communists 
of both varieties, socialists of all sorts, 3 or 4 different kinds of 
anarchists, anarchosyndicalists, syndicalists, social democrats, humanist 
liberals, a growing number of ex-YAF libertarian laissez-faire capitalists, 
and, of course, the articulate vanguard of the psychedelic liberation front.” 

I joined my high school’s SDS in late 1968 and was quite active until shortly 
after the split in the national organization (and subsequently, the local Los 
Angeles high school group). My attraction to the organization was its 
mass-based approach under the leadership of Oglesby. 

Oglesby was a proponent of working with libertarians and conservative antiwar 
activists in such groups as Young Americans for Freedom on war and other 
issues. He argued that “the Old Right and the New Left are morally and 
politically coordinate.” 

In his essay “Vietnamese Crucible,” published in the 1967 volume Containment 
and Change , Oglesby rejected the “socialist radical, the corporatist 
conservative, and the welfare-state liberal” and challenged the New Left to 
embrace “American democratic populism” and “the American libertarian right.” 

Oglesby was expelled from SDS in 1969, after more left-wing members accused him 
of “being ‘trapped in our early, bourgeois stage’ and for not progressing into 
‘a Marxist-Leninist perspective.’” 

Oglesby later became a writer, a musician, and an academic. He wrote several 
books on the JFK assassination and American class analysis. He also recorded 
two albums, roughly in the folk-rock genre. He taught politics at the 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Dartmouth College. 

Oglesby was friends with Murray Rothbard and other libertarian leaders. 
Rothbard wrote approvingly of Oglesby’s writings, particularly his books The 
Yankee and Cowboy War: Conspiracies from Dallas to Watergate and Containment 
and Change . 

In a later work, Ravens in the Storm: A Personal History of the 1960s Anti-War 
Movement , Oglesby said that two historians “rang his bell”: “One was the 
liberal William Appleman Williams, and the other was the conservative Murray 
Rothbard. They were both libertarians, and that is what I had begun calling 
myself. I still do. Libertarianism is a stance that allows one to speak to the 
right as well as to the left, which is what I was always trying to do.” 

Oglesby’s fight to broaden and open the antiwar movement is still being waged 
today. We can hope that people will remember the lessons of SDS’s demise and 
advance beyond sectarianism. 




. 

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