Remembering Vietnam War Foe Carl Oglesby 
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/carl_oglesby_sds_president_1935-2011_20110913/
 
Sep 13, 2011 
By Bob Katz 



Editor’s note: Author and journalist Bob Katz was a friend and colleague of 
Carl Oglesby and sent this remembrance, which has been edited for style. 




Carl Oglesby, one of the most influential figures of the 1960s counterculture, 
died Tuesday at his home in Montclair, N.J., after a short illness. 

An acclaimed political theorist, orator, playwright, musician and writer, 
Oglesby served as president of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) from 
1965 to 1966 and played a leading role in the opposition to the Vietnam War. A 
self-defined “radical centrist” and defense industry technical writer living in 
suburban Michigan with his wife and children when the war began, he soon became 
one of its most eloquent foes. 

On Nov. 27, 1965, Oglesby gave a speech before tens of thousands of anti-war 
demonstrators in Washington, D.C., that became one of the most important 
documents to come out of the anti-war movement. According to historian 
Kirkpatrick Sale: “It was a devastating performance: skilled, moderate, learned 
and compassionate, but uncompromising, angry, radical and above all persuasive. 
It drew the only standing ovation of the afternoon.” 

After the demise of SDS, Oglesby taught politics at Antioch, Dartmouth College 
and MIT, and wrote a column for the Boston Phoenix that merged geopolitical 
theory with his keen interest in the hidden dimensions of the Watergate 
scandal, the John F. Kennedy assassination and the CIA. 


He was the author of several books, including “Containment and Change,” “The 
Yankee and Cowboy War: Conspiracies from Dallas to Watergate” and most recently 
the memoir, “Ravens in the Storm: A Personal History of the 1960s Antiwar 
Movement.” 

Oglesby is survived by his children, Aron DiBacco, Shay Oglesby-Smith and 
Caleb, and his partner, Barbara Webster. 

Below is an excerpt from the end of his most famous D.C. speech: 



Let me then speak directly to humanist liberals. If my facts are wrong, I will 
soon be corrected. But if they are right, then you may face a crisis of 
conscience. Corporatism or humanism: which? For it has come to that. Will you 
let your dreams be used? Will you be a grudging apologist for the corporate 
state? Or will you help try to change it—not in the name of this or that 
blueprint or ism, but in the name of simple human decency and democracy and the 
vision that wise and brave men saw in the time of our own revolution? 

And if your commitment to human values is unconditional, then disabuse 
yourselves of the notion that statements will bring change, if only the right 
statements can be written, or that interviews with the mighty will bring change 
if only the mighty can be reached, or that marches will bring change if only we 
can make them massive enough, or that policy proposals will bring change if 
only we can make them responsible enough. 

We are dealing now with a colossus that does not want to be changed. It will 
not change itself. It will not cooperate with those who want to change it. 
Those allies of ours in the government—are they really our allies? If they are, 
then they don’t need advice, they need constituencies; they don’t need study 
groups, they need a movement. And it they are not, then all the more reason for 
building that movement with the most relentless conviction. 

There are people in this country today who are trying to build that movement, 
who aim at nothing less than a humanist reformation. And the humanist liberals 
must understand that it is this movement with which their own best hopes are 
most in tune. We radicals know the same history that you liberals know, and we 
can understand your occasional cynicism, exasperation, and even distrust. But 
we ask you to put these aside and help us risk a leap. Help us find enough time 
for the enormous work that needs doing here. Help us build. Help us shape the 
future in the name of plain human hope. 
. 






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