Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young - Ohio REACTION/REVIEW

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024
  • Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young - Ohio REACTION/REVIEW
    BizMatik Reviews and Reacts to Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young - Ohio
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Komentáře • 274

  • @CIB70637
    @CIB70637 Před rokem +25

    I was in a Army Hospital at the time recovering from being wounded in Viet Nam. When I saw that those National Guardsmen had killed unarmed students I was more than infuriated….I wanted revenge against those frightened so called soldiers. From months of jungle warfare where the shit really happens to seeing these cowards cutting down our own… I wished I could have taken my fellow soldiers and stood shoulder to shoulder with those students. Those Guardsmen wouldn’t stand a chance.

  • @LindaEll
    @LindaEll Před rokem +123

    A friend of mine was a student at Kent State that day. Just trying to walk to class he was confronted by an army tank coming at him. Horrifying. Can you imagine how parents would react today if the national guard starting shooting college students?

    • @nickface55
      @nickface55 Před rokem +4

      It must have been a horrifying experience for anyone there. I'm not trying to belittle it in any way, but the Ohio National Guard did not have tanks at Kent State at that time. They did I believe have a few M113's which is an armored personnel carrier, albeit a very poor one. Even though it doesn't look much like a tank, I guess someone who did not know any better might have confused it.

    • @tonydagostino6158
      @tonydagostino6158 Před rokem

      Maga would applaud it

    • @garywilloughby6893
      @garywilloughby6893 Před rokem +4

      I was at a college in southern Indiana... it was traumatic I'll tell you. Kent State students killed by the Guard.

    • @curmudgeon1933
      @curmudgeon1933 Před rokem +6

      Parents don't seem to have too much to say about the horrifying death toll from gun deaths nowadays... more than 200 mass shootings in the US so far this year, 24 of them at a school.

    • @sleigh4019
      @sleigh4019 Před rokem +4

      There where no tanks .. Jeeps and one Troop carrier but k guess its looking like a mini tank to someone just walking up... Probably scare anyone to death that's never seen them..

  • @alpetrocelli4465
    @alpetrocelli4465 Před rokem +44

    This is the greatest protest song ever written. I was in high school, and the line was drawn. The students were peacefully protesting Nixon’s invasion of Cambodia during the Viet Nam war, and the shooting sparked a nationwide student protest. A sad day in America. ✌️❤️🎶

    • @scottgoodman8993
      @scottgoodman8993 Před 9 měsíci

      Well, not really peaceful. But not really sure it needed a volley of rifle fire to suppress it.

    • @alpetrocelli4465
      @alpetrocelli4465 Před 9 měsíci

      @@scottgoodman8993 None of those murdered by the National Guardsmen were within 300 feet of the firing squad that gunned them down. Save the spin.

    • @annhardink8719
      @annhardink8719 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@scottgoodman8993 were you there or even old enough to read at the time?

    • @scottgoodman8993
      @scottgoodman8993 Před 5 měsíci

      I am 70. I recall reading about the riot very well. I live in Columbus, Ohio. The ROTC building had been burned the night before. Later, in College, I spoke with participants in 72,73 and 74.@@annhardink8719

    • @marynorris8800
      @marynorris8800 Před 4 měsíci +1

      My brother was there (Navy), just observing. He said there was two hippies they were trying to arrest, dragging them and everyone dog piled on the cops! That's when shots were fired!

  • @kwanshiyin
    @kwanshiyin Před rokem +61

    Four college students were killed (Allison Krause, 19, Jeffrey Glenn Miller, 20, Sandra Lee Scheuer, 20, and William Knox Schroeder, 19) and nine wounded (one permanently paralyzed) by the Ohio National Guard on the Kent State campus. Scheuer and Schroeder were just walking to class. The guardsmen claimed they feared for their lives, but there is reason to believe that those claims were fabricated after the event. Of those shot, none was closer than 71 feet to the guardsmen. Of those killed, the nearest (Miller) was 265 feet away, and their average distance from the guardsmen was 345 feet. The victim furthest from the Guard was 750 feet away, some of them shot in the back as they ran. A commission appointed to investigate the shootings concluded "the indiscriminate firing of rifles into a crowd of students and the deaths that followed were unnecessary, unwarranted, and inexcusable."

    • @imnotyourfriendbuddy1883
      @imnotyourfriendbuddy1883 Před rokem

      Some of the guardsmen were students to. Might have been targeted victims.

    • @kthor
      @kthor Před rokem +1

      Sandra was a graduate of Boardman High School....where we live now & my kids graduated from.

  • @zenpuppy6025
    @zenpuppy6025 Před rokem +69

    Don’t ever be ashamed of what you don’t know. Just take it as an opportunity to learn about history. I was a high school student when this happened. At that time they had the draft. They would pick numbers out of a drawing. It was based on your birthdate. Around the first 100 numbers drawn they would be inducted into the military. My draft number was over 300 so I consider myself to have been very fortunate.

    • @stevensprunger3422
      @stevensprunger3422 Před rokem +2

      If I would’ve been a year older I would’ve been available for the draft

    • @garyzink1927
      @garyzink1927 Před rokem +3

      I got a draft card, they ended the draft months later. This occurred when I was in high school. A Tragedy. Prayers for those who suffered.

    • @mesaeddie
      @mesaeddie Před rokem +1

      Same for me I had a draft number in the lower 3 hundreds.The thing is I had already went into the Navy several months prior. I was lucky being a Corpsman .

    • @mikerichards67
      @mikerichards67 Před rokem +1

      Mine was 69 and my father a Korean War veteran told me he was going to send me to Canada luckily for me the draft ended months later,I was very fortunate.

    • @stevensprunger3422
      @stevensprunger3422 Před rokem

      @@mikerichards67
      Yeah I was too young to even think about Canada I don’t know what I would’ve done I didn’t have enough money to go to Canada and nobody would have supported me I mean my parents we didn’t have any money
      My father was in World War II he probably would’ve been ashamed of me but heck I didn’t even know what’s going on back then

  • @cynergy4
    @cynergy4 Před rokem +69

    I remember when it happened very well. I was 14 at the time and was horrified! The images from the newspaper headlines has been seared into my memory forever. The more things change the more they stay the same

    • @markburnham7512
      @markburnham7512 Před rokem +3

      Same here. That was a crazy time for sure.

    • @thomastimlin1724
      @thomastimlin1724 Před rokem

      I was same age. To me the Kent State Massacre was the seed of all gun violence today. The difference is the military guns are no longer exclusive to the military. The Ohio National guard got off Scott free, as did the governor of Ohio running for re-election, proving that justice is for the rich and powerful and freedom of speech is phony dream. People telling me the Richard Nixon was a saint and was framed for Watergate are trying to rewrite history and deify an asshole. I've been on the grounds of Kent state twice in my life to remember and respect the 4, and the living or passed away other 9 victims wounded, one crippled for life. Nothing to do with Racism. But : On May 15, 1970, the police opened fire shortly after midnight on students (and passersby) in a May 14 protest of the U.S. invasion of Cambodia during the Vietnam War at Jackson State College in Mississippi. Twelve students were wounded and two (21-year-old law student Phillip Lafayette Gibbs and 17-year-old high school student James Earl Green) were killed. They were also protesting Vietnam War.

  • @andylawson87
    @andylawson87 Před rokem +13

    I just remember one crying parent on TV sobbing that"his daughter was not a bum!" after Nixon called the protesters "bums".

  • @myownchannel247
    @myownchannel247 Před rokem +64

    CSNY actually pulled their hit song Teach Your Children (by Graham Nash) from radio stations to make room and promote this Neil Young song about the massacre at Kent State

  • @daveshep9400
    @daveshep9400 Před rokem +29

    David drove out to Neil at his cabin with the news article. Neil walked out into the woods and came back and played this. David called Nash or Young and said get us a studio. It was playing on the radio 10 days later

  • @cindyfalstrom7231
    @cindyfalstrom7231 Před rokem +51

    Another very important song form the tumultuous Viet Nam era.This stupid war split the country in two. This event at Kent State was shocking and opened alot of eyes. My boyfriend (now husband) graduated from high school in 1973 and received his draft notice. We were so scared wondering what to do, then the Paris Peace Acoords were signed in 1973 , so miracle - no more war. Big relief for us, but thousands of young men died in this sensless war.

    • @mrnobody3161
      @mrnobody3161 Před rokem +2

      Over 50,000 died. 🕊

    • @trappenweisseguy27
      @trappenweisseguy27 Před rokem +2

      The war dragged on forever and included many nations at different times. There was an excellent series about it called “the 10,000 day war” that may be available here on the Tube.

  • @jenniferfoster1692
    @jenniferfoster1692 Před rokem +23

    This is an incredible song about a horrible tragedy. The video is good because it shows things from that day and the students who were lost.

    • @alimac1469
      @alimac1469 Před rokem +3

      I was going to suggest the video too

  • @rk41gator
    @rk41gator Před rokem +23

    I remember when this tune came out and college campuses were in flames. The Vietnam War was very divisive and this song was an anthem for college age kids. It was so big at the time that even in England, Genesis wrote a song about it called 'The Knife'. It rocks.

  • @stevenmurano7863
    @stevenmurano7863 Před rokem +23

    Given the subject/reason for this song and the story behind its writing, recording and release, this stands as one of the greatest rock songs ever release in my opinion….

  • @jenniferfoster1692
    @jenniferfoster1692 Před rokem +7

    I appreciate you looking up things during the reaction. It was a peaceful protest, the National Guard were in no danger, but they still started shooting. Some of the victims weren't even protesters.

  • @guitarman8462
    @guitarman8462 Před rokem +26

    Neil Young wrote this song in about an hr or so. The incident had a huge impact on him . All of them were also in a band called " Buffalo Springfield ".

    • @boboquisp
      @boboquisp Před rokem +9

      Only Stills and Young were in Buffalo Springfield. Crosby from The Byrds, Nash from The Hollies.

    • @mrnobody3161
      @mrnobody3161 Před rokem

      ​@@boboquisp
      This man has his facts 💯 right ✅

  • @TomTom-ui9hg
    @TomTom-ui9hg Před rokem +9

    It was a time when my generation protested against the Vietnam War and Nixon didn't want the truth or the fact on how bad things were going. He went all out to try and end protesting and tried to make us the enemy. Remember, it was the draft and if your number was picked you had to go fight or you went to jail. It was a difficult time that divided the country. Many people have died because of this damn war but as they say, freedom always comes at a cost. Peace!

  • @arniezelkovitz6885
    @arniezelkovitz6885 Před rokem +5

    “What if you knew her and found her dead on the ground…” well, I knew Allison Krause. She was a neighbor and schoolmate of mine. That phrase always gets to me because I did know her.

  • @ericanderson8886
    @ericanderson8886 Před rokem +24

    Neil Young with the lead in this one, pretty wild times back then. "Almost Cut My Hair" would be another great listen from CSNY.

    • @blindriv3r
      @blindriv3r Před rokem

      Yeah Neil plays the main riff and sings lead, Stills plays the lead guitar part

  • @bethhowton2719
    @bethhowton2719 Před rokem +10

    The only time I ever saw my mom cry over the news was then. I was 12 years old at the time and not paying that much attention. Blessed to have seen them live. Enjoy

  • @gpxo11
    @gpxo11 Před rokem +28

    This is one of those songs where the music is secondary as the message is at the forefront due to its importance and current shock of hearing the news.

  • @Pahdopony
    @Pahdopony Před rokem +9

    May 4th Coalition. I lived about 20 miles from Kent State University in 1970. Such a shocking and horrific event. You have to remember that young men were being drafted into the military to go to a pointless war in Vietnam. At least it was pointless for the US to get involved. Richard Nixon tried to prolong the war during his presidential campaign in an effort to win the presidency which resulted in an expanded US military presence in Vietnam. He had a plan to get the South Vietnamese to take over the region at the expense of our own young men who were being killed. Young people protested against the war and being drafted against their will. It was a turbulent time in American history.

  • @bobschenkel7921
    @bobschenkel7921 Před rokem +18

    One song Neil Young, and everyone else wishes he never had to write. I was twelve years old when this unspeakable act occurred, and I remember it very well. Armed Ohio National Guardsmen shot at unarmed students who were protesting the Viet Nam War. President Nixon and the Governor of Ohio, whose name I chose to forget, ordered the troops on to the campus to control the students, and the commanders on the ground lost control of the troops, and tragedy happened. In a true turn of irony, the Kent State mascot or logo is The Golden Flashes.

  • @stevenkarner6872
    @stevenkarner6872 Před rokem +10

    Look up the famous photo from the Kent St massacre. It will explain this song.

  • @debbieplato5107
    @debbieplato5107 Před rokem +65

    I remember when this happened. There was an anti war protest going on at Kent State. The national guard was there and they got nervous and starting shooting. At least one if not more of the students shot were not even part of the protest. I was 16 at the time and there is a very famous photo that was taken of a women in shock by the body of one of girls that was shot.
    It was on the front page of the newspaper. Being Canadian I met a lot of draft dodgers at that time escaping the Vietnam War.

    • @cynergy4
      @cynergy4 Před rokem +7

      The body was Allison Krause 😞

    • @raymondmanderville505
      @raymondmanderville505 Před rokem

      The national guard was made up of kids , the grocery delivery boy , the guy who makes pizza . They were jumpy & scared & your new to this duty . Some genius lite off fire works & the shooting started . Also the students gave some guardsmen oranges that were injected with LSD . They fucked around & found out .

    • @alanfeldstein9761
      @alanfeldstein9761 Před rokem +2

      God bless all draft dodgers.

    • @AP-gb3eh
      @AP-gb3eh Před rokem +5

      @@raymondmanderville505 where you there or is this some myth told to you. LSD? Fireworks?

    • @raymondmanderville505
      @raymondmanderville505 Před rokem

      @@AP-gb3eh it was on the news back then , but with the disclaimer word “ reputed “

  • @EdwardGregoryNYC
    @EdwardGregoryNYC Před rokem +14

    There was another college massacre less than two weeks later at Jackson State College, a historically black school in Mississippi, killing two young students. They were also protesting the Vietnam War and invasion of Cambodia. But their story was lost in the background of the Kent State story.
    In addition to this monumental song in the history of American popular music, the shooting had an even more lasting effect. Among the witnesses were Gerald Casale, Chrissie Hynde, and Chris Butler, founders respectively of Devo, The Pretenders, and The Waitresses. Devo formed well before punk and new wave became movements, and they are highly influential on the development of both forms. Chrissie would land in London working in retail for Malcolm McLaren and teach Sex Pistols' Steve Jones how to actually play his guitar. They turned her down for joining the band, but her own band, The Pretenders would prove to have longer staying power. And The Waitresses were central in the club scene in NYC during the same period.

    • @rickkane7913
      @rickkane7913 Před rokem +2

      It is terrible to have to admit to not knowing, or maybe remembering, the Jackson State killings. I was 18 at the time and still learning how to adult. Of course this song cut through to the heart and put Kent State high in the consciousness, but there was (and is) a lot of preferential valuing of life. Hopefully these events at least shortened the war...

    • @Jessica_Roth
      @Jessica_Roth Před rokem +2

      Wow, I didn't know about Casale and Butler. Thanks.
      Also present, as I mentioned upthread, were former student Joe Walsh (visiting friends) and the future Alabama football coach, Nick Saban.
      Steve Miller covers both incidents in his "Jackson-Kent Blues" off his album, "Number 5" (which also includes "Industrial-Military Complex Hex" and the antiwar "Never Kill Another Man".
      There was also violence against students at the U. of New Mexico, in between Kent State and Jackson State, on May 8. But because the NM National Guard "only" used bayonets, there were 11 wounded, but no deaths. (Bunch of softies in New Mexico, apparently.)

    • @EdwardGregoryNYC
      @EdwardGregoryNYC Před rokem +1

      @@Jessica_Roth Wow. So much came from this horrifying tragedy. I will check out those songs as well.

  • @karenpowell6063
    @karenpowell6063 Před rokem +4

    Right after the Kent State shootings college campuses all across America exploded with protest . I was a freshman in college at the University of South Carolina, NG on campus for a month . Bad time

  • @garyarnett1220
    @garyarnett1220 Před rokem +12

    One of the fastest songs to ever be released. Neil Young heard what happened, wrote it , they recorded it, and on the air in less than a month. Why were they shot? They happened to be walking by.

  • @pgrigg
    @pgrigg Před rokem +13

    Thanks for sharing this and for your interest and thoughts. If you think about movements like Black Lives Matter or other giant protests, the Viet Nam War and particularly the draft, led to similar giant protests, especially among young people who might be drafted. It went on for years, and was actually quite merged with race relations at the time, though not entirely. Some of the more violent protestors bombed banks and took University offices hostage. It was escalating and Nixon called out the National Guard to protect Kent State University. But the Guard had no training in crowd control at the time and they beat students as students threw rocks at the National Guard. Because there was no one saying don't shoot, the National Guard were fully armed, and not with rubber bullets, and they shot into the crowd, killing those 4 students and wounding 9 others. I was in high school at the time, and only realized later that this moment in our history came to define my entire take on politics, which is that it is our job to make our leaders work for the people, rather than to just trust that they'll do the right thing. Still a very pertinent lesson for our current times.

    • @gaillouise8310
      @gaillouise8310 Před 10 měsíci

      Don't want to watch your channel anymore after your lackadaisical response!!?!

  • @konradv7
    @konradv7 Před rokem +7

    The incident was still in the news and this song was already on the air!

  • @victorjohnson7512
    @victorjohnson7512 Před rokem +11

    I saw Crosby Stills and Nash (but not Neil Young) in 1995 at an outdoor concert. They still had the vocals...

  • @justkaron
    @justkaron Před rokem +7

    I went to work the next morning and one of the salesmen said....it's a damn shame the Natl Guard didn't crack open more heads.... I detested that man BEFORE he ever said that. 😭 I live in Ohio, not real far from Kent state. Horrid times

  • @terenzo50
    @terenzo50 Před rokem +5

    Still pissed off. Two of the dead were just walking between classes.

  • @spikebeans9563
    @spikebeans9563 Před rokem +8

    Was young, but remember when this happened. Good song from a sad situation that should have never happened.

  • @natwind8472
    @natwind8472 Před rokem +4

    They were protesting the Vietnam War, it was mostly a sit in. Not all of the students killed that day were protesting either but instead just walking to class on campus. As students ran some were shot in the back. None were armed.

  • @sfbayareagirl
    @sfbayareagirl Před rokem +2

    One of my favorite parts of this song is when David Crosby is yelling out at the end, "Four! Why? How many more? "

  • @55MYAGE
    @55MYAGE Před rokem +2

    Story goes after Neil Young heard of Kent State he wrote this song in 15 minutes.
    Y'all know Neil is a Canuck, born in Red lake, Ontario and growing up in a suburb of Winnipeg, Manitoba.

  • @J_Gamble
    @J_Gamble Před rokem +2

    It is deep. There's an iconic photo of this event showing a young woman screaming/crying kneeling next to the body of a dead student. The kids hadn't done anything. At least was just walking to class. [The mid-reaction research is fun.]

  • @daviddragavon7555
    @daviddragavon7555 Před rokem +2

    Students for peace, armed with flowers. Anti war protesters. Vietnam. This song, and others did change our world. At least for awhile. We could use a new bunch.

  • @Debcatawba
    @Debcatawba Před rokem +2

    Living in the greater Cleveland area, this was, and still is a sadly momentous part of our youth. I have friends who were there on campus that fateful day.

  • @margiemcpeak9304
    @margiemcpeak9304 Před rokem +4

    🎸💯 This song carried a lot of weight‼🔥
    I remember the Kent State massacre all too well‼What a tragic event in history‼Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young had such a different sound/vibe‼I used to love them; but, hadn't listened to them for a long while‼Thanks for this "reminder" of the times, BizMatik‼☮ ❤ 🎶

  • @mikecaetano
    @mikecaetano Před rokem +2

    For additional context, the anti-war rally during which the students were shot was called to protest the expansion of the Vietnam War into Cambodia, which Nixon had been secretly bombing for a year. "On March 18, 1969, American B-52s began carpet-bombing eastern Cambodia. 'Operation Breakfast' was the first course in a four-year bombing campaign that drew Cambodia headlong into the Vietnam War. The Nixon Administration kept the bombings secret from Congress for several months, insisting they were directed against legitimate Vietnamese and Khmer Rouge targets. However, the raids exacted an enormous cost from the Cambodian people: the US dropped 540,000 tons of bombs, killing anywhere from 150,000 to 500,000 civilians." (PBS) Nixon's secret war destabilized that country leading to a civil war and a genocide resulting in the deaths of 1.5 to 2 million people in the late seventies. That blood is on Henry Kissinger's hands too. Check out Dead Kennedys "Holiday In Cambodia" for a fiery follow up.

  • @missrayelyn3045
    @missrayelyn3045 Před rokem +1

    I was 19, living in CA, and going to college. My friend told me, we drove home and watched the news. After the shock wore off, people became very angry. I think everyone lost their innocence that day. Never again did I feel sure about what my government cant do.

  • @mikepesce3334
    @mikepesce3334 Před rokem +1

    Has to be the most powerful and relevant political song ever, especially given the fact it came out only 10 days after the massacre

  • @ZacCostilla
    @ZacCostilla Před rokem +1

    My mom is from Kent and my dad is from Ravenna (after moving up from Texas), the next town east. My older brother was a baby and my mom couldn’t even get over to pick him up after work the day the shooting happened because all the roads were blocked off. I grew up going to KSU all the time for the library and the sports (basketball courts at the i traumarle gym and the ice skating rink we’re open to anyone but you had to pay to get in if you weren’t a student). I visited the Memorial several times and it was always haunting to me.

  • @buckfan1969
    @buckfan1969 Před rokem +1

    Was a freshman in college in Ohio when this happened. They shut down all the schools, and I figured in the fall the protests would resume. I was wrong; not a peep anywhere in the fall of 1970. Protesting the war basically ended on May 4, 1970.

  • @smooch2955
    @smooch2955 Před rokem +3

    O-HI-O...part of the soundtrack of the Vietnam War

  • @jackknudson-rk1uv
    @jackknudson-rk1uv Před 6 měsíci +1

    This is long, I was stationed on the DMZ in Korea when this happened. Nothing was said about it in our military newspaper called the stars. and stripes but my mother had subscribed the Des Moines Register for me, I've always been a newshound. The article covered 3 pages with the pictures. I cut it out and hung it on the wall over my bunk. My platoon seargent ordered me to take it down and I refused . Our CO stood there and read every word. He knew me well as he made me our acting supply seargent as a PFC to replace our drunken on. Since I took it over I had turned our Division worst supply room into the best one. He looked at and knew I wouldn't do it. He then took my seargent and First seargent aside and they talked for a while. He then turned to the open bay where 42 men were watching and loudly announced that this stay on my and we all shoud read it also. This was about two weeks after it happened, this stayed on my wall till I left Korea 7 months later. I had just turned 21 and had 3 brothers stationed in Vietnam which was why I was Korea instead of Vietnam.

  • @jasonmccluskey3623
    @jasonmccluskey3623 Před rokem +2

    REAL SHIT!

  • @cletushouse906
    @cletushouse906 Před rokem +2

    Different times back then, Biz. Great song and even better reaction.

  • @mcityline8210
    @mcityline8210 Před rokem +1

    They didn't want you to know. We lived through it and thought it was a history that would live on for all to know.

  • @angelagoodwin5758
    @angelagoodwin5758 Před rokem +1

    I was 12 years old when this happened. I also grew up in a nearby city. During the time, there were many protests on college campuses against the war in Viet Nam.

  • @1Imonk
    @1Imonk Před rokem +2

    I am another one who remembers the time, along with the sentiment that followed among those of us with strong anti-war and anti-government opinions in those days. It was very different from the current mood in the country, but the ideological rift then was as sharp as it is now. We peacenicks just wanted an end to unjustifiable war, so we could have our homemegrown lifestyles. The students who were shot at Kent State turned out to be innocents transiting the protest area.
    You won my respect here, man, looking it up to learn the history. We must always remember Kent State and the shame of a government willing to murder civilians to make a point about the authority of those with the power of violence to quell ideas. When it was soldiers killing white middle class students, the violence against minorities in the country became more real across racial lines, too.

  • @joelliebler5690
    @joelliebler5690 Před rokem +1

    This was one of the most important protest songs of The Vietnam war!

  • @bennemer489
    @bennemer489 Před rokem +1

    I'm old enough to remember this. It was tragic.

  • @lorin42
    @lorin42 Před 7 měsíci

    This song shows the power of a song. Neil Young was very in touch with what was going on around him and wrote this song in about an hour. There was also a similar incident at Jackson State University.

  • @KennyY-bh3zl
    @KennyY-bh3zl Před rokem +2

    It's easy to think of the '70s as a decade of peace and nonviolence, and then we're reminded of the horror of the Kent State shootings, in which National Guardsmen shot and killed four Vietnam War protestors. It was a horrible day in the history of our country.

  • @justkaron
    @justkaron Před rokem +3

    College kids were protesting the Vietnam War.

    • @kayohmberger5294
      @kayohmberger5294 Před rokem

      I was one of those students. We marched in D.C. soon after. Very angry days.

  • @marksanders8028
    @marksanders8028 Před rokem +2

    Learning some history today Biz.

  • @brachiator1
    @brachiator1 Před 11 měsíci

    It is amazing how quickly history is forgotten by younger generations. I remember when this song, and the Vietnam protests were fresh and vital. Lives depended on the decisions made. But now, even when people Google the background, they still don't understand.

  • @jasonmccluskey3623
    @jasonmccluskey3623 Před rokem +2

    Love this Tune!

  • @hannejeppesen1809
    @hannejeppesen1809 Před 8 měsíci

    I'm of that generation, I remember it well. The line "we are finally on our own", was exactly how we felt. Nixon and the government didn't care about us. It was a peaceful protest, and at one of those killed was not part of the protest. The protest it was against the Vietnam war.

  • @alrivers2297
    @alrivers2297 Před rokem +2

    Great song, but I always feel a little funny listening and enjoying it, knowing how tragic an incident it was. You mentioned Joni Mitchell, listen to her song Help Me. Being a lover of beautiful shit, you will definitely love this beautiful song.

  • @christinewaide5249
    @christinewaide5249 Před rokem +1

    I can’t make it through the song without tearing up

  • @gregheath8106
    @gregheath8106 Před 7 měsíci

    I have twin daughters in college who will be 21 in a couple weeks. Makes this song hit extra hard.

  • @kennethbrown5164
    @kennethbrown5164 Před rokem +1

    Song written about 4 student protestors at Kent State killed by US military.

  • @lauraschwartz1077
    @lauraschwartz1077 Před rokem +2

    "Please come to Chicago", also one you would enjoy along the same political vein and commentary.

  • @debjorgo
    @debjorgo Před rokem +1

    It sounds pretty Rockin' to me. Great song!

  • @wen-nz3sk
    @wen-nz3sk Před rokem +2

    60s/70s were volatile times, the war, the draft, people speaking out and all the BS politics.
    Tricky Dicky, I remember this b4 Watergate.
    Learn something new everyday, can't expect to know all...

  • @nealtircuit9373
    @nealtircuit9373 Před rokem +1

    You forgot one. You said music is an escape and a mirror to society. You forgot it can also be a call for justice.

  • @James-hd6ez
    @James-hd6ez Před rokem +1

    Another sad fact i believe chrissie hynde who would later start a late 1970s early 1980s rock band called the Pretenders was present that day ( Although please double check what i have said here because it is only what i,have read and needs to be verifying) good instant reaction to the great neil young song about this tragic event all years ago about the students protesting the Vietnam War 😢

  • @rittherugger160
    @rittherugger160 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Why were they shot?
    Good question.
    The 4 dead on the ground weren't even part of the protest against the draft and the war in Viet Nam.
    The 4 dead were a hundred yards away from the protest. just being students, changing classes, going to the lab or the library.

  • @jimnicosia5934
    @jimnicosia5934 Před rokem +1

    The national guard was called out to break up a war protest. And the guard started shooting. Killed four I beleive.
    .

  • @jacobjones5269
    @jacobjones5269 Před rokem

    I once heard David Crosby describe Neil Young’s talent.. He said go listen to CS&N, then go listen to CSN&Y, and notice the difference..

  • @debraschiro6234
    @debraschiro6234 Před rokem

    Miss Tina Turner died I'm Switzerland 83 years old we love you and we will miss you❤❤❤❤😢😢😢😢

  • @akeleven
    @akeleven Před rokem +1

    I was in college then. My friend said she supported the shooting. I never spoke to her again. I turned activist. Protesting and changed parties. People in power were terrified of protest. The march in Tallahassee was met by armed police with riot guns on the capitol steps. We were just students. Remember this is in the wake of civil rights.
    Last time I voted Republican was the first time I had voted. Never again.

  • @susansquire7968
    @susansquire7968 Před rokem +1

    This was big time national news at the time it happened. It was at the height of the anti Vietnam War demonstrations. There had been many injuries to students protesting from coast to coast, but never armed military. There is a very famous Pulitzer Prize winning photo of a girl on the ground over the dead body of one of the victims, her face contorted in agony. Not only is there a pathetic lack of Black history not being taught in our schools, but important moments like this being seemingly some footnote in our shameful history. I was of the same age as some of these kids and heard my dad and his friends discussing this, and they were spewing hateful rhetoric, saying they got what they deserved. I was in tears screaming at them it could have been ME because I was an anti war protestor. It was so egregious CSNY came out with this almost immediately. I actually played it a few days ago. Please find the famous photo. It speaks volumes.

  • @barbarabweaver1
    @barbarabweaver1 Před rokem +1

    I was 16. People said, “if they had been in class they wouldn’t have been shot.” The guardsmen were young and untrained and panicked.

    • @Jessica_Roth
      @Jessica_Roth Před rokem

      The Guard were ORDERED to fire. It took 45 years to enhance the audiotape, but the order is there.
      And 2 of the 4 WERE going to class; they got shot crossing the parking lot.

  • @bobdelp2023
    @bobdelp2023 Před rokem

    THIS WAS ABOUT A PROTEST AND ALSO THE KENT STATE MURDERS BIZ, WRITTEN VERYYYYY QUICKLY BY NEIL AFTER IT HAPPENED! 😮 AMAZINGGGGG!😊

  • @mjp3186
    @mjp3186 Před rokem

    Nice reaction. A protest song. We could use such a song right now.
    Best wishes from the Netherlands

  • @thomasord8636
    @thomasord8636 Před rokem

    It was a protest over the Vietnam war. Protest got a bit rowdy and the 4 kids were killed by national guard.

  • @conniegaylord5206
    @conniegaylord5206 Před 6 měsíci

    I graduated from High School that year. To set the times, we had a national draft which took young men, most right out of high school, to fight in Vietnam. Nixon promised to get us out Nam but announced the expansion into Cambodia. Nixon Republican, Governor Rhodes a Republican responded with the National Guard. Protesting the war was not popular by the older generation. They were comming down from the Korean War and WW II. This was their answere. Many wounded or killed that day were not protesting, they were just going to their classes. There was a coverup. May 4 1970 NEVER FORGET!!!! 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @camerondempster4147
    @camerondempster4147 Před rokem

    Another protest song from the same era, Black Day in July. About the riot in Detroit. Also written by a Canadian. Gordon Lightfoot.

  • @jowsmith1904
    @jowsmith1904 Před rokem

    excellent find from my early teens.

  • @poutine57
    @poutine57 Před rokem

    crazy times man. peace and love from Canada.

  • @nellgwenn
    @nellgwenn Před rokem

    Now you have to hear their song Chicago.
    Though your brother's bound and gagged, and they chained him to a chair,
    Won't you please come to Chicago just to sing...

  • @Ozarkprepper643
    @Ozarkprepper643 Před rokem

    Was in Tempe Arizona when Kent State happened. In reaction sudents started rioting at ASU, Burning Down The ROTC building.

  • @glennmartin1632
    @glennmartin1632 Před rokem

    I was a teacher when this happened and my students were speechless like we felt when jfk went down

  • @craigwells3655
    @craigwells3655 Před rokem

    How much music is driven by fame and money. Give me music like this which is driven by outrage and a need to communicate what is going on. Sometimes, it takes someone with a different perspective to see the problems. A Canadian was needed to tell it like it was for Americans and the world. Love Neil.

  • @vlastik
    @vlastik Před rokem

    There is a similar song by them, called "Chicago". For some reason, people usually do not react to that one.

  • @laurahatzes6964
    @laurahatzes6964 Před rokem +1

    Great reaction. I always have to look up facts myself so no one should be giving anyone a hard time! Sad song and just shows their hearts and talent. Almost Cut my Hair next?

  • @sondrawhite3853
    @sondrawhite3853 Před rokem

    I was in high school and remember the incident and the song very well, so sad

  • @RobertaSirgutz-tu8xu
    @RobertaSirgutz-tu8xu Před rokem

    They cover Joni's song "Woodstock". Great band.

  • @karenpowell6063
    @karenpowell6063 Před rokem +1

    They were protesting the Vietnam war and the draft .

  • @Darryl_Frost
    @Darryl_Frost Před rokem +1

    You should listen to Young's Alabama as well, another powerful song from Neil Young.

  • @Spiritbro77
    @Spiritbro77 Před rokem

    This happened when I was a kid about 25 miles from here.

  • @cheryllohr8779
    @cheryllohr8779 Před rokem +1

    Try CSN "Cost of Freedom" Very short but says a lot. Harmonies are great

  • @kengunter6903
    @kengunter6903 Před rokem

    Top song.

  • @cathymccaffrey7725
    @cathymccaffrey7725 Před rokem +1

    This song has to do with killing of four students by National Guard (I think)at Kent State University in Youngstown, Ohio, who were protesting the war in Vietnam.

    • @patticrichton1135
      @patticrichton1135 Před rokem +1

      Cathy McCaffrey, Kent State University is NOT in Youngstown, it's in KENT, OHIO. I was a student there.

    • @cathymccaffrey7725
      @cathymccaffrey7725 Před rokem +2

      @@patticrichton1135 my friend who was from Youngstown went to Kent State too so I assumed it was there. Thanks for the correction.

    • @patticrichton1135
      @patticrichton1135 Před rokem

      @@cathymccaffrey7725 no problem, Youngstown is about a 42 minute drive east of Kent, and a 39 minute drive from the east suburb of Cleveland, Ohio where I live, going in a southeast direction. 😊

  • @RitaMae13
    @RitaMae13 Před rokem

    Great vibes! Great memories of an awesome Era ✌️

  • @Phoenix-bg1xt
    @Phoenix-bg1xt Před rokem

    What started the whole protest was, on April 30th .1970 Richard Nixon was on tv, many thought itwas to end the Vietnam war, only to be told he has sent troops into Cambodia, with out the knowledge of any other government agency, the kids were of course angry and scared they now had to wonder how long the war was gonna last and if they would be going, their 1st protest or back then was known as a sit-in, the kids felt bad that we invaded Cambodia and they buried the constitution. They had many sit-ins, that saturday may 2nd they had a sit-in they were on the road,but not blocking it they had permission to have it until 11.00 pm, well the cops yanked that right and told them they had a 9,00 pm curfew due to the night before, which the problem was caused mainly from the town kids not the college students as said or portrayed in "movies" To disperse of the kids the national guard used bayonets were used against them. The students were blamed for catching the ROTC building on fire which was done by 2 FBI agents acting as if they were students, that is what gave the Ohio National Guard the right to come onto the schools grounds. The following month the same ROTC building was to be demolished. Governor Rhodes called in the National Guard, he did not follow protocol. He made it out as if these students were awful people, Then governor Ronald Reagan said the Kent state incident should have been a blood bath, it is reported he done the same crap that caused one death and permanent blindness to another individual. This same National Guard was at a teamster rally where they actually had bullets the NG had rubber bullets, before going to the college they packed real bullets. Two of the ones that was killed were protesters but 2 were not they were walking between classes infact William S. was a member of the ROTC. Years later the sister and another person brought evidence that a higher up called for "fire" on the students then president OBAMA and the DOJ denied any help even after hearing the tape.

    • @maggynewtown3500
      @maggynewtown3500 Před rokem

      What was Obama supposed to do about a terrible incident that occurred in 1970?