Category Archives: War & Peace

Throwback Thursday: “No business as usual,” May 5, 1971

May 5, 1971 was dubbed the “No Business as Usual” moratorium by a coalition of peace and anti-war groups, and there were demonstrations in cities across the country, from Washington, D.C. to Hawaii.

Here in Honolulu, a group of about 150 people marched from the University of Hawaii Manoa campus to the Honolulu Federal Building.

After a rally at the federal building, the crowd splintered. One group staged at sit-in at the federal building’s main entrance, while others proceeded to other sites, including the draft board office, the Catholic Bishop’s office, and an Army recruiting office.

This is a “quick and dirty” set of photos from my personal archive. I still have to go back and identify people whose names I can remember.

Feel free to leave comments identifying people you recognize.

Photos by Ian Lind

No Business as Usual: May 5, 1971

Anniversary of the May 1968 Kalia Road Sit-in

Today marks the 52nd anniversary of the 1968 call-up to active duty of about 4,600 members of the Hawaii Army Reserve and Hawaii Army National Guard, who were assigned to the newly formed 29th Infantry Brigade

On May 13, 1968, the men reported to Fort DeRussy in Waikiki for transport to Schofield Barracks to begin their 19-mohths of active duty service. A group of several dozen peace activists gathered along Kalia Road in Waikiki as a convoy carrying guardsman approached the Army induction center at DeRussy. Then about 20 activists stepped off the sidewalk and sat down in the street, blocking traffic.

Police armed with tear gas stood by while other officers dragged protesters out of the street.

The activation of the Hawaii guard took place as the U.S. war in Vietnam was escalating, and during rising international tensions months after North Korea attacked and seized an American intelligence ship, the U.S.S. Pueblo, and its crew off the North Korean coast.

Several days later, ten people were later arrested and charged with loitering. They were: Jim Douglass, assistant professor of religion at the, along with Dot Buck, Steve Carter, Wayne Hayashi, Pat Higa, Stan Masui, Barry Nakamura, Nick Reidy, Bill Smith, and John Witeck.

All were found guilty in a July 1968 trial in Honolulu District Court. Douglass was sentenced to 15 days in Halawa Jail, while the other nine were fined $25 each. However, two men–Hayashi and Reidy–chose jail rather than pay the fine. Each served five days.

Douglass and Hayashi both denied loitering aimlessly or without purpose.

Hayashi told the judge:

In committing civil disobedience, which is part of my commitment to peace, I am quite willing to accept the consequences for my act of love in direct, non-violent action.

Douglass also made a statement.

We were resisting–resisting the slavery and murder of the draft, resisting the war whose inhumanity increases daily, and resisting the fear of young men who question the war but feel compelled to kill in obedience to a national system and a local community which support no alternative.

There was widespread opposition to the activation of the Hawaii guard and reserves.

U.S. Senator Hiram Fong publicly called the call-up unfair to Hawaii.

“Fong noted that on a percentage basis Hawaii should have had to contribute 89 men in the callup, but instead Hawaii is contributing more tha 17 per cent of the total reserve callup,” Associated Press reported.

And the army reported in late 1968 that 1,500 of the 4,600 members of the 29th Brigade had signed a petition seeking to have the unit deactivated.

At least two of those behind the petition later rose to prominence. Henry Peters, then a 27-year old from Waianae serving as a cook in the 29th Brigade, said he was one of 11 men who organized and circulated the petition. Peters later was elected to the state legislature, where he served as Speaker of the House from 1981-1986.

Another who worked on the petition was the late attorney David Schutter, who later earned a reputation (and a small fortune) as a high-powered lawyer with a successful law firm and several other businesses, as well as a multi-million dollar home in Kahala.

A local “underground” publication, The Roach, reported the sit-in and included several photographs. I appear in one of the photos (I’m the guy with the beard looking down at my camera–click to see a larger version).

I’ve gathered several of my photos from that long ago day in May. Just click below to view them.

The Kalia Road Sit-in: May 13, 1968

50 years ago: Thousands rallied on UH campus against Vietnam War

Yesterday marked the 50th anniversary of a large student demonstration on the University of Hawaii campus to protest the U.S. invasion of Cambodia and the shooting of unarmed student peace protesters by National Guard troops on the campus of Kent State University.

It was the largest demonstration to that date by UH students against the U.S. war in Indochina.

I dug out some photos I took during the afternoon rally which will hopefully provide a sense of what it was like.

May 7, 1970: Student protest at UH

A resource for understanding Thursday’s killing of key Iranian commander

Another Lawfare Podcast Special Edition was published on Friday afternoon: The Soleimani Strike and Its Fallout

It is, again, an excellent source for perspective on the incident and what it means in the region.

The American drone strike last night that killed Qassem Soleimani, the commander of the Iranian Quds Force, is a seismic event in U.S.-Iranian relations—and for the broader Middle East. We put together an emergency podcast, drawing on the resources of both Lawfare and the Brookings Institution and reflecting the depth of the remarkable collaboration between the two. Iran scholar Suzanne Maloney, terrorism and Middle East scholar Daniel Byman, Middle East scholar and former State Department official Tamara Cofman Wittes and former State Department lawyer and Baghdad embassy official Scott Anderson—who is also a Lawfare senior editor—came together the morning after the strike for a diverse discussion of the reasons for the operation, the vast repercussions of it, the legality of the strike and the role Soleimani played in the Iranian regime.

Also see:

The Soleimani Strike: One Person Decides,” Jack Goldsmith. Examines the legality of the drone strike.

Heather Cox Richardson, “Letters from an American,” January 3, 2020.