1972 And After - -Winding Down the Movement
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Left to Right:
1. Imperialism--Bragg Briefs, February 1972
2. Pushers are Pigs--Bragg Briefs, 1971
3. GI Center, Spring Lake-Newsletter --Fall 1972
4. GI Union flyer--1973?
5. "Being a GI Wife"-- late 1972
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After the frenetic spring and summer of 1971, something changed in the movement, in Fayetteville and elsewhere. There was a turn toward traditional left-wing political concepts and organizing strategies. Several factors took a steady toll: continuing repression by military and police authorities; rapid turnover among GI activists; and hard drugs became a deepening and divisive movement phenomenon. This issue of Bragg Briefs, from early 1972, starkly illustrates these trends, and in these images can be seen the turning which the movement was then facing. As 1972 continued, draft calls went down; US troop strength in Vietnam was steadily declining; and the approach of a presidential election drew energy away from public protest. In Fayetteville, the GI movement was clearly on the wane. Its program refocused on an effort to organize a GI labor union. Bragg Briefs appeared irregularly; in February 1972, the Haymarket Square Coffeehouse was closed down. A month later, an alternative GI Center was opened in Spring Lake, but it was only able to stay open for about a year. The notice of its closing (see below), typed on a barely functional typewriter and slipped into an issue of Bragg Briefs, tells much of the story in a few words. |