Great Wall Institute: The Process of the Great Wall of Los Angeles

Vietnam War Draft Resistance

A large part of the draft resistance movement was launched by students coming of age and who were eligible for the Vietnam War draft. Students burned draft cards and staged anti-war protests at hundreds of universities, Selective Service Centers, and public official spaces. As U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War began in 1957 during Kennedy’s administration but was exacerbated by Lyndon B Johnson’s time in office; the number of young men draft only kept rising. In each of the years of 1966, 67, and 68, the U.S. drafted 300,000 young men. Of all the young men drafted in the war, 80% had only a highschool education and came from poor or working class backgrounds. At the beginning of the war, deferments were available for college and graduate students. A large percentage of Black and Latino young men served in the war reflecting the ack of opportunities and resources available to them.
In 1969, the first lottery draft drawing since 1942 was held at the Selective Service National Headquarters in Washington, D.C. to draft soldiers at random. In the lottery, a ball was drawn that contained a date and year between 1944 and 1950; those whose birthdate fell on that day would be required to join the service. This brought a new fear that anyone could be chosen and taken to serve in the Vietnam War. The lottery created anxiety among 15-19 year olds who were all at risk of being drafted through the lottery and contributed to a stronger anti-war stance on the part of youth.
Young men avoided the draft by fleeing to Canada and other countries through underground railroads, failing to show for induction, attempting to claim disability, and through various other legal and illegal tactics. The most common among these was the burning of draft cards. Draft cards were torn, burned, and or sent back to the Justice Department forcing the Johnson Administration to focus on the Antiwar Movement. In the wake of the Civil Rights Movement, there was also significant draft resistance and anti-war sentiment on the part of the Black Americans and Latinos who recognized the dissonance between their lived experience and the violence they were expected to enact on a community abroad that had never mistreated them.


Sources:
    Kindig, Jessie. “Vietnam War: Draft Resistance.” Antiwar and Radical History Project – Pacific Northwest, Civil Rights and Labor History Consortium / University of Washington, depts.washington.edu/antiwar/vietnam_draft.shtml. Accessed 25 Oct. 2023. 
    Varon, Jeremy. “Defying the Draft.” Reviews in American History, vol. 32, no. 4, 2004, pp. 573–79. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/30031449. Accessed 25 Oct. 2023.
    Friedman, Jason. “Draft Card Mutilation Act of 1965.” The Free Speech Center, 6 Aug. 2023, firstamendment.mtsu.edu/article/draft-card-mutilation-act-of-1965/. 
    Foley, Michael Stewart, "Confronting the war machine: Draft resistance during the Vietnam War" (1999). Doctoral Dissertations. 2068. https://scholars.unh.edu/dissertation/2068

This page has paths:

Contents of this path: