Published at 6:27pm
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Knowing what you know now, what might you have done differently?
Katz Nothing!
James Well, we never got the police car over.
[Everyone laughs.]
Kurshan As a woman, I would have fought harder and stronger to have my voice be heard earlier.
Rose I cannot look back at ’68 and say we made a tactical mistake or something I should have known to do differently. It didn’t turn out exactly the way I wanted, but I can’t say it was due to a mistake on our part.
Do you think people were more passionate then?
Rose If the times seemed more intense during Vietnam, I would attribute it to a more deadly, 50,000 dead, war, plus the existence of the draft.
Katz I don’t think the issue was passion, but a sense of possibility. We felt very empowered in the ’60s, that what we did would or could make a difference. I think today there is a greater sense of desperation, a sense—a reality—that nothing we do will affect Bush, et al.
Peck Many today are passionate; we were in the crucible.