Camden 28 Raids Draft Office (1971) On this day in 1971, the Camden 28, a group of Christian anti-war activists, broke into a draft board office and proceeded to destroy and bag up thousands of...
Camden 28 Raids Draft Office (1971)
Sat Aug 21, 1971
Image: Camden 28 members Gene Dixon (far right), Milo Billman, and Mike Giocondo march at a local rally in Camden. [zinnedproject.org]
On this day in 1971, the Camden 28, a group of Christian anti-war activists, broke into a draft board office and proceeded to destroy and bag up thousands of draft documents. The group had been infiltrated by the FBI and all were arrested.
The raid resulted in a high-profile criminal trial of the activists that was seen by many as a referendum on the Vietnam War and a successful use of jury nullification.
On August 21st, 1971, the activists broke into the draft board office and began destroying and bagging thousands of draft-related documents. A member of their group had become a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) informant, however, and the FBI monitored the break-in, arresting everybody involved.
The 28 chose to be tried together, refusing an offered plea bargain for a single misdemeanor if the rest of the charges were dropped. Activist historian Howard Zinn testified at the trial as an expert on civil disobedience and recommended jury nullification.
On May 20th, 1973, the jury returned "not guilty" verdicts for all counts against all 28 defendants, acquitting them.
I think history would generally disagree with you, Christians have been the driving force behind a lot of bigotry and hate. In the 70s alone they opposed abortion, same sex and same race marriage, banning rock and blues music, satanic panic, etc. The Christian community as a whole can be traced back to years and years of bigotry, and efforts to make their religious ideals the public standard.
There are many well-intentioned Christians, most actual Christians (idk about Easter-Christians) probably are. And there are many beautiful things that Christians and some churches do for their community. The institution they belong to wants to set the moral standard for everyone else, though, which has always entailed oppression of some form. I grew up Christian, and I have seen the good and the bad first-hand. While I am always overjoyed for the good things I see from the Christian church, they don't balance against the bad for me.