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Social effects on the Vietnam war

he opposition grew"(Hershberger, 32). In the later stages of the Vietnam War, campus politics figured very prevelently in American politics because of the exploitation of the student-protests by the president in order to destroy the antiwar movement (People's, 1). With the growing disenchantment with what they were being fed by the government, the people needed somewhere to turn. Somewhere where they could find fuel for their objections, The Vietnam 9 a source to inform them of what was really going on. Throughout the whole conflict the media was finding itself more and more of a figurehead with the additional ways of reporting that had surfaced. Television for one, had opened up whole new channels for broadcasting information. Actually being able to see what was going on gave people more than just hearsay as to what they knew was really happening (Herring, 11). This medium erased alot of the previous glorification of war, by showing the gory truths right out front. "What alienated the American public was not only the news converage, but the casualties as well" (Gioglio, 45). Unfortunately, television also served as another medium for propoganda as was shown by the characterization of the protesters as "dirty-mouthed hippies taunting the brave, clean-cut American soldiers who confronted the unruly demonstrators" (Heirser, 80). "Even despite growing opposition to the Vietnam War, American involvenment continued to deepen. By the end of 1967, nearly half a million American soldiers were serving in Vietnam"(Fever, 24). News reporting was becoming less of its former puppetry by censors and the government, and more of a The Vietnam 10 challenge to get the real information through. No longer did yellow journelism prevail, but a new wave of ambitious reporters tried to sneak the stories past enemy lines. "For the first time in modern history, the outcome of a war was not determined on the battlefield but on the printed page" (Greenhaven Press,...

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