Vietnam was originally a French colony, and it gained independence after World War II (Willis 56). The former colony split into North Vietnam under communist Ho Chi Minh, and South Vietnam, under the anticommunist Ngo Dinh Diem. (Willis 57). The US supported Diem, ignoring the fact that he was hated by the South …show more content…
Although most white sports players were exempt from the draft, that standard did not apply to black athletes. Muhammad Ali, an extremely successful boxer, refused to even register for the draft, saying, “I got no quarrel with them Vietcong.” Because of this, he was forced to give up his title of heavyweight champ (Anderson and Ernst 254). An additional unfairness was the fact that for every white man in a combat position, there were two black men. Martin Luther King, Jr., complained that African Americans were dying “to guarantee liberties in Southeast Asia which they had not found in Southwest Georgia and East Harlem.” They did not have civil rights, yet they were expected to bear the burden to claim these rights for the South Vietnamese (Senker 45).
The separation between rich and poor and white and black increased even more following the Vietnam War, when the United States created an all-volunteer army. Extremely negative attitudes towards the draft caused it to be abandoned. Therefore, the people most likely to enlist would be those interested in the money and free college education – mostly poor blacks. In 1980, there were only 276 college graduates in a group of 340,000 soldiers. The army became a “poor man’s army,” increasing the social gap between rich and poor, white and black. The equality engendered by World War II was gone (Isaacs