Chicago 7 lawyer William Kunstler in 1994: That trial ‘changed me totally‪’‬ Charlie Meyerson interviews

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Prepping to watch The Trial of the Chicago 7 on Netflix, I revisited my Sept. 16, 1994, interview with The 7’s defense lawyer, William Kunstler, who told me then that the trial “changed me totally. … “I never knew what it was to really fight until I watched Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, Dave Dellinger, Hayden and so on fight in a courtroom—do things that would make the jury understand that they were being persecuted: Bringing in a birthday cake for Bobby Seale, a Viet Cong flag on their table, standing out and protesting the binding and gagging of Bobby Seale in the courtroom. “There were so many things they did that showed they were fighting—they weren’t gonna sit there like bumps on a log and be railroaded. “And the net result was they won.” I realized I never shared this file to this blog and the accompanying podcast series. So here you go. Check out more of my conversations with thought-leaders through the years on this website, in Apple Music, on Spotify, via your favorite podcast player and at Chicago Public Square. _____ P.S. I was apparently the first to inform Kunstler in 1983 of Judge Julius Hoffman’s death.

Prepping to watch The Trial of the Chicago 7 on Netflix, I revisited my Sept. 16, 1994, interview with The 7’s defense lawyer, William Kunstler, who told me then that the trial “changed me totally. … “I never knew what it was to really fight until I watched Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, Dave Dellinger, Hayden and so on fight in a courtroom—do things that would make the jury understand that they were being persecuted: Bringing in a birthday cake for Bobby Seale, a Viet Cong flag on their table, standing out and protesting the binding and gagging of Bobby Seale in the courtroom. “There were so many things they did that showed they were fighting—they weren’t gonna sit there like bumps on a log and be railroaded. “And the net result was they won.” I realized I never shared this file to this blog and the accompanying podcast series. So here you go. Check out more of my conversations with thought-leaders through the years on this website, in Apple Music, on Spotify, via your favorite podcast player and at Chicago Public Square. _____ P.S. I was apparently the first to inform Kunstler in 1983 of Judge Julius Hoffman’s death.

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