| Music Festival Descends into 
    Violence  by Jeff Provine 
     Author 
    says: we're very pleased to present a new story from Jeff Provine's 
    excellent blog This 
    Day in Alternate History Please note that the opinions expressed in this 
    post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s). 
     
      On August 18th 1969,
     
      for three days, a massive outdoor concert of a half-million listeners had 
      reigned over an upstate New York dairy farm owned by Max Yasgur. 
      Organizers for the Woodstock Music & Art Festival had chosen the farm for 
      its natural bowl shape, perfect for acoustics. Originally the festival was 
      to charge, but as funds ran dry and far more attendees appeared than 
      expected, the organizers decided to skip setting up fences and security, 
      instead focusing on readying the music.
 The concert seemed on the brink of disaster from the beginning. With so 
      many people, there was little or no access to food, water, or sanitation. 
      Attendees camped or slept in the elements, much of which was rain over the 
      course of the weekend. Yasgur's fields turned to giant mud pits. Despite 
      the discomfort, or perhaps because of it, people embraced nature and 
      enjoyed the concert featuring stunning performances by Santana, Grateful 
      Dead, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Janis Joplin, The Who, Jefferston 
      Airplane, Johnny Winter, and Jimi Hendrix.
 
 As the concert came to a close in the wee hours of Monday morning, people 
      began to pack up after listening to a wobbling rendition of the national 
      anthem on Hendrix's guitar. According to various reports in the apocryphal 
      film Woodstock, someone, somewhere, said, “Hey, this is groovy. 
      Why do we have to leave?”
 
 The idea spread through the crowd like wildfire. While thousands left the 
      area, tens of thousands more stayed. A cluster seized the stage, declared 
      it public property, and began something of an “open mic” day. John 
      Roberts, one of the festival organizers, attempted to regain control with 
      his crew of security guards, but they were booed, used as targets for 
      rotten food, and finally beaten with various blunt instruments. Yasgur 
      called the police, and the festival quickly escalated to a riot. New York 
      Governor Nelson Rockefeller sent in 10,000 National Guard, as he had been 
      prepared to do the day before when Roberts had calmed his fears. Now 
      10,000 scarcely seemed enough.
 
 Journalists, who had been covering the massive traffic tie-ups throughout 
      the weekend, covered the escalation live. The National Guard began to 
      arrive as well as protesters from around the area. Evening settled, and 
      the National Guard took up a siege of the farm, only to find themselves 
      surrounded by more protesters pouring in from around the country, some 
      having driven through the night from as far away as Missouri and 
      Wisconsin. Thrown rocks and chants were traded with tear gas and rubber 
      bullets. The riot spread to neighboring counties, and Rockefeller declared 
      a wide state of emergency, inviting President Nixon to take charge of the 
      wild situation.
 
 Though later denied and subject of the investigation that would find Nixon 
      impeached, ultimately resigning in 1971, the order was given to use live 
      ammunition on the “damn hippies” that were “tearing up” the state of New 
      York. Peace and love had fallen, conquered by blood and steel. Social 
      upheaval would spread throughout the nation, causing sit-ins, 
      demonstrations, and further riots, primarily centered around universities. 
      At Kent State in Ohio, the fall semester would be broken up by further 
      shootings, and calamity would spread anew throughout the country. The New 
      Years' Bloodbath in San Francisco would result in the deaths of over one 
      thousand rioters.
 
 Nixon declared a state of emergency and began systematically to crack down 
      on the counter-culture movement, even to the point of calling back troops 
      from Vietnam. Curfews were enforced with heavy fines, substance control 
      penalties were raised to military executions, and even dress and living 
      codes were adopted to eliminate hippie culture. A “black list” of rock and 
      roll songs was created, though immediately tied up in courts from the 
      First Amendment. Over the course of 1970, America would become something 
      of a police state. Gradually, the tempers would calm, and people began to 
      cry out for peace or at least “some kind of sanity,” to quote journalist 
      Walter Cronkite.
 
 With elections in 1970, the government wrung itself out to establish 
      moderate rule. Nixon and many others were put on trial, but many of their 
      policies were kept with weaker punishments. In 1972, Democrat George 
      McGovern won narrowly over Republican John Ashbrooke. In the following 
      decade, the United States would turn away from international involvement 
      and return to isolationism, praising the ideals of forefathers like George 
      Washington and Thomas Jefferson.
 
 International power shifted to the Soviet Union, which would overstretch 
      itself in the late '70s and '80s with invasions of Afghanistan and Iran. 
      The collapse of Soviets came in 1992, soon followed by the liberation of 
      many dependencies, such as the reunited Germany of 1994. The world stood 
      without a clear leader for more than a decade, but gradually the growing 
      strength of the European Union came to shadow world policy. Many suggest 
      the military successes of China in the '90s and early new millennium in 
      the policing of Southeast Asia suggest it as the new superpower, but 
      others doubt their lackluster economy with allow them sufficient clout.
 
 
 
     
     Author 
    says in reality, the Woodstock Festival stood as one of the greatest 
    moments in the Peace and Love movement. Despite the constant potential for 
    violence, goers were more concerned with music and merriment. Farmer Max 
    Yasgur, who did not rent his farm for another festival the next year, was 
    nonetheless impressed by the hippies, saying that they “can turn those 
    adversities that are the problems of America today into a hope for a 
    brighter and more peaceful future.” 
     Jeff Provine, Guest Historian of
    
    Today in Alternate History, a Daily Updating Blog of Important Events In 
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