Throughout the early postwar era and emphatically during the 1960s, the politics of assassination came into play.

Site of assassination of Black Panthers Fred Hampton and Mark Clark by the Chicago Police at 2337 Monroe St., in Chicago on Dec. 4, 1969. Photo by Stephen Hogan / Flickr / Creative Commons 2.0.
I’m writing this on the morning of December 4, 2021, the 52nd (!) anniversary of the murder of Fred Hampton, just turned 20, and Mark Clark, a year older. Both were members of the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party, which was undergoing a concerted, too frequently deadly assault by law enforcement officials—local, state, and federal—across the country.
Hampton, chair of the Illinois chapter, also had recently founded the Rainbow Coalition. That was a multi-racial group that included the Young Lords, originally a Puerto Rican Chicago street gang that became drawn to radical political and social action, and the Young Patriots Organization, made up largely of Southern migrants who resided in decaying Uptown, Chicago, and also condemned the city’s historic pattern of discrimination and racism.
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