Below The Fold ...

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On the morning of August 3, 1965, CBS News correspondent Morley Safer was in Da Nang, Vietnam, drinking coffee with Marine officers while looking for a story to cover.

A lieutenant mentioned that his unit would be heading out on an operation the next morning and invited Safer to join them.

Safer agreed.

The destination was Cam Ne, a small village in South Vietnam that was suspected of sheltering Viet Cong fighters. Before sunrise, he and his camera crew climbed into an armored vehicle and headed toward the village.

He expected a military operation. Possibly combat. Possibly resistance.

What he found was something very different.

When the Marines entered Cam Ne, they encountered a village filled mostly with women, children, and elderly residents. There was no firefight waiting for them. No clear battlefield.

Instead, the operation moved from house to house.

As Marines questioned villagers, communication quickly broke down. Many residents did not understand English. Others could not answer the questions being asked. The tension grew, and soon the situation escalated in a direction that had nothing to do with combat.

Soldiers began setting thatched-roof homes on fire, using cigarette lighters and flamethrowers.

Families stood by as their homes burned. Elderly women pleaded to be allowed time to gather their belongings, but their requests were ignored. Rice stores were destroyed. Personal possessions were lost in the flames.

By the end of the operation, around 150 homes had been burned. Three women were injured. A baby was killed.

Four elderly men were taken into custody, reportedly because they could not understand what was being asked of them.

Throughout the entire operation, Morley Safer kept filming.

That evening, he sent the footage and narration back to New York. When CBS News president Fred Friendly and anchor Walter Cronkite reviewed the material, they immediately understood its importance.

It had to air.

On August 5, 1965, the report was broadcast on the CBS Evening News.

The reaction was immediate. Viewers flooded CBS with letters and phone calls. Some praised the reporting. Others were outraged, accusing the network of damaging the image of American troops during wartime.

Soon after, the controversy reached the highest level of government.

CBS president Frank Stanton received an early morning phone call from an angry voice on the line. According to accounts, President Lyndon B. Johnson personally expressed his anger over the broadcast.

Johnson reportedly questioned how such footage could exist and whether it had been presented with hidden intent. Investigations were launched into both Safer and the Marine officer who had allowed him to accompany the unit.

No wrongdoing was found.

The Pentagon later pushed for Safer’s removal from Vietnam and restricted his access to Marine operations. CBS refused.

The network stood by its reporter and the story.

The backlash against Safer was severe. He received threats and, at times, reportedly kept a pistol nearby for protection as criticism and hostility grew.

But the report had already done something irreversible.

It changed the conversation.

Military leadership responded to the public reaction, issuing new guidance aimed at reducing unnecessary destruction in populated areas and increasing caution around civilians during operations.

One television report had helped influence military policy.

Years later, New York University’s Department of Journalism would name the Cam Ne broadcast one of the most important works of American journalism of the twentieth century.

Morley Safer went on to spend decades at 60 Minutes, becoming one of the most respected figures in broadcast journalism.

But the story that defined his legacy did not begin in a newsroom.

It began in a small village in Vietnam.

A camera rolling.

A fire spreading through homes.

And a reporter who chose to record what was happening, even when it was not what anyone wanted to see.

He was not trying to make history.

He was simply doing his job.

And sometimes, that is exactly what changes history.

SOURCE with comments
 
August 3, 1965, CBS News correspondent Morley Safer #341
Thank you for your service Morley.

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The war in Gaza has, since October 7, 2023, killed more journalists than the U.S. Civil War, World Wars I and II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War (including the conflicts in Cambodia and Laos), the wars in Yugoslavia in the 1990s and 2000s, and the post-9/11 war in Afghanistan, combined.
 
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On the morning of August 3, 1965, CBS News correspondent Morley Safer was in Da Nang, Vietnam, drinking coffee with Marine officers while looking for a story to cover.

A lieutenant mentioned that his unit would be heading out on an operation the next morning and invited Safer to join them.

Safer agreed.

The destination was Cam Ne, a small village in South Vietnam that was suspected of sheltering Viet Cong fighters. Before sunrise, he and his camera crew climbed into an armored vehicle and headed toward the village.

He expected a military operation. Possibly combat. Possibly resistance.

What he found was something very different.

When the Marines entered Cam Ne, they encountered a village filled mostly with women, children, and elderly residents. There was no firefight waiting for them. No clear battlefield.

Instead, the operation moved from house to house.

As Marines questioned villagers, communication quickly broke down. Many residents did not understand English. Others could not answer the questions being asked. The tension grew, and soon the situation escalated in a direction that had nothing to do with combat.

Soldiers began setting thatched-roof homes on fire, using cigarette lighters and flamethrowers.

Families stood by as their homes burned. Elderly women pleaded to be allowed time to gather their belongings, but their requests were ignored. Rice stores were destroyed. Personal possessions were lost in the flames.

By the end of the operation, around 150 homes had been burned. Three women were injured. A baby was killed.

Four elderly men were taken into custody, reportedly because they could not understand what was being asked of them.

Throughout the entire operation, Morley Safer kept filming.

That evening, he sent the footage and narration back to New York. When CBS News president Fred Friendly and anchor Walter Cronkite reviewed the material, they immediately understood its importance.

It had to air.

On August 5, 1965, the report was broadcast on the CBS Evening News.

The reaction was immediate. Viewers flooded CBS with letters and phone calls. Some praised the reporting. Others were outraged, accusing the network of damaging the image of American troops during wartime.

Soon after, the controversy reached the highest level of government.

CBS president Frank Stanton received an early morning phone call from an angry voice on the line. According to accounts, President Lyndon B. Johnson personally expressed his anger over the broadcast.

Johnson reportedly questioned how such footage could exist and whether it had been presented with hidden intent. Investigations were launched into both Safer and the Marine officer who had allowed him to accompany the unit.

No wrongdoing was found.

The Pentagon later pushed for Safer’s removal from Vietnam and restricted his access to Marine operations. CBS refused.

The network stood by its reporter and the story.

The backlash against Safer was severe. He received threats and, at times, reportedly kept a pistol nearby for protection as criticism and hostility grew.

But the report had already done something irreversible.

It changed the conversation.

Military leadership responded to the public reaction, issuing new guidance aimed at reducing unnecessary destruction in populated areas and increasing caution around civilians during operations.

One television report had helped influence military policy.

Years later, New York University’s Department of Journalism would name the Cam Ne broadcast one of the most important works of American journalism of the twentieth century.

Morley Safer went on to spend decades at 60 Minutes, becoming one of the most respected figures in broadcast journalism.

But the story that defined his legacy did not begin in a newsroom.

It began in a small village in Vietnam.

A camera rolling.

A fire spreading through homes.

And a reporter who chose to record what was happening, even when it was not what anyone wanted to see.

He was not trying to make history.

He was simply doing his job.

And sometimes, that is exactly what changes history.

SOURCE with comments

It is surprising how long it took for people to understand how wrong the Vietnam war was.
And we are getting worse instead of better, like blowing up fastboats, murdering the Ayatollah and his wife, attacking Iran, funding genocide in Palestine, etc.
The media no longer has any independence to say anything bad.
 
Thank you for your service Morley.

View attachment 5318

The war in Gaza has, since October 7, 2023, killed more journalists than the U.S. Civil War, World Wars I and II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War (including the conflicts in Cambodia and Laos), the wars in Yugoslavia in the 1990s and 2000s, and the post-9/11 war in Afghanistan, combined.

That makes the Israelis seem pretty dumb to not realize the repercussions of attacking journalists?
 
"It is surprising how long it took for people to understand how wrong the Vietnam war was." R5 #343
The U.S. War in Vietnam was protested coast-to-coast.
Draftees complained they wouldn't be old enough to have a glass of wine with supper until they were 21, but were old enough to die for their country at age 18, U.S. military conscription. SO !
- iirc the drinking age was lowered in some States, &
- Nixon suspended U.S. military conscription. BUT !
It seems the U.S. lost its War in Vietnam not on the Southeast Asian battlefield,
but in the living rooms of U.S. TV viewers, not due to any U.S. presidential action
but due to persistent U.S. television reporting, chiefly CBS Walter Cronkite, who polled as the most trusted man in America.

"And we are getting worse instead of better, like blowing up fastboats, murdering the Ayatollah and his wife, attacking Iran, funding genocide in Palestine, etc." R5 #343
a) Yes we are.
b) I hope this is just a blip, an unrepresentative temporary shift, and not evidence of a permanent change.

"The media no longer has any independence to say anything bad." R5 #343
Not without consequence.
Jimmy Kimmel lost his job,
and soon got it back.
Stephen Colbert lost his job
and remains on vacation.

"The media no longer has any independence to say anything bad." R5 #343
Reminds me of the Billy Mumy The Twilight Zone episode It's a Good Life.
 
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Woman with advanced Alzheimer's regained speech and memories after taking magic mushrooms
Melissa Rudy / Tue, June 9, 2026 at 6:00 AM GMT-5

A woman with advanced Alzheimer's disease saw significant improvements in brain function after taking psilocybin-containing mushrooms.

That's according to a case report recently published in Frontiers in Neuroscience, which focused on an elderly woman who had been living with Alzheimer's disease for about 10 years.
The Japanese American woman, whose name was not shared, had experienced severe functional decline for roughly five years. The Brazilian study authors described her as having advanced dementia, with very limited speech or communication, severe cognitive impairment, urinary incontinence and reduced mobility.

She also depended on caregivers for assistance with daily living activities.

The woman received two sessions of psilocybin-containing mushrooms. The first was a 5-gram oral dose, followed by a 3-gram oral dose a month later.

A woman with advanced Alzheimer's disease saw significant improvements in brain function after taking psilocybin-containing mushrooms, according to a published case report.
After the first dose, she experienced profuse sweating and hyperthermia, followed by a prolonged sleep-like state.

Approximately 19 hours later, the patient "spontaneously initiated autobiographical conversation lasting several hours," the researchers wrote.
Over the following days and weeks, the woman experienced restored urinary continence, was able to walk independently and dress herself, and engaged in spontaneous conversation. She was also able to retrieve contextual memories, showed the ability to express emotions and maintained eye contact — smiling with others.


Might lower dose help delay Alzheimer's disease onset?
 
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