Free as in Freedom by Sam Williams (classic books for 13 year olds .TXT) đ
- Author: Sam Williams
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That stirred me up.â
The visit to the party headquarters proved disappointing, however. Describing it as âthe proverbial smoke-filled room,â Lippman says she became aware for the first time that corruption within the party might actually be the reason behind the cityâs thinly disguised hostility toward poor residents.
Instead of going back to the headquarters, Lippman decided to join up with one of the many clubs aimed at reforming the Democratic party and ousting the last vestiges of the Tammany Hall machine. Dubbed the Woodrow Wilson/FDR Reform Democratic Club, Lippman and her club began showing up at planning and city-council meetings, demanding a greater say.
âOur primary goal was to fight Tammany Hall, Carmine DeSapio and his henchman,âCarmine DeSapio holds the dubious distinction of being
the first Italian-American boss of Tammany Hall, the New York City political machine. For more information on DeSapio and the politics of postwar New York, see John Davenport, âSkinning the Tiger: Carmine DeSapio and the End of the Tammany Era,â New York Affairs (1975): 3:1.
says Lippman. âI was the representative to the city council and was very much involved in creating a viable urban-renewal plan that went beyond simply adding more luxury housing to the neighborhood.â
Such involvement would blossom into greater political activity during the 1960s. By 1965, Lippman had become an âoutspokenâ supporter for political candidates like William Fitts Ryan, a Democratic elected to Congress with the help of reform clubs and one of the first U.S.
representatives to speak out against the Vietnam War.
It wasnât long before Lippman, too, was an outspoken opponent of U.S. involvement in Indochina. âI was against the Vietnam war from the time Kennedy sent troops,â she says. âI had read the stories by reporters and journalists sent to cover the early stages of the conflict. I really believed their forecast that it would become a quagmire.â
Such opposition permeated the Stallman-Lippman household. In 1967, Lippman remarried. Her new husband, Maurice Lippman, a major in the Air National Guard, resigned his commission to demonstrate his opposition to the war. Lippmanâs stepson, Andrew Lippman, was at MIT and temporarily eligible for a student deferment.
Still, the threat of induction should that deferment disappear, as it eventually did, made the risk of U.S.
escalation all the more immediate. Finally, there was Richard who, though younger, faced the prospect of choosing between Vietnam or Canada when the war lasted into the 1970s.
âVietnam was a major issue in our household,â says Lippman. âWe talked about it constantly: what would we do if the war continued, what steps Richard or his stepbrother would take if they got drafted. We were all opposed to the war and the draft. We really thought it was immoral.â
For Stallman, the Vietnam War elicited a complex mixture of emotions: confusion, horror, and, ultimately, a profound sense of political impotence. As a kid who could barely cope in the mild authoritarian universe of private school, Stallman experienced a shiver whenever the thought of Army boot camp presented itself.
âI was devastated by the fear, but I couldnât imagine what to do and didnât have the guts to go demonstrate,â
recalls Stallman, whose March 18th birthday earned him a dreaded low number in the draft lottery when the federal government finally eliminated college deferments in 1971. âI couldnât envision moving to Canada or Sweden. The idea of getting up by myself and moving somewhere. How could I do that? I didnât know how to live by myself. I wasnât the kind of person who felt confident in approaching things like that.â
Stallman says he was both impressed and shamed by the family members who did speak out. Recalling a bumper sticker on his fatherâs car likening the My Lai massacre to similar Nazi atrocities in World War II, he says he was âexcitedâ by his fatherâs gesture of outrage. âI admired him for doing it,â Stallman says.
âBut I didnât imagine that I could do anything. I was afraid that the juggernaut of the draft was going to destroy me.â
Although descriptions of his own unwillingness to speak out carry a tinge of nostalgic regret, Stallman says he was ultimately turned off by the tone and direction of the anti-war movement. Like other members of the Science Honors Program, he saw the weekend demonstrations at Columbia as little more than a distracting spectacle.Chess, another Columbia Science Honors Program alum, describes the protests as âbackground noise.â âWe were all political,â he says, âbut the SHP was imporant. We would never have skipped it for a demonstration.â
Ultimately, Stallman says, the irrational forces driving the anti-war movement became indistinguishable from the irrational forces driving the rest of youth culture. Instead of worshiping the Beatles, girls in Stallmanâs age group were suddenly worshiping firebrands like Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin. To a kid already struggling to comprehend his teenage peers, escapist slogans like âmake love not warâ had a taunting quality. Not only was it a reminder that Stallman, the short-haired outsider who hated rock ânâ
roll, detested drugs, and didnât participate in campus demonstrations, wasnât getting it politically; he wasnât âgetting itâ sexually either.
âI didnât like the counter culture much,â Stallman admits. âI didnât like the music. I didnât like the drugs. I was scared of the drugs. I especially didnât like the anti-intellectualism, and I didnât like the prejudice against technology. After all, I loved a computer. And I didnât like the mindless
anti-Americanism that I often encountered. There were people whose thinking was so simplistic that if they disapproved of the conduct of the U.S. in the Vietnam War, they had to support the North Vietnamese. They couldnât imagine a more complicated position, I guess.â
Such comments alleviate feelings of timidity. They also underline a trait that would become the key to Stallmanâs own political maturation. For Stallman, political confidence was directly proportionate to personal confidence. By 1970, Stallman had become confident in few things outside the realm of math and science. Nevertheless, confidence in math gave him enough of a foundation to examine the anti-war movement in purely logical terms. In the process of doing so, Stallman had found the logic wanting. Although opposed to the war in Vietnam, Stallman saw no reason to disavow war as a means for defending liberty or correcting injustice. Rather than widen the breach between himself and his peers, however, Stallman elected to keep the analysis to himself.
In 1970, Stallman left behind the nightly dinnertime conversations about politics and the Vietnam War as he departed for Harvard. Looking back, Stallman describes the transition from his motherâs Manhattan apartment to life in a Cambridge dorm as an âescape.â Peers who watched Stallman make the transition, however, saw little to suggest a liberating experience.
âHe seemed pretty miserable for the first while at Harvard,â recalls Dan Chess, a classmate in the Science Honors Program who also matriculated at Harvard. âYou could tell that human interaction was really difficult for him, and there was no way of avoiding it at Harvard. Harvard was an intensely social kind of place.â
To ease the transition, Stallman fell back on his strengths: math and science. Like most members of the Science Honors Program, Stallman breezed through the qualifying exam for Math 55, the legendary âboot campâ
class for freshman mathematics âconcentratorsâ at Harvard. Within the class, members of the Science Honors Program formed a durable unit. âWe were the math mafia,â says Chess with a laugh. âHarvard was nothing, at least compared with the SHP.â
To earn the right to boast, however, Stallman, Chess, and the other SHP alumni had to get through Math 55.
Promising four years worth of math in two semesters, the course favored only the truly devout. âIt was an amazing class,â says David Harbater, a former âmath mafiaâ member and now a professor of mathematics at the University of Pennsylvania. âItâs probably safe to say there has never been a class for beginning college students that was that intense and that advanced. The phrase I say to people just to get it across is that, among other things, by the second semester we were discussing the differential geometry of Banach manifolds. Thatâs usually when their eyes bug out, because most people donât start talking about Banach manifolds until their second year of graduate school.â
Starting with 75 students, the class quickly melted down to 20 by the end of the second semester. Of that 20, says Harbater, âonly 10 really knew what they were doing.â Of that 10, 8 would go on to become future mathematics professors, 1 would go on to teach physics.
âThe other one,â emphasizes Harbater, âwas Richard Stallman.â
Seth Breidbart, a fellow Math 55 classmate, remembers Stallman distinguishing himself from his peers even then.
âHe was a stickler in some very strange ways,â says Breidbart. There is a standard technique in math which everybody does wrong. Itâs an abuse of notation where you have to define a function for something and what you do is you define a function and then you prove that itâs well defined. Except the first time he did and presented it, he defined a relation and proved that itâs a function. Itâs the exact same proof, but he used the correct terminology, which no one else did. Thatâs just the way he was.â
It was in Math 55 that Richard Stallman began to cultivate a reputation for brilliance. Breidbart agrees, but Chess, whose competitive streak refused to yield, says the realization that Stallman might be the best mathematician in the class didnât set in until the next year. âIt was during a class on Real Analysis, which I took with Richard the next year,â says Chess, now a math professor at Hunter College. âI actually remember in a proof about complex valued measures that Richard came up with an idea that was basically a metaphor from the calculus of variations. It was the first time I ever saw somebody solve a problem in a brilliantly original way.â
Chess makes no bones about it: watching Stallmanâs solution unfold on the chalkboard was a devastating blow. As a kid whoâd always taken pride in being the smartest mathematician the room, it was like catching a glimpse of his own mortality. Years later, as Chess slowly came to accept the professional rank of a good-but-not-great mathematician, he had Stallmanâs sophomore-year proof to look back on as a taunting early indicator.
âThatâs the thing about mathematics,â says Chess. âYou donât have to be a first-rank mathematician to recognize first-rate mathematical talent. I could tell I was up there, but I could also tell I wasnât at the first rank. If Richard had chosen to be a
mathematician, he would have been a first-rank mathematician.â
For Stallman, success in the classroom was balanced by the same lack of success in the social arena. Even as other members of the math mafia gathered to take on the Math 55 problem sets, Stallman preferred to work alone.
The same went for living arrangements. On the housing application for Harvard, Stallman clearly spelled out his preferences. âI said I preferred an invisible, inaudible, intangible roommate,â he says. In a rare stroke of bureaucratic foresight, Harvardâs housing office accepted the request, giving Stallman a one-room single for his freshman year.
Breidbart, the only math-mafia member to share a dorm with Stallman that freshman year, says Stallman slowly but surely learned how to interact with other students.
He recalls how other dorm mates, impressed by Stallmanâs logical acumen, began welcoming his input whenever an intellectual debate broke out in the dining club or dorm commons.
âWe had the usual bull
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