- Ronald Ridenhour
Ronald Ridenhour (
April 6 ,1946 –May 10 ,1998 ), a youngGI who served in the 11th Infantry Brigade during theVietnam War , played a central role in spurring the investigation of theMy Lai Massacre .Life
Ridenhour was born in
Oakland, California , and was raised inArizona .A helicopter gunner, Ridenhour heard of the massacre from friends while serving in
Vietnam . While still on active duty, he gathered eyewitness and participant accounts from other soldiers. On his return to theUnited States , he sent letters to 30 members of Congress and to Pentagon officials, spurring a probe that led to several indictments against those involved, and the conviction ofWilliam Calley . His own account of learning about the massacre can be found in the article, "Jesus Was a Gook", published in "Nobody Gets Off the Bus: The Viet Nam Generation Big Book".Ridenhour, a 1972 graduate of
Claremont Men's College , went on to become an investigative journalist, winning aGeorge Polk Award in 1987 for his expose of a tax scandal inNew Orleans , based on a year-long investigation.He died of a heart attack in 1998, aged 52, in
Metairie, Louisiana .According to
Jonathan Glover 's book "Humanity: A Moral History of the Twentieth Century", Ridenhour took part in the Princeton version of theMilgram experiment . Ridenhour was part of the minority who refused to administer electric shocks that would result in death. He was the only participant who refused to administer any shocks whatsoever. This fact is also mentioned in the novel "I, Lucifer " byGlen Duncan . Recent investigations, however, suggest that the Ron Ridenhour who took part in the Milgram experiment and the Ron Ridenhour who helped break the story of the My Lai Massacre are two different individuals. Glover's source for treating the two individuals as identical came from Gordon Bear, a social psychologist, who on April 5, 2008 posted a correction to the listserv of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology.Quote
:"Some people -- most, it seems -- will, under some circumstances, do anything someone in authority tells them to.... Government institutions, like most humans, have a reflexive reaction to the exposure of internal corruption and wrongdoing: No matter how transparent the effort, their first response is to lie, conceal and cover up. Also like human beings, once an institution has embraced a particular lie in support of a particular coverup, it will forever proclaim its innocence."
:--"
Los Angeles Times ", March 16, 1993External links
* [http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/mylai/Myl_hero.html#RON A first-person account] of Ridenhour's investigation and exposure of the My Lai Massacre, transcribed from a talk he gave at
Tulane University in 1994
* [http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/mylai/ridenhour_ltr.html Ridenhour's 1969 letter] to Congress and Pentagon officials
* [http://www.ridenhour.org/about.shtml The Ridenhour Prizes]
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