A Matter of Conscience: GI Resistance During the Vietnam War

BONUS EPISODE: First person with Peter Hagerty

18 min · 18 de feb de 2026
Portada del episodio BONUS EPISODE: First person with Peter Hagerty

Descripción

In 1969 Peter Hagerty, Navy ROTC instructor, inspected a destroyer the way he was supposed to. He followed the rules. The ship was in bad shape. He told his superior that the hairline crack on the barrels of the guns could cause an explosion. He said he would not approve the ship for battle. The captain told Peter, "you're a goddamn agitator” and said he would court-martial him. He found an attorney to defend him as he refused to go to Vietnam. Hagerty, motivated by guilt that his class background spared him from fighting the Navy in court, became involved in GI rights for men who went AWOL. For show notes, glossary, photos, and more, visit amatterofconscience.com [https://amatterofconscience.com/podcast/]

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21 episodios

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A Ferocious Place: Long Binh Jail

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In this powerful episode of A Matter of Conscience, veterans of the Vietnam War bear witness to the unthinkable — and reveal the moral courage it took to refuse complicity. From infantry soldiers surviving ambushes, to a military intelligence officer who risked his life to stop the torture of prisoners, to a whistleblower threatened into silence after reporting war crimes, these are stories of young men — barely out of their teens — confronting the darkest extremes of warfare. We’ll also hear from two Vietnamese women, survivors of the My Lai massacre, whose devastating testimonies put a human face on a U.S. military atrocity that shook the world.  This is not a comfortable listen, but it is a necessary one to understand why many U.S. soldiers came to oppose the war they were fighting. Check out the show notes [https://amatterofconscience.com/podcast/].

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