Understanding the Self-Immolation of George Winne Jr. at UCSD in Protest of the Vietnam War, 55 Years Later

On May 10, 1970, a 23-year-old UCSD fourth-year student burned himself to death in Revelle Plaza to protest the Vietnam War.

Editordude: I was at UCSD when George Winne burned himself to death — and wrote about it in my new book, The May 1970 Rebellion. The Rag has published a number of articles about George and those times (see here) and Patty Jones and I from the OB Rag were at UC San Diego in 2014 when a memorial for him was unveiled.

By Alex Reinsch-Goldstein / The Guardian — UCSD / May 12, 2025

It was just past 4 p.m. on May 10, 1970, when George Winne Jr., a 23-year-old UC San Diego fourth-year, strode out into Revelle Plaza.

Ten days earlier, then-President Richard Nixon had drastically expanded the Vietnam War by sending American troops into Cambodia. Four days after that, National Guard troops opened fire on a crowd of anti-war protesters at Kent State University in Ohio, killing four students. Massive anti-war demonstrations were taking over Revelle Plaza every week.

However, on Sunday, May 10, in this tense atmosphere, Winne walked alone. He held a sign that read: “In the name of God, End this war.”

Winne stood at the northeastern corner of the plaza, in front of what is now Galbraith Hall, and began to douse himself with gasoline. Then, he lit a match.

UCSD May 1070 geo Winne memorial editThe flames instantly swallowed him. Winne, burning, ran across Revelle Plaza screaming, “Stop the war! Stop the war!” Several horrified bystanders tried to knock Winne down and beat out the flames, but it was no use. By the time the flames were out, Winne had sustained third- and fourth-degree burns across 95% of his body. He spent 10 hours at Scripps Memorial Hospital before dying that night at about 2 a.m.

At the hospital in his last moments, Winne told his parents to write a letter to Nixon, telling them, “The world is in such a terrible mess, and Nixon is part of it.” He also told a friend, “Get rid of guns. Guns just mean more guns.”

The details of Winne’s act itself are only half the story. Who was this solitary, intense young man? Of all the ways to protest an injustice, what made him choose this way? Few who encounter Winne’s story feel like they would make the same choice, while many others struggle to understand it. Perhaps the mystery has only increased the story’s staying power.

Winne was an unlikely anti-war crusader. He came from a military family; his father George Winne Sr. was a naval officer, and Winne himself — who grew up in La Jolla — had actually applied to the United States Naval Academy. He was rejected because he was nearsighted in one eye, and instead, he joined the ROTC at the Colorado School of Mines before transferring to UCSD.

Once he arrived at UCSD, Winne’s outlook began to change. Friends noticed him becoming increasingly disturbed by the war in Vietnam. He stopped talking to his parents entirely — his mother had not heard from him for several months leading up to his death. The war, and how to end it, had become an obsessive focus for Winne. He was just weeks away from graduating when he died, and would have become eligible to be drafted and sent to Vietnam once he lost his student status.

And yet, despite the countless anti-war protests and sit-ins taking place on campus in the Spring 1970, Winne never participated in any of them. His first and last act of protest took place that Sunday in May, alone in Revelle Plaza.

However, though Winne was alone that day, he was not alone in the choice he made. Numerous people self-immolated — deliberately killing themselves by setting themselves on fire — to protest the Vietnam War. Between 1963 and 1965, several Buddhist monks in Vietnam burned to death to voice their opposition to the war — and anti-war activists in the U.S. followed their example. In March 1965, Alice Herz, an 82-year-old German-Jewish immigrant who had narrowly escaped the Holocaust, self-immolated on a street in Detroit to demand that then-President Lyndon B. Johnson end the war in Vietnam. In November that same year, 31-year-old peace activist Norman Morrison burned himself to death in front of the office of Robert McNamara, then-secretary of defense and a main architect of the war. One week later, 22-year-old Roger Allen LaPorte did the same in front of the United Nations headquarters in New York.

The Vietnam War era was not the only time in which people used self-immolation to make a statement. Many readers will undoubtedly remember February of last year when Aaron Bushnell, a 25-year-old airman in the U.S. Air Force, burned himself to death in front of the Israeli embassy in Washington D.C. to protest Israel’s genocide against the Palestinian people. Bushnell, who set himself on fire wearing his Air Force combat fatigues, shouted “Free Palestine” as the flames consumed him. A Secret Service agent arrived on the scene and, rather absurdly, stood there pointing his pistol while Bushnell sat and burned.

Bushnell’s self-immolation polarized public opinion in the U.S. Some praised Bushnell’s act as drastic but justified, while others condemned the “glorification” of suicide for any reason. Officials declined to engage with the human side of the Bushnell story at all; when asked about the incident, then-Pentagon Press Secretary Maj. Gen. Patrick Ryder merely reaffirmed America’s support for Israel. Sen. Bernie Sanders said of Bushnell’s death, “It’s obviously a terrible tragedy, but I think it speaks to the depths of despair that so many people are feeling now about the horrific humanitarian disaster taking place in Gaza, and I share those deep concerns.”

A similar debate took place in the wake of Winne’s self-immolation at UCSD and has sputtered on ever since. Was Winne’s action justified? Was it the act of a madman, or was it a symptom of the desperate times in which it took place?

This now-familiar debate began almost as soon as Winne died. The next day, May 11, 1970, students and faculty held a memorial service for Winne in Revelle Plaza — Herbert Marcuse, famed philosopher and UCSD professor, delivered a eulogy. Issues of The UCSD Guardian featured many more such eulogies, or, conversely, denunciations of Winne’s actions. The debate continued to take place across The Guardian’s pages for decades afterward. Sometimes, the pieces praised Winne as a young man who sacrificed everything for his beliefs; sometimes, they condemned both his act and those who applauded it.

On the fourth anniversary of Winne’s death, then-Editor-in-Chief of The Guardian David Buchbiner wrote:

“The collective acts of masses may ultimately cause change to occur, yet it is in the actions of individuals where the moral conscience to cause change is initially raised. It is this power of the individual to stir conscience which we should recall and honor on this day. May we be as brave.”

On the 20th anniversary, one student penned an op-ed commemorating Winne. Another wrote a letter to the editor titled “Winne Was Not a Hero,” which declared, “[To some,] Winne is a hero of conviction. To me, he’s dead.” Another letter was more ambiguous, eerily similar to Sanders’ statement on Bushnell’s 2024 self-immolation.

“I don’t know if Winne should be termed a ‘hero’ because he sacrificed his life in protest of the war,” the letter read. “I do, however, think that we should reflect upon the circumstances surrounding his death. The tragic alternative that Winne sought is a testimony to the desperation many feel toward the absurdity of war and the degeneration of human morality.”

Even half a century later, Winne’s act has not been forgotten. In 2014, students and faculty from Thurgood Marshall College’s Dimensions of Culture program teamed up to create a memorial for Winne in Revelle Plaza, near where he lit himself on fire. The May 1970 Peace Memorial consists of a small tree, a bench, and a concrete half circle bearing the inscription: “For George Winne Jr., the student activists of May 1970, and all those who continue to struggle for a peaceful world.”

This past May 10 marks 55 years since Winne died. Violent conflicts — in Palestine, in Ukraine, and now in Kashmir — continue to rage across the world. And in a time when students have once again taken a leading role in anti-war activism, Winne’s act — irrespective of what one thinks of it — carries an undeniable resonance. Madman or idealist, the ghost of George Winne still haunts the place where he took his final stand.

The May 1970 Peace Memorial is dedicated not just to Winne but to all those who continue to struggle for a peaceful world. Perhaps they are struggling for a world in which an act like Winne’s would not take place — where that kind of desperation is unthinkable, because the lack of humanity that breeds it has been extinguished for good. But if present experience shows us anything, such a world has not yet come.

Author: Source

4 thoughts on “Understanding the Self-Immolation of George Winne Jr. at UCSD in Protest of the Vietnam War, 55 Years Later

  1. Thanks for your thoughts on this event. The whole Vietnam war and many others before and since in the name of “democracy and freedom” are such a disgrace to our country. Ordered your books in November; they are a must read for all of us that were around during that time.

  2. I personally appreciate this article about George Winne’s protest against the ever expanding war in Viet Nam and unlawful bombing in Cambodia. George Winne and I both graduated from Mission Bay High School and were classmates in the California Cadet Corps that had replaced the Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps on campus. Although I had the distinction of commanding officer of that unit, I too was caught up in the tidal wave of change that impacted the United States in 1970s. So much injustice and governmental power overreach that I joined a protest at San Diego State College and was deeply saddened by the death of George Winne. I also recall my very conservative World War 2 veteran father strongly advising me not to sign anything that could haunt me later in life. And though I never did sign or officially join, I participated in protest marches in 1968-1970 and swiftly leaned to the political left transforming to join the Democratic party in the process. I openly protested the war, did not serve the Armed Forces, though later worked for federal, state, and local governments in environmental protection organizations and became who I am today. Sadly, I do not feel George Winne’s self sacrificed was understood by most, though it certainly gained a great deal of attention to the changing times. I have never been the same since.

  3. RE “Aaron Bushnell”

    What Bushnell’s desperate act exposes is that some 95-99% of people anywhere DO NOTHING when confronted with grave injustices such as the current US-Israeli Holocaust of the Palestinians, just like all the “bad German people” during the Nazi Holocaust, whom they are happily pointing the finger to as examples of OTHER PEOPLE who are bad and evil in their deep dishonesty, self-delusion, and madness.

    He pointed exactly this reality out in one of his last statements:

    “Many of us like to ask ourselves, ‘What would I do if I was alive during slavery? Or the Jim Crow South? Or apartheid? What would I do if my country was committing genocide?’ The answer is, you’re doing it. Right now.”

    Now WHY is it that 95-99% of people anywhere DO NOTHING when confronted with grave injustices? Because “advanced” humans have a malignant disease called a “Soullessness Spectrum Disorder” …. https://www.rolf-hefti.com/covid-19-coronavirus.html

    Because of this big truth Bushnell is pointing to lots of truth-hating cowardly soulless people resort to slandering Bushnell as mentally disturbed or fanatical, having been suicidal (he was not), etc. or try to misrepresent him negatively in some other form –anything in order to NOT see the real truth about themselves. But that is no surprise of course because…

    “The masses have never thirsted after truth. They turn aside from evidence that is not to their taste, preferring to deify error, if error seduces them. Whoever can supply them with illusions is easily their master; whoever attempts to destroy their illusions is always their victim.” — Gustave Le Bon, in 1895

    “America is the greatest exporter of violence the world has ever known. So wear your patriotism on your sleeve and be proud. You are a depraved citizen of the world’s worst killer nation.” — Paul Craig Roberts, Ph.D., economist & former US empire official, in 2015

    “The US empire is quantifiably the most destructive and tyrannical force on this planet, by an extremely massive margin. No other power has spent the 21st century killing people by the millions and displacing them by the tens of millions. No other power is circling the planet with hundreds of military bases, starving people around the world with blockades and economic sanctions, staging proxy wars, color revolutions and coups all over the earth, and working to destabilize and destroy any nation anywhere on this planet who dares to defy its dictates. Only the US empire is doing this. No other power comes anywhere remotely close.” — Caitlin Johnstone, Independent Journalist, in 2024

    “I am about to engage in an extreme act of protest, but compared to what people have been experiencing in Palestine, at the hands of their colonizers (=the genocidal US empire and its genocidal Israeli colony), it’s not extreme at all.” — Aaron Bushnell, shortly before he set himself on fire

    If you have been injected with Covid jabs/bioweapons and are concerned verify what batch number you were injected with at https://howbadismybatch.com

    “We can have the world of our dreams tomorrow, but we have to be willing to fight today.” — Aaron Bushnell, in 2023

Leave a Reply to Ron May Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *