Yes, yes it did.
I was young then. My older brother was in his first year in college when Kent State happened. He was worried about the draft, of course. He and my dad had some very interesting discussions at the dinner table in May, 1970. And I sat between them. :)
Anyway, my point, which I never really made, was how easily us younger folks were “fooled” by the media and entertainment. I sang that CSN&Y song, along with many other anti-war songs into my early teens, thinking that it was all cool because it was my older brother’s music. Never mind that much of it was based on a false premise, I thought it was music with meaning.
I thought it was music with meaning; Kent State
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I did too until I got tricked into a march in Boston which turned into a riot with the weathermen smashing and destroying..
furthered my edumacation, if you get my drift...
When you figure out that Steven Stills was CIA, All the way, it all starts to make more sense. For me it was being all into the Grateful Dead, not understanding that THEY were a product of the CIA and/or the derp state (that LSD didn’t get up and walk itself out of that lab in Palo Alto), until I came to see the incredible amount of Illuminati symbolism in their songs and art work.