 In your partnership you're going to look at these sources. You're going to think about who wrote the source How does that contribute to some of the meaning of what's being said and you're going to draw three conclusions from each source? Any kind of blame them? He was saying they were being slow. Well, he lied because like he kept saying that they're trying to go into a defensive But you know that they really weren't going through a defensive position. They were trying to kill them as well. They're trying to do them to confess to something but like it seems like they're going against what they're trying to do because he's like So why didn't you shoot them in the first place? So who was this guy? Who's Paul Medlow? I approached some groups who began to question what was being said and began to question why Lieutenant Cali was saying what he was saying that he tries to make it seem like he's some sort of hero and I think that that's an important aspect of this and that Lieutenant Cali did feel like he hadn't really done anything wrong in following his orders. And we quickly moved then into continuing to examine the American public's reaction by looking at Paul Conrad's political cartoon Students participate in what's called a zoom and inquiry looking at a cartoon in small pieces looking at a specific part of the cartoon and not the entire image and Revealing slowly the entire image to them thereby eliciting responses about more specific pieces of the cartoon to engage in some hypothesis making and think about what's coming next. Describe who you see. What do we think we're gonna see next? You're expecting to see some things up here, all right, well, let's find out what new things do you see? All right, so light and dark is being used Perhaps this looks like the top of the ditch. It seems like he's down quite a way Like just below the grassy stuff. It looks like it's sort of like two walls pretty close together snaking off What was described in some of that testimony? That there might there was a trench involved in this whole thing, right? Hmm. We might want to make sense of that. Well, let's make a hypothesis why this person is on the ground I think that it's it's talking about how the US conscience like died in the my lay incident and that Possibly that there wasn't really morality in Vietnam or Some loss of morality that US conscience has Died here. All right, huh Casey? I think it goes like maybe one step further and it's saying that the US soldiers actually killed the US conscience during their actions in my license Maybe who we're gonna see up here are the US soldiers warning guns at the dead body What new things do you see Casey? Well, there are people throwing up confetti waving American flags and somebody's holding up one of those like sort of protest board things, so Now what questions do you need to ask then to get a closer? Get closer to the meaning of this whole cartoon. What questions Jake? What are they really cheering for a great question? Andrew who are these people good and let's see then if we can get an answer to that See that the US conscience was gone. They don't see what really happened in my life They just see this guy, you know this lieutenant in the army who seemingly did something really patriotic, you know killed a bunch of Stupid North Vietnamese enemy people and did don't see that he just massacred civilians