The WUO, a now defunct radical leftist faction formed from the
Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), was created to raise public attention to the United States involvement to the
Vietnam War with more violent methods to overthrow the government. It was known for its close coalition with non-members that also hid underground, including
Jane Alpert, a former
Swarthmore College student and radical leftist feminist who wrote for
Rat, a New York underground newspaper for most of her life. Despite sharing similar views on
anti-imperialism, there had been inner tensions among the members and non-members in regard to finding a universal purpose of fighting the Vietnam War. Particularly, this tension was felt between Alpert and the WUO; she proved to be a primary antagonist to the WUO for her radical feminism and drawing controversy not only from the outside but also from the inside. Although she was never a member of the WUO or SDS, Alpert nonetheless played an important role in WUO's development and shared her views of feminism with the Weatherwomen. Because she shared similar intimidation methods as the Weathermen, Alpert allied with them to strengthen her political views and hatred of the U.S. government. Prior to WUO's development, Alpert first became involved in radical politics upon attending Swarthmore College in 1967. She met her lover,
Sam Melville, at her first demonstration of the
Community Action Committee. Along with Melville, she participated in intimidation methods against the U.S. government, in response to the Vietnam War. She first went underground after refusing to accept her parents' bailout for her arrest in the bombings. The idea of bombing a public building originated from reading
Ayn Rand's
The Fountainhead, considering bombing as "a morally legitimate form of protest" For four years underground, Alpert worked closely with Weatherwomen, such as
Bernardine Dohrn and
Kathy Boudin, and helped conspire to overthrow the U.S. government. Along with the bombings of public buildings such as Chase Manhattan Bank, Alpert also wrote to the press of the WUO's further intentions. She addressed her famous manifesto to the Weatherwomen published in 1974 in
Ms. Magazine entitled "Mother Right: A New Feminist Theory." The manifesto drew criticism from the WUO through letters in response to Alpert, for her "retrograde version of feminism....focusing on white self-interest and the dying left." It also spurred a less than desirable response from the non-WUO members as well for they had a different view of feminism than Alpert's vision. ==Mother Right==