Since I was born in 1975, I can't really comment on the tone in DC or the pulse of the nation during the 60's.. But one thing I have been pondering is my perception of the 60's (especially late 60's) and the media's glorification of the counterculture, hippies and social movements that took place.. A lot of which strikingly resembles OWS and the counterculture against the "supposed" 1% that controls America.
When I look back at the 68 and 72 sweeping Nixon victories, I can't help but wonder if the 60's mystique was a facade, generated by historians and the media to exaggerate the movement and to romanticize it. Yes, the 60's were turbulent- The Vietnam war, drugs, Kennedy assassinations, the rise of the USSR, Bay of Pigs, MLK, urban riots and Woodstock.. Yet despite all that, the status quo remained in power politically and Nixon had no problem coasting to victory in 72.. Was the counterculture of the 60's far less impact-full than what we have been led to believe (socially it did change America with mass drug usage and open sexuality) from a political perspective? Most films that deal with the 60's are very harsh on patriotic conservatives, almost portraying them as rigid, backwards minded individuals that refused to open their minds to the growing social unrest and economic inequalities. Noble, idealistic causes.. Yet those people still represented a majority of Americans, correct?
With that being said, will history repeat itself and view this OWS movement as a watershed moment in American politics? I would hope not, but if this continues for a few years history may be re-written to falsely portray this as a worthy ideological cause.
Thoughts?
When I look back at the 68 and 72 sweeping Nixon victories, I can't help but wonder if the 60's mystique was a facade, generated by historians and the media to exaggerate the movement and to romanticize it. Yes, the 60's were turbulent- The Vietnam war, drugs, Kennedy assassinations, the rise of the USSR, Bay of Pigs, MLK, urban riots and Woodstock.. Yet despite all that, the status quo remained in power politically and Nixon had no problem coasting to victory in 72.. Was the counterculture of the 60's far less impact-full than what we have been led to believe (socially it did change America with mass drug usage and open sexuality) from a political perspective? Most films that deal with the 60's are very harsh on patriotic conservatives, almost portraying them as rigid, backwards minded individuals that refused to open their minds to the growing social unrest and economic inequalities. Noble, idealistic causes.. Yet those people still represented a majority of Americans, correct?
With that being said, will history repeat itself and view this OWS movement as a watershed moment in American politics? I would hope not, but if this continues for a few years history may be re-written to falsely portray this as a worthy ideological cause.
Thoughts?