"It's the 60s, Stupid"

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Posted May 21, 2008 | 05:11 PM (EST)



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A few years ago, while doing research for my book, The Pact: Bill Clinton, Newt Gingrich, and the Rivalry that Defined a Generation, I asked President Clinton to highlight his differences with Speaker Gingrich. "If you want to understand the differences between me and Newt you have to go back to the 60s," he told me. "If you think the 60s were generally good, chances are you are a liberal. If you think the 60s were bad, chances are you're a conservative."

That perceptive observation not only tells us a great deal about the politics of the 1990s, it provides useful insight into the issues that will shape the fall contest between Barack Obama and John McCain. While Iraq and a struggling economy may dominate the public debate, the real fight will be over the unresolved conflicts of the 1960s.

Just as the military battle between North and South in the 1860s molded American politics for the rest of that century, so the cultural civil war of the 1960s has defined politics in our time. The clashes between protesters and police in the streets of Berkeley, Chicago, and Detroit were far less violent than the bloody battles between Union and Confederate armies that took in place at Bull Run, Antietam, and Gettysburg. Both civil wars, however, produced a generation that was scarred by the memory of the struggle, deeply divided over its meaning, and determined to win a long-term fight for the hearts and minds of the American people.

The deep generational fissures forged during the 1960s never healed. They were obscured during the 1970s by stagflation, and during the 1980s by the elevated fear of Soviet expansionism. The Cold War ended, however, just as some in the 60s generation were ready to assume positions of power in the 1990s. In the 1960s they fought in the streets; now they fight in the Halls of Congress, in blogs, and in joint television appearances as "talking, or more typically, "shouting" heads.

What are they fighting about? The ideological struggle over the meaning of the 1960s boils down to a debate over what I refer to as a "culture of choice." The clashes over Vietnam, racial rioting, and student protesting have faded into memory, but they have left a lasting impression on the nation. Taken together the social movements of the decade expanded the range of individual choices people have about the way they live their lives. The civil rights movement dramatically expanded options for African-Americans. Along the way, it spearheaded other empowerment movements, especially for women and homosexuals. The range of choices expanded beyond political rights into the world of culture, where many young people questioned all forms of authority and loosened the rules of behavior that had guided their parent's generation. That cultural revolution had a ripple effect that touched nearly every institution in society.

The dramatic changes prompted a backlash among traditionalists who complained that "counterculture" values had seeped into every institution of American society, breeding permissiveness and eroding the moral glue that held society together. Neoconservative thinkers focused on the public policy consequences of a culture that valued liberation over responsibility, claiming that the abandonment of older values such as family, hard work, and discipline have produced an epidemic of divorce, poverty, and crime. At the same time, religious fundamentalists probed the moral and religious results, claiming the culture of individualism led to moral decay.

Over time the Democratic Party has embraced, with varying degrees of enthusiasm, the "culture of choice." Despite differences in style and temperament, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama emphasize the value of diversity and individual expression and stress the positive side of the "rights revolution" in America. Not surprisingly, the groups that have benefited most from the political and legal advances of the decade -- African Americans and women -- form the electoral backbone of the Democratic coalition.

The Republican Party, on the other hand, has become home to conservatives who advocate a "culture of authority." They have turned the decade into a metaphor for a constellation of issues that resonated with millions of Americans who feared the erosion of traditional values and authority in society. For them, mention of the "60s" produces subliminal images of privileged students burning the American flag, radical feminists assaulting the family, militant minorities rioting in the streets, arrogant intellectuals mocking cherished values and blurring the distinction between right and wrong, and faceless government bureaucrats wasting hard-earned tax dollars
while people on welfare did not have to work.

The clash between these two competing views of the 1960s reached a fever pitch during the impeachment debate in the final years of the Clinton administration. "Why do you hate Clinton so much?" an interviewer asked a prominent conservative. The response: Because "he's a womanizing, Elvis-loving, non-inhaling, truth-shading, war-protesting, draft-dodging, abortion-protecting, gay-promoting, gun-hating baby boomer. That's why." Conservative journalist David Frum claimed that Clinton's personal behavior exemplified the pernicious legacy of the 1960s' sexual revolution. "[W]hat's at stake in the Lewinsky scandal," Frum wrote, "[is] the central dogma of the baby boomers: the belief that sex, so long as it's consensual, ought never to be subject to moral scrutiny."

It's possible that the two major candidates this year will be able to move the nation beyond the battle over the 1960s. In many ways, McCain was too old, and Obama too young, to participate in the youthful rebellion that shaped the decade. When President Kennedy was assassinated in November 1963, which marked the symbolic beginning of the troubles of the decade, McCain was already 27 years old. Obama was only two. In addition, polls have shown that many Americans, especially young voters, have responded to Obama's plea for moving beyond the culture wars. At the same time, McCain has been a vote but not a voice for the conservative backlash against the 60s. He also has a proven track record of being willing to reach across the aisle and build coalitions with Democrats, which is rare in the polarized atmosphere in Washington.

Despite their best intentions, however, both men will find it difficult to transcend the cultural divide forged during the 1960s. McCain will realize that the only way to win over voters disaffected with the Bush administration is to make Obama into a threatening figure, and the easiest way to accomplish that goal is to transform him into a child of the 60s. Even when not specifically mentioning the decade, both candidates will be sending subtle signals to their warring armies. Obama will stress the language of choice, praising America's cultural diversity. McCain will talk about responsibility, both at home and abroad, and the importance of traditional values. While Obama praises new rights, McCain will emphasize old rules. As much as the two major candidates will talk about the future, they will find themselves trapped in the past.

 
 

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- January See Profile I'm a Fan of January permalink

"The Powell Memo (also known as the Powell Manifesto) published August 23, 1971

"In 1971, Lewis F. Powell, then a corporate lawyer and member of the boards of 11 corporations, wrote a memo to his friend Eugene Sydnor, Jr., the Director of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. The memorandum was dated August 23, 1971, two months prior to Powell's nomination by President Nixon to the U.S. Supreme Court.

"The Powell Memo did not become available to the public until long after his confirmation to the Court. It was leaked to Jack Anderson, a liberal syndicated columnist, who stirred interest in the document when he cited it as reason to doubt Powell's legal objectivity. Anderson cautioned that Powell "might use his position on the Supreme Court to put his ideas into practice...in behalf of business interests."

"The Chamber and corporate activists took Powell's strategic advice to heart and began building a powerful array of institutions designed to shift public attitudes and beliefs over the course of years and decades. The memo influenced or directly inspired the creation of the Heritage Foundation, the Manhattan Institute, the Cato Institute, Citizens for a Sound Economy, Accuracy in Academe, and others. Their long-term focus began paying off handsomely in the 1980s, in coordination with the Reagan Administration's "hands-off business" philosophy."

Google it for the whole story.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:05 PM on 05/22/2008
- YankeeCanuck See Profile I'm a Fan of YankeeCanuck permalink

The "revolution" of the 60s had nearly as many factions as as Ben and Jerry's flavors. That's one of the reasons it could not sustain itself. The committed antiwar groups, many of whom came up through the civil rights movement, split over the impatience over results and the idea of strict non-violence. Besides, the students had failed to forge real links with the working class youth-- whom they would encounter as security guards and police on the other side of those barricades.
The 1968 presidential nomination race has echoes of today's-- young people got behind Eugene Mc Carthy, the antiwar candidate. It was called by some the kiddie crusade. It failed, for some of the above reasons.
Mark Kurlansky's 1968: The Year that Rocked the World is the best discussion of those times. They're still with us. The country is still divided: witness the underlying sexism and racism that drive some people's decisions, West Virginia, Ohio.
Where are they now, those young activists?
Yes, some of them went to the suburbs and lived conventional self-absorbed lives. But most of them fit service to their communities into the equations. You can find many of them at universities as professors, particularly in Canada. They are the soul of the environmental, human rights movements, relief agencies. They are getting old-- good thing they have children and young friends.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 AM on 05/22/2008
- jackpinesavage See Profile I'm a Fan of jackpinesavage permalink

What?!

If the majority of the 60's liberals...war protesters, civil rights fighters, free lovers and dope smokers... were still fighting for the supposed values of their youth then there would be a point to this. But how many boomer parents have let their children enter the criminal justice system for smoking dope? (As one example)

Where are all those flower children now? Most of them are ensconced in big suburban houses, nervously checking their investment portfolios before making a run to Trader Joe's in the SUV. They sure aren't out there sticking daisies into gun barrels. Mostly, it seems, they just don't want anyone to rock the boat.

And on both sides of that cultural divide, there has been little good. It is that generation that squandered the end of the Cold War and driven the country into the awful place that it sits in now...but we're still supposed to be concerned about their cultural divide? Whatever happened to dying before getting old?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:56 AM on 05/22/2008
- YankeeCanuck See Profile I'm a Fan of YankeeCanuck permalink

Look again. Dying before getting old is a rock n roll conceit. Many boomers are in a state of denial about aging and it may be a good thing. Many of them use that energy to better their communities, and volunteer and contribute to human rights and aid organisations.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:30 PM on 05/22/2008
- theyak See Profile I'm a Fan of theyak permalink

A large percentage of the anti-war protestors of the '60s, were in fact, draft protestors. And the squanderers of the end of the Cold War for the most part were that generations College Republicans, today's "Chickenhawks" who were never under any threat of being drafted. They, like today's college republicans, were "fighting the culture war at home". I suggest todays youth start researching those same 'pro-war, pro-Bush' faces for when they come up for election in 20-30 years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 AM on 05/22/2008
- YankeeCanuck See Profile I'm a Fan of YankeeCanuck permalink

Some may have been, but see my post above. It's a bit larger than that.
The "revolution" failed, but for many other reasons.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:22 PM on 05/22/2008
- breakfast See Profile I'm a Fan of breakfast permalink


And by "staying the course" in Iraq and refusing to "cut and run", Bush hopes to finally win the Viet Nam war. That'll show "em.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 AM on 05/22/2008
- JimR See Profile I'm a Fan of JimR permalink

I think the only voters who will feel at some level that this election is about the 60s are Baby Boomers. Millions of other voters, myself included, were either toddlers or weren't even born then.

The 60s was truly a historic decade! But it's time to move on now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 PM on 05/21/2008
- Chillinout See Profile I'm a Fan of Chillinout permalink

I am a baby boomer and this election isn't really about the 60's as much as it that what is happening in America right now is the same thing that created the 60's. The only difference this time, is that the Democrats are going to be in power instead of the conservatives.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:59 AM on 05/22/2008
- LouisPWu See Profile I'm a Fan of LouisPWu permalink

The conservatives were wrong in the '60s.
They were wrong in the '70s.
They were wrong in the '80s.
They were wrong in the '90s.
They are wrong for the 21st century because they want to turn the clock back to 1800. They live in a world based on superstition and fairytales, and they have NO answers for the problems facing the world of today. They are wrong on race. They are wrong on sexual matters. They are wrong on energy. They are wrong on the budget.
McCain belongs to the past. LEAVE HIM THERE!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:49 PM on 05/21/2008
- KillTheMessenger See Profile I'm a Fan of KillTheMessenger permalink

Make love not war!

YES, WE CAN!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:36 PM on 05/21/2008
- YankeeCanuck See Profile I'm a Fan of YankeeCanuck permalink

Right on sister or bro!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:31 PM on 05/22/2008
- bethinCary See Profile I'm a Fan of bethinCary permalink

great article..
I keep coming back to the 60s being pivotal too in analogy to now.

I think because in the 60s-- with drugs,Panthiesm, freedoms of music and expression, a war many wanted out of, the deaths of many favorite leaders.protests, industrialization, modernaization-especially of those giving hope to minorities- beginning to to have the beginnings of a universal conscience...
There was a great division- that was beginning to draw us into a debate about what we as individuals think we are. What we as a country are. What we want to be. What we wanted the country to be..what makes happy as a country and an individual. What do we want our societal morals to be. .
But it got stopped-by fear.
Stopped in its' tracks as materialism, drugs, excesses- all took over our philosophical underpinnings.

Now I feel that we are at that same crossroads- we are asking ourselves those same questions our parents did. We are getting a do-over or a sort of "you sure you wanna do that?' is being asked of us..
I hope this time-instead of fears dividing us and putting wedges up between us as a nation; we will instead have faith in each other, strength, wisdom to overcome fears that we have learned by our mistakes .
It's the only chance we have as a nation to finally "grow up and to finally anmswer all of our own questions on how to make PROGRESS into the 21st century..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:21 PM on 05/21/2008
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