T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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685.1 | making sense on the "60's" | ORCAS::MCKINNON_JA | otium cum dignitatum | Thu Jan 31 1991 10:07 | 2 |
| you're welcome...
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685.2 | an editorial | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Thu Jan 31 1991 10:36 | 31 |
| One of the characteristics of revolutions is that very often at the
tail end of the revolution, there are activities that are not only
excessive but actually counter-productive.
Indeed a word has come into our vocabulary to characterize people who
engage in such activity.
They are called Jacobins.
The Jacobins were radical democrats advocating egalitarian democracy
and engaging in terrorist activities during the French Revolution of
1789. (I don't remember my history well enuf to say for certain, but I
will hazard a *guess* that the Jacobins provided huge impetus for
Napolean)
In my opinion, we *can* thank the 'Jacobins' of 1968 for ensuring the
election of their 'favorite politician'. The quite sincere radicals of
1968 by their excesses in Chicago (during the democratic national
convention) as well as elsewhere, sufficiently sabotaged and isolated
the moderate left as to ensure that Hubert Humphrey not be elected.
The events at the Democratic convention of 1968, did more to determine the
course of domestic history for the next decade than any other single event.
What would domestic Americal life had been like had Nixon *not* been
elected?
Where would you be Joe Dimaggio?
The excesses of those Jacobins -after the *!@$*&# war against
THE WAR had ALREADY been won- stopped in its tracks the liberal avalanche
that had been started by Clean Gene and Bobby
Thankyou Abby Hoffman etal
sign me
a veteran for McCarthy (in New Hampshire primary)
|
685.3 | now, where're my love beads & patched jeans??? | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | snow sky | Thu Jan 31 1991 10:37 | 13 |
| you're welcome! and I never thought I'd be thanked! :-)
In another string, Dave Dawson (I think it was Dave) asked, what
happened to us? Us being those of us who came of age in the 60s. You
might look in that topic too.
There's a lot left to do. I would not want to burden any generation
with utopia. (Not that I think there's any danger of that happening.)
I enjoyed the series very much (it was broadcast on Vt PTV last week).
Sara
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685.4 | decade of concentrated change | TRACKS::PARENT | Human In Process | Thu Jan 31 1991 10:47 | 26 |
|
Michele,
Being born in '53 the '60s were a part of and influenced my life.
I don't know that I would say the 80s politics undid what happened
in the 60s, it was certainly reaction to what went before.
The 60s had lots of chaos and activism that in later years became solid
movements that continue. Environmental concern became focused then.
As did the individual rights movement. The concept that society was
not monolithic and the individual was a key element was further
focused. The idea that an individual can make a difference was from
many years before, the 60s was the lens that focused on the actuality
that individuals can make change happen.
One thing that was assured it was the whole idea of uncertainty of who,
what, and if. Every where you looked the ideas were challenged, history
was no longer a good reason or excuse for something being the same.
Even history itself was examined and exposed for it's inaccuracies.
The 60s wasn't as much an era as a wave that crested and continues.
The ripples that started that wave were from generations before.
Peace,
Allison
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685.5 | Amen | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Broccoli not bombs! | Thu Jan 31 1991 10:49 | 12 |
| RE: .0
Amen Sister!
PS:
I also watched the show with great interest. I was born in 59 so I
remember some of the stuff (like JFK and RFK and MLK being shot) and
my parents (God Bless Them) were infused with values and ideals of the
time that they passed on to me. Of course, living them is harder!
|
685.6 | thank you | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | the social change one... | Thu Jan 31 1991 11:29 | 20 |
|
I think the sixties still has a tremndous impact in many parts of
our life today. The values and ideals are still out there. Maybe
not up on the stage standing beside Ronald Reagan, but they are
still out here in many people, even if buried deep inside. Just
look at all the emotions people like JFK and RFK and MLK still
bring out in us.
No, I think ideals of the sixties are not dead. I think they will
revive again after this current conservative swing swings back
again.
And thank you, Mom and Dad, and other people active in the sixties...
you gave us a great starting place to resume from once we get back
to the more liberal swing again.
-Erik
(PS- I was deeply moved by the PBS program last night too)
|
685.7 | another take | GUCCI::SANTSCHI | violence cannot solve problems | Thu Jan 31 1991 11:47 | 10 |
| To disagree just a bit with Herb regarding the single event that
influenced the succeeding decades (to paraphrase :) ):
The event that preceeded the '68 Democratic Convention, it is my belief
that had he lived, Robert Kennedy would have been elected President,
not Nixon.
Interesting thought, no?
sue
|
685.8 | but what do I know, I became 30 in Jan 68 | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Thu Jan 31 1991 12:04 | 19 |
| I agree that Bobbie was a seminal force in the 60s and that his death
was an awesome tragedy. I think it hit me MORE even than the
assasination of his brother. My personal belief is that Bobby was by
far the most emotionally committed to liberal ideals of all the
Kennedys of his generation.
I also feel a tremendous sadness for Teddie, who saw three of his older
brothers suffer premature death. He simply wasn't able to carry the
burden thrust upon him by his father and his country. And he collapsed
beneath the burden.
I don't know whether Bobbie would have been nominated and elected had
he survived. If true then Sirhan Sirhan is an even greater figure in
history than I felt.
I do however feel certain that Humphrey WOULD have been elected had it
not been for the understandable excesses following Bobbies death. I
believe that statement would be shared by most contemporary historians
herb
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685.9 | let's really look closely.... | JURAN::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Thu Jan 31 1991 12:11 | 13 |
| > I also feel a tremendous sadness for Teddie, who saw three of his older
> brothers suffer premature death. He simply wasn't able to carry the
> burden thrust upon him by his father and his country. And he collapsed
> beneath the burden.
I get the sense that good ole Teddie NEVER was destined for
greatness on a National level. He just never had it in him
and only is riding the Kennedy name. He collapsed way before
he even finished prep school!
justme....jacqui
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685.10 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Thu Jan 31 1991 12:26 | 2 |
| ok
|
685.11 | Thanks for your viewpoint | GUCCI::SANTSCHI | violence cannot solve problems | Thu Jan 31 1991 12:42 | 15 |
| Interesting reply, herb. I was a senior in high school at the time of
the election, taking US Government too. It's interesting to see an
"adult" perspective, as my frame of reference was high school. I think
that I grew up that year, forming some mature opinions that I still
hold today. I think tha't when it all became "real".
I too supported Humphrey, and was saddened when he died, because his
passing, to me, meant that a person that could bring about and influence
society to better understanding and tolerance of other was now silent.
I remember that I had a picture of Humphrey hanging in my room, much to
my Republican mother's dismay.
We still agree to disagree to this day. :)
sue
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685.12 | Am I the only one who sees a conflict? | LEDS::LEWICKE | Redneck in training | Fri Feb 15 1991 11:25 | 11 |
| My observation was that a lot of people accepted a lot of rhetoric
as gospel during the sixties (and still do) without ever examing the
real premises behind it. Am I one of the only people who sees an
inherent conflict between "Ask not what your country can do for you;
ask what you can do for your country." and "...to secure these rights
governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from
the consent of the governed...", or "...government of the people, by the
people and for the people...". I think that the "ask not" statement is
contraty to everything that a constitutional republic stands for.
Although I must say that it makes a nice "sound bite".
|
685.13 | What were the sixties? | REFINE::BARTOO | Self-proclaimed BADBOY of notes | Fri Feb 15 1991 11:35 | 5 |
|
The ask not clause is not at all contradictory to our constitution.
The clause is saying that you will get more from your government if you
put more into your government.
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685.14 | | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | Freeway Condition: HUG ME! | Fri Feb 15 1991 11:37 | 6 |
| I believe, though I was just a tad at the time (*8, that President
Kennedy's quote was directed to those who were saying *only* "What will
this country do for me?" I believe it was a reminder that the country's
citizens *are* the country, and have to give something back.
E Grace
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685.15 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | I'm the journey | Fri Feb 15 1991 11:39 | 6 |
| say what you will about "ask not..." I say it sounds and comes across a whole
lot better and is more elegant than "a thousand points of light"
;-}
Sara
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685.16 | Some clarification | LEDS::LEWICKE | Redneck in training | Fri Feb 15 1991 12:24 | 14 |
| Just to clarify, in no particular order: The ask not quote is
Robert Kennedy not John. The other two were from the Declaration of
Independence and Lincoln's Gettysburg address, not the constitution.
Surprisingly there are a lot of things in the constitution that we
often assume are in it. For instance it doesn't prohibit taxation
without representation.
Personally I still consider any government or politician that feels
that people should serve their government rather than the converse to
be an abomination. I also reject the idea that our rights are handed
to us by our government. We surrender some of our rights to our
government in excange for having our freedom protected. Lately the
biggest threat to our freedom has been our government.
John
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685.17 | | REFINE::BARTOO | Self-proclaimed BADBOY of notes | Fri Feb 15 1991 12:33 | 12 |
|
RE: .16
Of course the people should serve their government. The government is
not our father, it is our child.
Governmental threat to freedom? What gives you this opinion of the
government?
NICK
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685.18 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Feb 15 1991 12:37 | 6 |
| <the ask not quote is Robert Kennedy not John>
I believe the ask not statement was made by John Kennedy in his
Inaugural Address Jan 20(?) 1961.
(Spose it might have been conceived by Bobby)
|
685.19 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | hanging in there | Fri Feb 15 1991 12:38 | 3 |
| 'Ask not' was indeed JFK at his inauguration
BJ
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685.20 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | I'm the journey | Fri Feb 15 1991 12:41 | 3 |
| a friend has said to me, that the most feared words in the English language are
"we're from the government and we're here to help you."
|
685.21 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | wheel to the storm and fly | Fri Feb 15 1991 12:41 | 4 |
| re .17 Government is a tool. Not a father or a child. Just a
way for a bunch of people to secure their rights.
"Lo, men have become the tools of their tools."
|
685.22 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Fri Feb 15 1991 12:52 | 5 |
| My guess as to who 'created' those words would be either Arthur
Schlesinger Jr. or Theodore Sorenson (leaning toward Sorenson).
Even Kennedy, as eloquent as we like to remember him, had some very
gifted speech writers.
|
685.23 | OK, it's a tool | REFINE::BARTOO | Self-proclaimed BADBOY of notes | Fri Feb 15 1991 13:41 | 9 |
|
RE: .21
What happens when you neglect a tool's need for maintenance, yet continue
to make it work for you?
NICK
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685.24 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | wheel to the storm and fly | Fri Feb 15 1991 13:56 | 1 |
| You said 'serve'. Quite different concept than 'maintain'.
|
685.25 | | CFSCTC::GLIDEWELL | Wow! It's The Abyss! | Sat Feb 16 1991 02:37 | 9 |
| > 'Ask not' was indeed JFK at his inauguration
>
yup, he said it ... altho proclaimed would be a more
accurate verb. It absolutely rang!
I believe Richard Goodwin wrote it; he was a speech
writer with the K's for years. I'm foggy about what
else he did, other than the politically knowledgeable
think he is terrific.
|
685.26 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | It ain't easy being green | Sat Feb 16 1991 13:10 | 7 |
| <what else he did>
Well he married LBJs biographer (and putative mistress?) Doris Kearns.
h
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685.27 | | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo | Sat Feb 16 1991 13:24 | 12 |
| re .25,
>> > 'Ask not' was indeed JFK at his inauguration
>> [...]
>> I believe Richard Goodwin wrote it;
I vaguely recall reading where Sorenson was asked if he
had written that. He answered somelike like
Ask not what I wrote for JFK ....
Dan
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685.28 | Imagine... | BATRI::MARCUS | The Daze of Our Lives | Tue Feb 19 1991 12:23 | 10 |
|
You may say that I'm a dreamer,
But I'm not the only one....
There really did seem to be a lot of us then.
Barb
p.s. Anyone go to The March?
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685.29 | The Sixties <> the 1960's | THEBAY::COLBIN::EVANS | One-wheel drivin' | Wed Feb 20 1991 19:04 | 13 |
| RE: "Ask Not" and "The Sixties"
Kennedy didn't really say that in The Sixties. The Sixties are NOT
the same as the 1960's. The Sixties (The Commie-pinko-hippie-fag era.
And I say that with great affection and nostalgia) actually started
around 1966 and went to about 1976.
Kennedy was definitely not A Sixties person, although I think his
election presaged the times when the younger folks and idea would
take the country by storm.
--DE
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685.30 | | REFINE::BARTOO | Put this in your queue & print it | Wed Feb 20 1991 20:29 | 8 |
|
RE: .29
"The Sixties" 1964-1973
"The Seventies" 1973-1981
"The Eighties" 1981-1989
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685.31 | .30 works for me, because... | NEMAIL::KALIKOWD | Parody Error -- Please retry | Wed Feb 20 1991 20:36 | 1 |
| ... I graduated college in '64 and missed the whole dang thing! :-)
|
685.32 | out of it | WMOIS::B_REINKE | My gr'baby=*better* than notes! | Wed Feb 20 1991 21:33 | 10 |
| Dan
I graduated in '66 and missed most of it too...
I was a college prof. by '69 and a mom, when most of the stuff
let loose I was too p.j. (Woodstock) or involved in parenting
(marches in Cambridge, etc ) as a nursing mom, or too conservative
(never smoked pot), to be involved.
Bonnie
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685.33 | that makes sense :-) | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | when I get you on my wavelength | Thu Feb 21 1991 11:55 | 7 |
| The Sixties ended the year I got pregnant ('73). That makes sense to
me. Things have never been the same since. :-)
(Although, I think my daughter would have loved The Sixties.)
Lorna
|
685.34 | I loved that time | GRANPA::TDAVIS | | Thu Feb 21 1991 12:50 | 3 |
| I graduated in 1972, so I got to enjoy, and live that era,my children
(two boys 19 & 16) wished they could have lived that era, they
love the music of that time.If we call all go back......
|
685.35 | | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante divorcee | Thu Feb 21 1991 16:05 | 15 |
| I was sixties all the way. Graduated high school in 68. Dropped out of college.
Joined the peace, love, dope crowd and hitch hiked around the country between
hospital jobs. I wore a white uniform during the day and hippy drag at night.
Everything seemed intense and spirituality was in the air. There was a feeling
of change and excitment, as if the world really could be affected.
Everything I owned could fit in a VW bug and leave room for a passenger. I look
around me sometimes and wonder why I've come to need more.
One thing I do remember, the crowd I hung with, the back to the land types, were
not big on women's liberation. My husband expected me to cook everything from
srcatch and be the earth mother. We were expected to be able to talk about all
the events but the bottom line was we made dinner and cleaned up afterwards.
liesl
|
685.36 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Mon Mar 25 1991 15:21 | 29 |
| This week' Newsweek (3/25) contains an article on the Sixties by George
Will. The article is smug and somewhat too harsh, but it also contains
a lot of truth. Among them...
...
...It reflects a vague--very vague--desire to (in the words of The
Doors' anthem) "break on through to the other side." Through what? To
what? Don't ask. The Doors didn't. Peopel who talk like The Doors
are not, as such people say, "into" details.
...In Randall Jarrell's novel "Pictures from an Institution" a foreign
visitor says, "You Americans do not rear children, you INCITE them; you
give them food and shelter and applause." the problem is juvenophilia.
It is the foolishness of listening for wisdom from the mouths of babes
and hoping that youthful vigor (the favorate word along the New
Frontier when the Sixties were aborning) will liberate by smashing
suffocating old structures. Remember the Founding Father, Chuck Berry:
"Hail, hail, rock and roll, deliver me from the days of old."
...
I personally do not think the Sixties left much legacy at all. It
didn't produce any great art which always serves as an indicator of a
great era. Much of the rock and roll is indeed, as as Will puts
it, juvenile; or to use a phrase I just learned, "brain dead". But
it weren't too bad. Will says it was boring, but so were the
era of 50's 70's and 80's. May we live in a more interesting time.
Eugene
|
685.37 | | CFSCTC::MACKIN | That is a non sequitur | Mon Mar 25 1991 15:30 | 13 |
| That's an interesting perspective, but one I disagree with. I've done
a fair bit of reading about the sixties and think that it has left a
significant legacy on the U.S., at least.
Some things that came out of the sixties: a woman's right to an
abortion. Women's rights. Civil rights for minorities. Anti-war
organizations. Serious environmental concern started during that
decade. The 60s left such a legacy, IMO, because the 50s were such
a conservative decade where very little was done to challenge the
status quo. Even though most of these movements started earlier, its
been my perception that they only really took off during the 60s.
Jim
|
685.38 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Mon Mar 25 1991 15:38 | 4 |
| And let's not forget the Rolling Stones, who continue to roll today
as good as ever...
:-)
|
685.39 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | corner of 18th and Fairfax | Mon Mar 25 1991 15:44 | 9 |
| Oh, there was art. Op Art. Peter Max. There was an entire nation
wrestling to break out of its forms and its function, testing its
preconceptions. Not all of the attempts were successful, but the very
fact that people QUESTIONED their givens was fantastic in its
originality (I know, I know, they did that during the revolutionary war
too, but I don't think they did it to such an extent).
-Jody
|
685.40 | to know where I am, look at where I've been | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | Mudshark Boots! | Tue Mar 26 1991 08:45 | 22 |
| "...deliver me from the days of old..." Chuck Berry is Black. He knows the
days of old were not all fun and games.
"Break on through" - that is, question authority. Something about that dusty
old document, the Constitution, makes me think this is not such a radical idea.
The 40s were about this nation waking to its own power in the world, about
defeating Evil (really). I'm grateful to our parents for that. But they are not
invincibly pure. We expected that of them, in the 60s. Turns out they are
only human, doing the best they could...
The 50s were about smugness, confidence, export of the Amemrican Way, since the
confidence in the virtue of the U.S. was not questioned by most. this is when
our parents raised us to be idealistic, to do right. Some of the bad stuff was
hidden from them (as now, from us!), and some they didn't see because they
weren't looking for it. I think humans get complacent very easily.
The 60s were about questioning the smugness, the virtue, of the country because
the contrast between the IDEALS our parents fought for, and believed in, and the
REALITY of the applications we saw all round us, were so stark. We questioned
what we saw, well they got upset. Things were not the way they were supposed to
be -- change it, NOW! Fix it, NOW! Do it, NOW!
|
685.41 | | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Tue Mar 26 1991 13:05 | 13 |
| Yeah, Sara, I like that perspective. I flashed on another aspect of the 60s
while I was writing a letter last night; seems to me that this was an era when
the youth found its voice, found within itself the confidence to shrug off any
need to pay lip-service to their parents' values. New generations of teenagers
have ever since, tried to define their own independence from their parents in
socially visible ways. The media has been engaged in a multi-generational bid
to entice them back into the materialistic fold, with large amounts of success.
Youthful idealism hasn't been entirely sold out, its created anew with each
generation...but within each generation, many are corrupted, and many cannot
find ways to reconcile idealism with living in the real world. (It was a fun
letter to write. ;-).
DougO
|
685.42 | | DENVER::DORO | | Fri Apr 05 1991 18:32 | 9 |
|
re .36
"may we live in more interesting times"
Careful, Eugene! That's an arabic curse!!! (May you live in
interesting times)
:-)
|
685.43 | Chinese curse, I believe | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Fri Apr 05 1991 19:59 | 2 |
| Nit - I always heard "May you live in interesting times" described as a Chinese
curse, not Arabic.
|
685.44 | Me too! | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Fri Apr 05 1991 20:21 | 1 |
|
|
685.45 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | bread and roses | Fri Apr 05 1991 22:05 | 3 |
| me three, and I think Eugene should be our reference on this
one..
BJ
|
685.46 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Sat Apr 06 1991 02:46 | 17 |
| re .43, .44, .45,
If it is, I am not aware of it. However, translation has a way of
turning out the unexpected. Perhaps, it is indeed a creative
translation of some common phrase. It is just that I can't think of
any. It is most likely one of those mythical "Confucious said" things
from Fu Man Chu. And for the life of me, I couldn't figure out how
Kun-Fu-Tsi became "Confucious". Anyway, I think it is great. If you
all think it is a Chinese phrase, I will be glad to take the credit on
behalf of all the Chinese here. By the way, I didn't know
anything about "fortune cookie" until about 2 years after I arrived
here, and I have yet to see a fortune cookie written in Chinese, but I
like them anyway, and I think they are great. I would also like to add
that all those things happened in the 60's, so this note is by no
mean a rathole. :-)
Eugene
|