June 27, 2007
In the cover story from reason's July issue, Brink Lindsey re-examines the 1960s for evidence of how the decade created two absolutely divergent cultural movements.
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
I was hugely disappointed in this article. I don't think the
author supports his thesis at all. Amongst the more egregious
errors (as I see it) is how he vastly undervalues Vietnam, and the
draft in particular, as a motivating force of the 60's
counterculture. The whole article strikes me as a series of
unsupported and dubious claims around a central theme.
It reminds me of the sort of "how many dust bunnies can dance on a
bowling pin" stuff the Liberal Arts people fret over.
I don't get the alleged contribution of the Evangelicals to this
supposed "libertarian center."
The contribution of the Aquarians is clear - they pushed for a
level of personal freedom and self-expression that did not have
much of a voice prior to the New Left movement. But what was the
Evangelical contribution?
But having beat their intellectual retreat, evangelicals
summoned up the fortitude to defend a cultural position that was,
to a considerable extent, worth defending. In particular, they
upheld values that, after the Sturm und Drang of the '60s and '70s
subsided, would garner renewed appreciation across the ideological
divide: committed family life, personal probity and self-restraint,
the work ethic, and unembarrassed American patriotism.
There were people all over the political spectrum arguing for each
of these already. Patriotism, family life, personal probity and
self-restraint, and the work ethic were in no way under-appreciated
or undefended values in American political and social discourse,
the way the individual freedom and innovation trumpeted by the
hippies were.
The contribution of the Aquarians is clear - they pushed for
a level of personal freedom and self-expression that did not have
much of a voice prior to the New Left movement. But what was the
Evangelical contribution?
For one thing, the libertarian movement in education is supported
much more by the evangelical right than by any major demographic on
the left. Speaking of Vietnam, I've often seen militant atheists
(like the ones who comment here) rationalize taxpayer-funded
schooling as a way of rescuing kids from "fundie" parents. In other
words, we have to destroy the village of liberty in order to save
it.
ba zing! Warren gets a dig in on liberal arts!
According to yesterday, LA students get worked up over coed
bathrooms :)
Both sides of that "coin" have contributed to the cloying sentimentality so prevalent in the USA today. Which contributes in myriad ways to the increasingly authoritarian nature of American society. Libertarianism is a far older strain of American culture.
he vastly undervalues Vietnam, and the draft in particular,
as a motivating force of the 60's counterculture
You're confusing the counterculture with the New Left.
"Speaking of Vietnam, I've often seen militant atheists (like
the ones who comment here) rationalize taxpayer-funded schooling as
a way of rescuing kids from "fundie" parents."
So, what exactly doest this have to do with Viet-Nam?
There's a huge difference between taxpayer-funded schooling, which
can include vouchers used to send kids to religious schools, and
public education (aka state-run schools).
Militant atheists? WTF? H&R posters comprise a wide spectrum of
belief, or lack thereof. Hardcore fundies ideas don't get a lot of
respect here (however, the right to be a superstitious
anti-modernist is greatly respected). Perhaps you're confusing this
blog with, say, Austin Cline's?
joe,
The article may not be arguing this explicitly, but one could argue
that the evangelicals invigorated the conservative movement that
triumphed with the election of Ronald Reagan and other Republicans
in the 1980s. Reagan and crew worked to protect capitalism from
unions, the Democratic Party, and the like, through legislation and
also by changing the national mood to one less suspicious of
wealth. Capitalism, which Lindsey mentions time and time again in
the article, is the portion of libertarianism rescued by the
evangelicals.
Has any body read that Bobos in Paradise" book? How would
its thesis differ from Lindsey's? Does Lindsey focus more on the
evangelicals?
Brian Sorgatz, mitch,
The problem is, the article doesn't examine the issue on the level
of policy or even partisan politics. It's about broad social trends
redifining the culture as a whole in a libertarian direction.
The hippies' influence on our broader culture is pretty obvious -
freer speech, freer expression, greater questioning of authority.
The Evangelicals didn't push for more capitalism - they were highly
suspicious of capitalism.
joe,
You are right that the evangelical part of the article is weaker
than the hippie part, and that if the evangelicals helped save
capitalism it was largely by accident. It would be interesting to
hear Lindsey himself respond to your criticisms.
Capitalism and Christianity. One name explains how they
combined.
Amway
Jesse,
You're confusing the counterculture with the New
Left.
I don't think so. Civil Rights may have given birth to the New
Left, but the counterculture gave it growth and vitality.
Even so, wasn't Vietnam center stage on the New Left agenda as
well?
Big Moe:
So, what exactly doest this have to do with
Viet-Nam?
You need to read my paragraph all the way through. The Vietnam
reference is to my next sentence, which you didn't copy and paste:
"In other words, we have to destroy the village of liberty in order
to save it."
By militant atheism, I'm basically talking about the Sam Harris
mentality, which is well represented among H&R regulars and
amounts, IMO, to almost a new bigotry.
Brilliant! When we first decided to homeschool 13 yrs. ago, I got my first taste of the religious right. (Made a couple of life long friends.) WHile their reasons for believing in their values may come from a different "reason", they do have more in common with the far left than the middle of the roaders. I also found the leftist hippies and have many wonderful life long friends from that group as well. Each side believes they can do a better job than the government schools are doing and from all indications, they have been right. The people who are far left or far right are more willing to step out and state their beliefs (because they believe them so strongly) and fight for them than people are don't believe as strongly. These will always be the changers of society because they are willing to be different and accept the criticism of a world that doesn't champion that.
"There is no point in mincing words: The stunning advance of
evangelicalism marked a dismal intellectual regress in American
religion. A lapse into crude superstition and magical thinking,
credulous vulnerability to charlatans, a dangerous weakness for
apocalyptic prophecy (see the massive popularity of the
best-selling nonfiction book of the '70s, evangelical Hal Lindsey's
The Late, Great Planet Earth), and blatant denial of scientific
reality, resurgent conservative Protestantism entailed a widespread
surrender of believers' critical faculties."
This is a total mis-characterization of evangelicals. Let me not
mince words here. Christianity delivered the world once from the
same superstition it is heading back into with all vigor.
Christians who stand on the authenticity of the Bible resist it. I
am sure this genius is referring to the evolution/creation debate,
labelling all who believe in a 7-day creation scenario as
intellectually deficient. Based on his criteria, Isaac Newton would
be considered stupid given the fact he wrote about apocalytpic
events including the return of Jews to Israel 2oo+ years before it
occured.He used the same set of scriptures as Hal Lindsey.
Christianity in the US has surrendered to materialism and walked
away from the One who is to lead. This the Bible predicted as well.
In addition, it predicted the fate of all who refused to have God
in the intellect and suppressed the Truth by their unrighteous
living. He will send them strong delusion that they will believe
the lie (in the last days) that they may condemned.
Jesus is the Truth. All who hear His voice are of the Truth. All
the rest is just intellectual meandering of lost men.
Oi there, Warren, I did my thesis on the phrenological history and gender significance of Dust-bunny pin dancing in medieval Oriental cultures. So screw your "science," square!
@Brian Sorgatz
Yeah how dare I question that the world was made in EXACTLY 11
minutes by the flying spaghetti monster, it says so in the book of
noodle.
Now that I have realized the error of my bigotry against religious
lunatics I am so ashamed, sob.
I second Warren's criticism, which is what I thought when I read the article in print. Looked to me like a strained excuse for a single article on a couple of subjects the author had some facts about.
The Vietnam War and the draft were a large part of the reason
for the birth and blossoming of the left counter culture. The war
was not in defense of our national interest. It was sold on
pretenses that were as easy to fault then as the Iraq war's
pretenses are today. The new left counter culture gave millions of
draft-age men moral support for our resistance to and revulsion by
the government's demand that we go and die without question.
"In the process, the Haight's anarchic innocence was
destroyed....Its special magic never returned; instead, it
dispersed throughout the country, and a thousand sparks began to
blaze."
Living far from San Francisco, I and my like-minded friends
participated vicariously in the Summer of Love and became one of
those "thousand sparks" that began to blaze throughout the country.
We banded together to share our fear of the personal effects of our
government's misbegotten war; to try to live with a little more
freedom and joy; and to plot our course through those long and
troubling years.
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245