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Can we get over the 60s already?

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I'm sorry, I'm just tired of the older boomers' nostalgia for 1960s-style street protests. They certainly aren't the best or only way to make social change. I don't think they're called for just now, for a variety of reasons.

But if you want some street protests, here's a suggestion: institute a draft.

That will bring kids into the streets. People risk their bodies when their bodies are at risk. I could go on & on about the usefulness of street demos in the great post-60s progressive movement--the LGBT communities, with massive 1979, 1987, and 1992 marchs on Washington, galvanized our movement, changed our own sense of who we were (since we literally got to *see* each other--half a million of us each time), and eventually got some coverage and won enormous ongoing change. But then, what we were facing was genuinely horrible at the time. You could lose your job, custody of your children, the right to see your beloved if she got ill. And men were literally dying--beaten up or, later, dying of AIDS, which Reagan literally did not mention until 1987, after that astonishingly large march, with the AIDS Quilt wrenchingly laid out all across the Mall.

But I digress. Without a draft, I don't foresee massive street protests. It's not middle class Americans who are dying or at risk for death, and so they are unlikely to disrupt their lives by heading into the streets. And that's why there will be no draft. This administration will continue to try to outsource the war--to Halliburton, and to hired "security guards," and so on.

But there are other ways to make change--a topic for everyone else to take up.

 


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I don't think they're called for just now, for a variety of reasons.

 

And those reasons would be..? You've stated that you don't think masses of otherwise comfortable middle class Americans will disrupt their lives by heading to the streets, OK, but what are the reasons demos aren't "called for just now"? They're not called for because no one will show up? That's it?

I don't know many boomers with any interest in marching in the streets, but this boomer is sure tired of people beating up on boomers. Sorry. You're stuck with us for the next 50 years. If you come up with some awesome achievements in the meantime, I'll applaud. I'm not holding my breath and if you want my vote, better ask nice, otherwise I may just write in Ted Kennedy.

I know you want to live forever, but boomers are going to die off in their 70s and 80s just like everyone else. You all aren't going to make it to 110 in any significant numbers.

Fully half of your slight diary lauds what appears to be your politically defining period, the successful LBGT/ACTUP/HIV/AIDS street protests of the '80s and early '90s. Good for you, it was a good thing you did then.

But why do you think they should be preserved forever as the last successful street protests?

You "don't think they are called for just now, for a variety of reasons." What kind of petty, dropshot commentary is that? If you expect to have any credibility here, you can't just leave it at that. What are your reasons?

And who the hell are you to complain, anyway?

My WWII era mother is still voting at 85. We boomers may have thought she was too old to vote in 1968 but she's still voting.

Americans are way too fixated on getting their whiskey, sexy, rock and roll to put down the remote, or leave the key boards and hit the streets.

Those of us who do, and will protest in the streets, (and if anyone bother examining these masses, - they are not just socalled boomers). Many Americans will continue, and we know that we will not have the support and that unfortunately we will have the disdain of our fellow Americans left and right, and while mass protests may not be the "best or only way to make social change," history proves protest are one means toward our shared ends.

I am more interested now in diffusing the growing hostility, slime, and venom being poured out by socalled netroots progressives on people who share the exact same concerns desires and determination to see the facsists in the Bush government held accountable, forced to change course, and for many of us hopefully impeached.

If liberals and the netroots movement are so carnivorous and cannibalistic against people who agree 100% with the ends, but hold differing opinions regarding the most effective means to achieve social change, - our hopes and this movement is doomed.

No one is forcing anyone to take it to the streets. We know there will be no support for us this weekend, but no one anywhere, and especially those who socalled netroots liberals who supposedly share the same core values, desires, ideologies and demands have the right to deny, or dismiss your fellow Americans who choose to assemble in public and raise our voices in protest.

Let's end this debate before it drives a wedge or a stake into the heart of a potentially powerfull movement in its' embryonic stage.

Yeah. Do not storm the Bastille, forget Tiananmen Square. Ho Hum

If you are tired, full of ennui, by all means stay home. Let those filled with passion take over. Do not denigrate the cause. It may be more significant than all the previously protested causes put together. If we attack Iran, we may be talking about a resultant nuclear war. As Einstein said, (i paraphrase) the fourth world war will be fought with sticks and stones.

I was in the streets (never violently as it was clearly counterproductive) and on the town commons protesting from 1965 through 1972. I'm not particularly nostalgic about it, unlike other parts of my lost youth, and I sure wouldn't like to see that kind of thing happen again. It would be arguably counterproductive in the current situation, unintended consequences would be rife, and, most importantly, such demonstrations have a tendency to encourage self-congratulation among the demonstrators rather than focus on a goal.

As I think about this I think the beginning of the Eric Alterman narrative about the corruption of the mainstream media may well begin with the demonization of the 60's protestors. As one small example, I remember breakfast the day after my college commencement in 1969 when my father suddenly wadded up and threw down in disgust the New York Times because it represented a student speaker (actually performer -- and one I'm pretty sure my father hadn't enjoyed) who had won a college-sanctioned vote to appear at commencement as having set up a loud speaker system to try to drown out the traditional ceremony. An absurd, gratuitous, and pointless lie.

Addendum

Are street protests or Internet Websites more effective to bring about political change?

Bush and Cheney have done the impossible: by snatching their long awaited mulligan to replay the Vietnam War the way they wanted, they vindicated everything the hippies said.

Who thinks Vietnam would have been won if we bombed a few more weeks, or escalated into Cambodia? How much more can we untie our hands? Is it coincidence that Cheney, Rumsfeld, Kissenger, and the rest of those tainted men, cemented their mistakes in history, by repeating them, with twice the enthusiasm, resulting in twice the failure?

Who now doubts we were right to withdraw from Vietnam?

This boomer and Vietnam Veteran will always remember with fierce pride the protesters who took to the streets and college campuses -- to have the cops beat them and national guard shoot them -- until by force of personal example, they attracted a mainstream following and eventually proved Gandhi right again about repressive governments: "First they ignore you; then they laugh at you; then they fight you; then you win."

Not long ago I saw a lonely woman, Cindy Sheehan, standing by herself in a roadside Texas ditch outside Deputy Dubya Bush's so-called "ranch." She doesn't stand alone any more because the power of personal example in protest inspires and energizes the citizenry to oppose oppressive and unresponsive government. We protesting boomers and Vietnam Veterans Aganst the War haven't all died off yet. Senator John Kerry even rejoined our ranks the other day. So history has not heard the last of us. The subservient punks of today can express their tired aquiescence to government perfidy and malfeasance all they want; history will remember them for nothing but their abject surrender. They don't need a draft to motivate them. They'd just succumb passively to that, too. They don't live in the times that try mens' souls. They live in the times that buy them.

Bluebell

I am totally with you. Virtually everyone I know in their 50s still have both parents alive.

Also there is a movie coming out totally based on the Beatles music. There are too many Baby Boomers too used to shaping the world around them.

Daniel A. Greenbaum

I don't mind being stuck with you. But can you please, please, please start living in the present! Both the Right and the Left need to relegate the 60s to the history books and finally addresss the world today. The events of the 1860s were far more cataclysmic than the grandiose Bacchic farce of the 1960s, but can you imagine how weird it would have been if the politics of TR's presidency had been obsessed with the events of the Civil War? The Progrsesive Movement of that day would have drowned in silly nostalgia and acrminious sectarian strife.

Re: Do not storm the Bastille, forget Tiananmen Square.

The storming of the Bastille led to the freeing of four petty criminals and three schizphrenics (who were then paraded in triumph from prsion to mental asylum)-- and to the mob lunching ofseveral innocent bystanders.
Tiennamen Square led to-- what exactly? A new wave of repression in China?
I hope no one thinks either is a good model for US politics to follow. Our government is altogether too tempted by repressive autocracy as it is, and I'd rather not deal with homegrown Jacobins stringing up their imagined foes on every lamppost.

I have never heard of anyone being forced to take part in a street protest. Those who disagree with that tactic shouldn't join the protestors. But, if they share the goals of the protest I don't see what they gain by becoming vocal critics of those who do the protesting.

Back in the 60's I didn't join any of the protests, partly because I was a Civil Service employee who would have lost a job if I did. But, also because like many here I thought the protests were counter productive. I was wrong then.

I did my protesting years later, in the late 70's and early 80's, then in the run up to the Iraq fiasco. If I felt physically able I would join any such protest now, but I don't. The reference to Cindy Sheehan is a very good one. Without her willingness, as a totally unknown person, to put herself on the line and stick to it, many millions of us would never even realize that our ranks are very large, and public protests are a good way to demonstrate that.

Hoppy in Sacramento

And your point is that boomers are old, and are going to die, so why should we bother?

Well, I have three children, who are all going with me to Washington this weekend. The demonstration happens to fall on my 59th birthday. Yes, I was born January 27th, 1948. I am not eligible for the draft, but amazingly, I actually care about the direction our country is going in, which seems to me to be downhill.

If you are tired of boomers, then fine, do something as generation X, Y, Z, me, or whatever you want to call your selfish self.

If you want to repudiate a generation that saw its high-school class-mates sacrificed to Vietnam for ABSOLETELY NOTHING - fine
!

The reason Bush, Cheney, and their partners in crime never understood this is because they got away (despite their personal fears of soldiering) scot-free. They are the ENTITLED, AND ALL THE REST OF US BE DAMNED!

So screw you; those of you who discount the boomers. There is a new generation coming up. The difference is that they are even braver because they all volunteered. It is they who will have similar memories as we do and you will not be able to answer to them either.
Jan Knaus

"Who thinks Vietnam would have been won if we bombed a few more weeks, or escalated into Cambodia? "

Who? Our idiot president and vice president, our "elected" war criminals.

Jan Knaus

But TR's contemporaries weren't fighting the Civil War all over again.

Thank you for adding your voice. I've addressed this issue in two separate blog entries (Entry 1 and Entry 2).

Mind you, I have no desire to send anyone off to fight any war, "voluntary" or otherwise. But at the very least the topic of the draft deserves a more active discussion than either left or right has been willing to give it.

So your point is that because we don't have a draft no one should protest? A more legitimate, and perhaps a more knowledgeable and mature observation would be that because there is no draft, that is why there are no protests.

Reality proves you wrong, and your superficiality is showing, just like my slip did when I was your age.

Well, this "boomer," whom you think is nothing but an anachronism, says you need to grow up. I have never "gotten over" my young friends never coming home after being sent to Vietnam for ABSOLUTELY NOTHING! Can you imagine 5 of your friends being blown up? Try 55,000 of them! Get over yourself!

You need to grow up. I am mad!

Jan Knaus

PS. I have always thought that Ms Graff's posts were simple-minded, but this one takes the cake. Is there a place where the original posts can get a rating? If not, please count mine for this one as "unworthy." Whatever number that comes to....I don't care. It was a thoughtless and poor post.

Jan Knaus

EJ,

What is the point of your BS post? Bush is about to start a suicidal war with Iran the blowback from which could destroy us, so there won't be any causes left to fight for because we'll be trying to survive. But you think we shouldn't get off our butts to stop the war machine because you're tired of hearing about the sixties. I'm sure MLK and Gandhi would be proud of you - NOT!

Thanks for suggesting that more people be cannon fodder for Bush's killing machine. What a great way to drum up protests that you think shouldn't be held. Truly a brilliant analysis worthy of the front page - NOT!

Tom

But why do you think they should be preserved forever as the last successful street protests?

I realize this is hyperbole (maybe), but nonetheless, it's a big straw man, don't you think?

I take it that Ms. Graff's point is not that there will be no more successful street protests, but that these street protests will not be successful. (If you ask me, the stronger assertion that you attribute to her isn't far off the mark, either).

That's a rather important assertion, and worth debating seriously. At a time when more soldiers are about to be sent into what looks like an impossible mission, the opportunity costs of choosing the wrong antiwar strategy are unconscionably high.

I agree 110%!!

Tom

This has got to be the most anti-American post I have read.

Ms Graff says that Americans are so damn selfish they'll never take to the streets to stop the war because their sorry asses are not on the line.

Oh yeah??

I've got news for you Ms Graff!

Plenty of heterosexual people moved their sorry asses in the 60s and 70s to fight for the causes that are so dear to you. And they did it for that concept that seems so alien to you: altruism.

Yes, Ms Graff, there are Americans willing to take a stand for a cause that does not involve only their own personal interests.
And you probably owe them more than you think.

I don't care if you insult boomers. But in your post you are insulting all Americans.

I'd rather believe that you're not very good with words because


f you want some street protests, here's a suggestion: institute a draft

is either idiotic or mean. Which one is it?

Ms. Graff asks:

Can we get over the 60's already?

Shorter Amike:

NO!  History isn't something one gets over.

I should leave it at that, but I can't, being one of those "older boomers" of whom Ms. Graff is "tired". 

Twice in the past year and a half that I've been a faithful inhabitant of the TPM Café I've indicated a wish that there was a way to record my evaluation of one of the pieces posted by the generally excellent stable of writers Josh Marshall has recruited.  In each of those cases I wrote that I wished for the numerical system was available so I could rate the piece a "5". 

This time, I wish we had that system so I could rate this a 1.

I've not seen many pieces which have gone out of their way to insult a significant portion of the readership.  I can't help that I'm 65, Ms. Graff, or that in a few months I'll be 66.  Shudder about that, Ms. Graff--I don't.  You can be even more tired of me in April than you are now.  My gray hair signifies something besides a right to be grumpy occasionally...I've not only read about the sixties, I've lived through them.  John Kennedy was shot the year I entered graduate school.  I was in school in Cleveland living in the little island between the black Ghetto to the northeast and the Italian ghetto to the southwest during racial unrest then.  In the sixties I had to get a pass from the national guard whose bivouac was in a parking lot behind my apartment house in order to visit friends living not more than three blocks away.  I cringed and stayed away from windows when I heard gunfire during Kent State.  I have zero nostalgia for that experience, Ms. Graff:  zero. 

I respect the great accomplishments you claim for the marches of 1979, 1987, and 1992.  You recognize, I hope, that they were made possible by 1968 and the Stonewall Riots, which in turn were made possible by the courage given to ordinary citizens by the civil unrest in the anti-war and civil rights movements.  I got the courage to come out in the 1960s, Ms. Graff, when it was just as possible for a person to be fired or beaten up.  I marched in Gay Pride marches in the early 1970s, Ms. Graff.  By the 1980s and early 1990s I was mourning the loss of friends and, horrors, students of mine, to HIV.  I lived through the beginnings of the epidemic before it had a name or a known cause, and when it was generally referred to as the "gay disease". 

I have seen little nostalgia here, Ms. Graff.  Remembering the futility and the anger of the 1960s and feeling that self-same anger now does not mean I desire street protests now.  To infer that I do would be a case of the post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy, Ms. Graff, and I think you should be beyond that kind of intellectual laziness.  And the intellectual laziness of this piece is what I resent most.  Where is Mr Newberry when we need him?

Most of those who look back to the sixties as their time of coming of age, have no desire or need to come of age again.  What I do see, Ms. Graff, is not nostalgia, but a bleak recognition that what has been accomplished so far may not be enough to terminate this war, and if it isn't who will have the moral fiber to do something further?

Taking 1963 as the benchmark year. . .we're only in 1967 vis a vis the Vietnam experience--before the violence (police inspired, I have to say) of 1968.  Again, taking the Vietnam experience as the benchmark....which year will you say "enough is enough?"  1974 in Vietnam Years equates to something like 2013 in Iraq-years.  One hopes that someone--that many someones--do as Thoreau suggests--vote with their entire influence and not a piece of paper only. 

In the meantime, I pity your tiredness, Ms. Graff, and hope you have time to take a nap.  I'm not going away.

aMike

Both?

Tom

Well said, aMike! A classic. Now let's get out on the streets to march to stop the madman Bush, for the rights of LBGTQ people, and for respect for all humans including Boomers.

Tom

Devon,

You gave me a 2. Obviously, you don't feel my anger at being disrespected. Look at other posts. I'm not the only one.

Tom

A boomer calling someone else selfish? ahh, sweet irony.

My point was that boomers won't be around in another 50 years as Bluebell would have it. You're 58. In 50 years, you would be 108. Do you really think you'll make it?

I can't make sense of the rest of your ravings.

Again, not the point. Whatever.

So what?

Tom

So sit around contemplating your navel while Bush starts a war with Iran?

Tom

So figure out how to do something that works.  

Yeah, maybe I should be giving more credence to the anger, but it's the distortion that bothers me.  I guess I see now that the original post was disrespectful (to be honest, I have a bit of a tin ear to that, because I've spent much of this decade, professionally, trying to find ways to work around the inability of some members of the 60s left to move on and develop new ideas and tactics).  

Nobody is suggesting that we pave the way and let more people die in a senseless war.  But I'm getting a little frustrated with the idea that either you get out on the streets and protest or you're letting our soldiers die.  It's not going to work this time.  We'd be more likely to find something that does if we didn't spend our time marching, or arguing about marching.  

I'm beginning to feel like the left, like the Pentagon, is perennially fighting the last war.

I actually think there is an important difference between younger progressives and the old hippies. Sure a lot of the people in whatever upcoming protests won't be boomers. They will be younger people who are emulating boomers.

For a lot of us, though, the hippie leftism that is the legacy of the baby boomers has been largely discredited. While we might share the same goals, we have different reasons for thinking those are the right goals. I hate to say it, but it is not enough that we agree, but that we agree for the right reasons. I don't like right wing ideologues, and I can't see any reason for liking lefties who, just like the rightwingers, hold their beliefs without critical examination.

The fact that there are young people willing to emulate their elders may be a testament to what the boomers did in the past, but most young hippies are ugly caricatures that weigh us down in many ways.

Umm, so nothing. *shrug* thought I said everything I wanted to . . .

I don't get your sentiment here. I already posted on Josh's thread that I avoid a lot of modern protests (at least in my home city) because of who organizes them. But I don't see cause to just throw the whole idea away.

Nor do I think that the impulse to have a new protest movement can be so easily dismissed as boomer nostalgia.

But the really unfair judgment you make, I think, is that people don't care because there's no draft. To take that line of thought to its logical extreme, you'd have to argue that any US military action is now acceptable, so long as it's undertaken by a volunteer army. I happen to think that Americans are, by in large, more than willing to support and care about those volunteers, especially because we need them so much and we know we need them.

Josh argued that, rather than protest in the streets, people chose to express that concern, perhaps more effectively, by voting the pro-war party out of power last year. He still said, basically, that people care, and he's right.

In your post, you basically associated the will to protest with the will to take personal risk. But even in decades past, the risks of being beaten by police or wrongfully arrested during a protest were statistically small and everyone knew it. These days, with a cameraphone on every corner, they're even less. The lack of a mass protest movement these days, where we all have camera phones and the like isn't due to a fear that could only become by the possibility of being sent to war but by a tendency towards other (arguably more effective) means of opposition.

thosethingswesay.blogspot.com

Street action has a history of working that is as old as streets.

Good comment

Michael,

I think you speak for many in this post. I know you speak for at least one more.

I don't read much poetry but I write some and also some flash fic