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Summer of love: 40 years later - Hippie Hippie Shakedown: But where was love?
DailyNews.com ^ | 06/16/2007 | DAWN EDEN

Posted on 06/17/2007 12:07:44 PM PDT by DogByte6RER

Summer of love: 40 years later

Hippie Hippie Shakedown: But where was love?

BY DAWN EDEN, Guest Columnist

LA Daily News

WHEN it comes to inappropriate names, "Summer of Love" has to be right up there with "Joy Division," the name the Nazis reportedly gave to the sections of concentration camps that housed the guards' sex slaves.

For one thing, it was not just a summer event. The countercultural happening that swept through San Francisco and beyond began with an April1967 planning announcement by concert promoter Chet Helms, aka Family Dog, creating the "Council for the Summer of Love."

It still goes on today in the burned-out minds of its rapidly fading survivors, remnants of the thousands of teens who ran away to find Love in San Francisco, only to wind up wasted on a street whose name sounds like hate.

Where, indeed, was the love in the San Francisco of Helms, the Diggers, the San Francisco Oracle, and other Summer of Love organizers, of whom so many have died young?

Helms would later boast on his Web site that the event "sowed the seeds of a compassionate idealism which still lives in the hearts of many of our own and subsequent generations." He pointed to the organizers' efforts to feed the runaways. Other Summer of Love chroniclers note that the Haight Ashbury Free Clinics, founded in the summer of 1967, still help the needy today.

The irony is that there would have been no need to feed those runaways, nor to care for so many drug abusers, alcoholics and venereal-disease victims, had Helms - who succumbed to hepatitis C at 63 - and his compatriots not encouraged youths to flood San Francisco. And for what, exactly? Drugs, to be sure, and "free love" - "free," as opposed to the kind that costs money, apparently.

Thanks to the Pill and a counterculture that defined rebellion as annoying one's parents, thousands of youths became guinea pigs in a kind of mass experiment propagated by prurient Beat Generation relics such as Helms, Allen Ginsberg (died at 70, hepatitis and liver cancer) and Ken Kesey (died at 66, liver cancer). They were told that they would overcome the superficial consumerism in which they had been raised, reaching a higher spiritual level by uniting their minds to drugs and their bodies to willing takers. Instead, they themselves became products to be consumed - victimized by pushers, treated as sexual objects to be disposed of, or corrupted into predators.

It boggles the mind to think what the Summer of Love's sad victims could have accomplished if, rather than seeking to fulfill their own juvenile desires, they had aimed to create a true culture of love. Instead, in following their leaders' urging to do their own thing, they found themselves locked in a society that gave them all the restrictions of communal life - poverty, squalor, and social pressure to self-destruct - and few of the protections.

At the celebrated Be-Ins and Love-Ins, the mob ruled, while - like those Playboy cartoons of orgies where one person's orifice is indistinguishable from another's - the individual was subsumed.

Meanwhile, one corner of the culture, recognizing the counterculture's threat to the individual, composed a clarion call for the restoration of human dignity. A work in progress during the Summer of Love, published the following summer, it attacked those who, in pursuing solutions to overpopulation and other contemporary concerns, put forth "an utterly materialistic conception of man himself and his life." Instead, it urged world powers to develop a solution "which envisages the social and economic progress both of individuals and of the whole of human society, and which respects and promotes true human values."

That's real love.

However, when those words of Pope John XXIII, quoted in Pope Paul VI's "Humanae Vitae," emerged in 1968, few of the hippies bothered to read them, let alone follow them as far as they led. All they knew was the five-word condensation of the encyclical that appeared on a popular poster, underneath an image of the Pope pointing his finger Uncle Sam-style: "The Pill Is a No-No."

Supporters of the hippies' objectives argue that they and future generations benefited from the dismantling of repressive Eisenhower-era values that restricted sex to marriage. Well, say what you will about a culture that presumed women found their highest fulfillment in motherhood, but one doesn't see many repressed housewives panhandling on modern-day Haight Street. One does see lost geriatric flower children with stringy hair and rotten teeth who contracepted or aborted the children who could have taken care of them in their old age.

Years after the Summer of Love's Bay Area invasion, a more moneyed class of Californians popularized a term that parallels what the hippies accomplished: garbage in/garbage out. The true measure of the success of the Love-In is the love that came out.

Today, the counterculture's victims are dying with few children to mourn them - at least, few who are willing to speak to parents who put their own desires ahead of their children's. It is the end of a long, bad trip.

Dawn Eden is director of the Cardinal Newman Society's Love and Responsibility Program. She is author of "The Thrill of the Chaste: Finding Fulfillment While Keeping Your Clothes On."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: 1960s; 1967; aids; anniversary; areyouinthemovement; babyboomers; boomer; california; chlamidia; culturewar; dirtbags; generationx; genx; germs; gonorrhea; haightashbury; hepatitisc; hippies; hpv; leftcoast; liberals; reddiaperdoperbabies; sanfranciscobalues; sanfrancsicovalues; sixties; summeroflove; woodstock
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To: knarf; qam1
They aren’t, weren’t hippies ... they were, are 60’s radicals ... SDS.

As they say in my generation: "Whatever."

121 posted on 06/18/2007 6:31:41 PM PDT by Cogadh na Sith (Banning Bread and Circuses is the New Bread and Circuses....)
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To: farmer18th

Didn’t Rod Serling do just that?


122 posted on 06/18/2007 9:30:46 PM PDT by Maelstrom (To prevent misinterpretation or abuse of the Constitution:The Bill of Rights limits government power)
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To: Zionist Conspirator

Spielberg doesn’t belong in the same trough with Moore as he has celebrated American culture throughout his career.


123 posted on 06/18/2007 9:30:48 PM PDT by Borges
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To: knarf

Sure, there’s a solution, but the first step is to recognize that everything you have eloquently worshipped in this thread is wrong at one level or another.

I believe your sanity has suffered.


124 posted on 06/18/2007 9:38:57 PM PDT by Maelstrom (To prevent misinterpretation or abuse of the Constitution:The Bill of Rights limits government power)
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To: Cogadh na Sith

You had to be 21 to vote in 1964. That would put the youngest voters as being born in 1943. Not a single hippie or baby boomer cast a vote in that election.


125 posted on 06/18/2007 9:39:26 PM PDT by Borges
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To: Borges
You had to be 21 to vote in 1964. That would put the youngest voters as being born in 1943. Not a single hippie or baby boomer cast a vote in that election.

So the 'Greatest Generation' were weird old socialists?

No wonder Tom Brokow likes them.

I guess there was really no such thing as hippies, Steven Spielberg celebrates American Values and Nancy Pelosi is a conservative....

You're right, the crime rate, tax rate, interest rate, divorce rate and American Malaise was really increased by the 9 year old Gen-Xers in 1976.

For the Baby Boomer, every President is Nixon, every war is Vietnam, every governor is George Wallace, every black politician is Martin Luther King, every wife is barefoot and pregnant, every homosexual orgy is the Stonewall Riot and every March is the March on Selma.

I, and my cohort, will never achieve such wide-eyed never aging perfection. If your erection lasts more than four hours seek medical attention.

126 posted on 06/18/2007 10:44:26 PM PDT by Cogadh na Sith (Banning Bread and Circuses is the New Bread and Circuses....)
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To: DogByte6RER
One does see lost geriatric flower children with stringy hair and rotten teeth who contracepted or aborted the children who could have taken care of them in their old age.

Ouch! As my teenage gamer son would say, "Sick burn!"

127 posted on 06/18/2007 11:10:29 PM PDT by SuziQ
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To: Cogadh na Sith

Huh? I stated the chronological fact that LBJ was elected in 1964 mostly by WW2 vets and their parents. I don’t know where you got that other stuff. And SS does celebrate American values in his work.


128 posted on 06/19/2007 7:54:16 AM PDT by Borges
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To: the OlLine Rebel
Yes, but it's the nature of teenagers to suck up anything that sounds like fun. It's the responsibility of their parents to say no.

This very same "Greatest Generation" was funding their kids' stay in the Haight. These kids virtually all got checks from home, in addition to what they made by panhandling and selling drugs. And their thinking had been shaped by teachers and professors much older than they, who seemed to be living out their "rebellions" vicariously through these kids, who were free to sleep around, use drugs, act irresponsibly, etc. in a way that they felt they had been deprived of doing.

A lot of it had to do with the influence of Freudian psychology in the academic world, although the United States has always had a fondness for the image of the noble savage, unfettered by society, that was similar to the (as popularized) Freudian idea that everybody was busy repressing all sorts of things and had to let go of their repressions and let it all hang out. Universities acquired a number of German and French professors around the time of WWII, many of them both Marxist and Freudian in their orientation, who were very influential in molding the academic climate that would later influence hippie "thought."

So while this stuff was always bubbling along underneath in American liberalism (look at Dewey's educational theories), I think it took the influence of European theories, plus the presence of a previously undreamt of level of affluence, to produce the social melt-down that occurred.

129 posted on 06/19/2007 9:30:14 AM PDT by livius
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To: Maelstrom
"Sure, there’s a solution, but the first step is to recognize that everything you have eloquently worshipped in this thread is wrong at one level or another."

"I believe your sanity has suffered."

Prove it.

130 posted on 06/19/2007 3:01:59 PM PDT by knarf (I say things that are true ... I have no proof ... but they're true.)
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To: knarf
"Sure, there’s a solution, but the first step is to recognize that everything you have eloquently worshipped in this thread is wrong at one level or another."

"I believe your sanity has suffered."

Prove it.


Step one: Recognize that these quotations were made from a basis of knowledge after long study of past governments throughout human history:

"[V]irtue or morality is a necessary spring of popular government." George Washington

"Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports. In vain would that man claim tribute to patriotism who should labor to subvert these great pillars of human happiness -- these firmest props of the duties of men and citizens. . . . reason and experience both forbid us to expect that national morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principles." George Washington

"Human rights can only be assured among a virtuous people. The general government . . . can never be in danger of degenerating into a monarchy, an oligarchy, an aristocracy, or any despotic or oppresive form so long as there is any virtue in the body of the people." George Washington

"Only a virtuous people are capable of freedom. As nations become more corrupt and vicious, they have more need of masters." Benjamin Franklin

"A nation as a society forms a moral person, and every member of it is personally responsible for his society." Thomas Jefferson

"No government can continue good but under the control of the people; and . . . . their minds are to be informed by education what is right and what wrong; to be encouraged in habits of virtue and to be deterred from those of vice . . . . These are the inculcations necessary to render the people a sure basis for the structure and order of government." Thomas Jefferson

"It is in the manners and spirit of a people which preseve a republic in vigour. . . . degeneracy in these is a canker which soon eats into the heart of its laws and constitution." Thomas Jefferson

"When virtue is banished, ambition invades the minds of those who are disposed to receive it, and avarice possesses the whole community." Montesquieu (written by Thomas Jefferson in his Common Place Book).

"Liberty . . . is the great parent of science and of virtue; and . . . a nation will be great in both always in proportion as it is free." Thomas Jefferson

"The order of nature [is] that individual happiness shall be inseparable from the practice of virtue." Thomas Jefferson

"Without virtue, happiness cannot be." Thomas Jefferson

"The institution of delegated power implies that there is a portion of virtue and honor among mankind which may be a reasonable foundation of confidence." Alexander Hamilton

"To suppose that any form of government will secure liberty or happiness without any virtue in the people, is a chimerical idea." James Madison

"The aim of every political Constitution, is or ought to be first to obtain for rulers men who possess most wisdom to discern, and most virtue to pursue, the common good of society; and in the next place, to take the most effectual precautions for keeping them virtuous whilst they continue to hold their public trust." James Madison

". . . Virtue, morality, and religion. This is the armor, my friend, and this alone that renders us invincible. These are the tactics we should study. If we lose these, we are conquered, fallen indeed . . . so long as our manners and principles remain sound, there is no danger." Patrick Henry

"Bad men cannot make good citizens. It is when a people forget God that tyrants forge their chains. A vitiated state of morals, a corrupted public conscience, is incompatible with freedom. No free government, or the blessings of liberty, can be preserved to any people but by a firm adherence to justice, moderation, temperance, frugality, and virtue; and by a frequent recurrence to fundamental principles." Patrick Henry

"Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other." John Adams

Now, if you *cannot* accept the conclusions deemed inescapable by the Founders of this nation, then you are most likely one of those people who CANNOT learn, or only learn under the harshest of conditions: Direct Experience.

Step 2: Understand that the events in the past that you have cheered are antithical to virtuous people.
131 posted on 06/19/2007 7:54:37 PM PDT by Maelstrom (To prevent misinterpretation or abuse of the Constitution:The Bill of Rights limits government power)
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To: livius

There is far more evidence of unicorns and dragons than of the “noble savage”.


132 posted on 06/19/2007 7:55:39 PM PDT by Maelstrom (To prevent misinterpretation or abuse of the Constitution:The Bill of Rights limits government power)
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To: knarf

Oh, and the solution relies upon educating people.

The children of today are not being educated. They are being indoctrinated.

They are not being taken down the path of study that answers the question “why”...and teaches them to find the answer to that question, but instead tells them *what* to think.

By way of example I offer the favorite of the Flower Children’s vises: Sex. They are indoctrinated to believe, as it happens, that sex is something they are going to do whether they want to or not, so they might as well give in to those feelings. It’s hormonal, and they are animals...this is the message....Therefore get a condom from the nurse’s office, nevermind the fact that the child is 12 or 13 years of age.

They are also told, beginning in Kindergarten in some cases, that there is no difference between heterosexuality and homosexuality while deftly ignoring that men and women are different, but homosexuality and a plethora of other fetishes and paraphilias have astonishingly *few* differences.


133 posted on 06/19/2007 8:01:12 PM PDT by Maelstrom (To prevent misinterpretation or abuse of the Constitution:The Bill of Rights limits government power)
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To: Maelstrom

You don’t know me.


134 posted on 06/20/2007 12:00:15 AM PDT by knarf (I say things that are true ... I have no proof ... but they're true.)
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To: knarf

If you did not write about yourself, your thoughts, your memories, and were not waxing nostolgic about the immorality of your past...no.

But then, that would beg the question of why you would create such fictions in the first place.

The internet political forums are wonderful places. Stripped away are the superficialities of race, age, appearance, wealth, and all the emotional trappings one encounters in face-to-face meetings. Thus, when you write, you more completely lay bare your thoughts than when you, say, share a coffee at Starbucks in your Berkenstocks.

At least we’ve put the lie to that bit about open minds.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1851750/posts?page=63#63

Ya gone an’ letcher brains drip out...and now your mind is closed to the fact that you were wrong. Everything about that time was wrong, and harmful to the nation.


135 posted on 06/20/2007 4:52:34 AM PDT by Maelstrom (To prevent misinterpretation or abuse of the Constitution:The Bill of Rights limits government power)
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To: Maelstrom

Too true. But those in love with the idea of the noble savage will never admit it.


136 posted on 06/20/2007 5:12:37 AM PDT by livius
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To: Maelstrom
So, I waxed nostalgic and now, some 40 years later, you in your wisdom and morality can attack a memory as if it is a present day way of life?

Hillary! needs a writer.

137 posted on 06/20/2007 3:04:24 PM PDT by knarf (I say things that are true ... I have no proof ... but they're true.)
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To: knarf

Nope, It doesn’t matter 40 years ago, 60 years ago, 100 years ago, 1000 years ago.

That behavior is harmful to the society in which it was engaged.

It’s time to recognize the fact and feel shamed by your actions rather than wax nostalgic about it.

Oh...and please, it’s Mrs. Bill Clinton. She isn’t anybody without Slick Willie.


138 posted on 06/20/2007 3:37:02 PM PDT by Maelstrom (To prevent misinterpretation or abuse of the Constitution:The Bill of Rights limits government power)
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To: Maelstrom
And your argumentative spirit isn't?

You're cancer.

139 posted on 06/20/2007 3:41:53 PM PDT by knarf (I say things that are true ... I have no proof ... but they're true.)
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To: Moonman62
"And they must have been terrible parents"

Some posit that is not far wrong as many of that generation rejected traditional child raising and opted for Dr. Spock. Up until the time of his book his methods were definately not the norm.

A lot of parents paid attention, it was, after all, a time of science, technology and "modern" methods. His book has only been outsold by the Bible.

Of course blaming ones parents for ones shortcomings is silly but I'm not sure that a lot of that generation think there's any reason to place blame.

140 posted on 06/20/2007 4:00:22 PM PDT by Proud_texan (Just my opinion, no relationship to reality is expressed or implied.)
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