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July 4, 2007 at 07:48:36

American Culture on the 4th of July

by John Carey     Page 1 of 2 page(s)

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By John E. Carey
Peace and Freedom

I am never sure whether it is our American culture that shapes our TV, movies and other media or whether our media shapes our thinking to such an extent that it changes culture.

Probably a little bit of both.

What is culture? One very good online dictionary calls it “The totality of socially transmitted behavior patterns, arts, beliefs, institutions, and all other products of human work and thought. These patterns, traits, and products considered as the expression of a particular period, class, community, or population.”

On July 4, 1963, as a young lad, I was fortunate enough to be at Gettysburg, PA. The Centennial of the greatest land battle in the history of North America had just concluded. That centennial event was marked with religious services, re-enactors in uniforms and period clothing from the 1860s, and my Dad’s gigantic Ford “Country Squire.”

Just as a reminder, on July 4, 1863, some 50,000 Americans lay dead on the fields and in the town of Gettysburg. The slaves had been freed but the issue of one or two nations sharing this part of the continent was still undecided.

In 1963 at that Centennial, America had a vastly different culture than it has today. JFK was president and the Republican Party largely cooperated with the government called “Camelot.”

In 1963, at Gettysburg, there were no protesters, many men wore a “crew cut,” homosexuality was not discussed, girls wore skirts to the knee, and the Beatles were still hot.

In 1963 there was no Paris Hilton (whom we admire for what? I forget.), no Brittany Spears, and our sex lives and drug use and times in rehab were private matters.

In 1963 there was no internet, no chat rooms, no U-Tube, no talk radio, no Jerry Springer and no Oprah. And Vietnam had not yet become a common word in America.

In 1963, a survey said the most valued and cherished thing about a marriage was children. Abortion was illegal and people went to worship their own God in their own way on Sunday – in droves.

In 1963, movie giants like John Wayne, Kirk Douglas, Jimmy Stuart and Robert Mitchum were still on the silver screen or in re-runs on TV. The stars where big and tough, Hollywood filmed epics, and the themes were often based in history. In 1962 and 1963 movies like “Cleopatra,” “Lawrence of Arabia,” Birdman of Alcatraz,” and “H.M.S. Defiant” were made.

It seems to me, but I could be wrong, in 1963, most adult Americans were married and not divorced, people didn’t live together in “alternative life styles,” families ate dinner together (and Mom actually cooked — she didn’t bring home pre-made food from the grocery) and we Americans were not so preoccupied with money, big houses and whiz bang cars.

In 1963 America was an industrial powerhouse, we made most of the cars in the world, and the auto workers and steel men were protected by powerful unions.

A woman born in Japan who has lived here in the United States most of her life reflected on all this to me just yesterday. She recalled to me the human sacrifices made during World War II but reminded me that we might be living in a Nazi and Japanese warlord world had it not been for D-Day, Stalingrad, and Iwo Jima.

Think of that: a Japanese American stood telling me how import it was that her homeland lost World War II.Then she went on to bemoan our current culture, born in the protests and LSD of the late 1960s.

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http://peace-and-freedom.blogspot.com/

John E. Carey is the former president of International Defense Consultants, Inc.

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Rob Kall is executive editor and publisher of OpEdNews.com, President of Futurehealth, Inc, inventor . He is also published regularly on the Huffingtonpost.com. He is a frequent Speaker on Politics, Impeachment, The art, science and power of story, heroes and the hero's journey, Positive Psychology, Stress, Biofeedback and a wide range of subjects. He is a campaign consultant specializing in tapping the power of stories for issue positioning, stump speeches and debates. He recently retired as o...

to see more of bio, click on member name

Rob KallRob Kall is executive editor and publisher of OpEdNews.com, President of Futurehealth, Inc, inventor . He is also published regularly on the Huffingtonpost.com. He is a frequent Speaker on Politics, Impeachment, The art, science and power of story, heroes and the hero's journey, Positive Psychology, Stress, Biofeedback and a wide range of subjects. He is a campaign consultant specializing in tapping the power of stories for issue positioning, stump speeches and debates. He recently retired as o...

to see more of bio, click on member name

ahem...

Nostalgia can blur those views of the past.

-By 1963, movies were no longer silver screen. They were color.

-You're blaming LSD for changing the culture? How about corporations (you know, those companies the right wing loves to support) taking over the media, running the content you compare to what you find on the barn floor. Corporations like GE, Time Warner, Disney-- running networks that spew the stuff you hate. And the right wingers supported consolidation of the media, so local content was subsumed by cheaper networked media homogeneous across America.

-then, about those cars and industries we used to have. Blame both the Dems and Republicans in congress who sold out to the few hundred big, transnational corporations that benefit from globalization at the cost of jobs and industries in the US. Globalization hurts most american industry and jobs. But right wingers are more loyal to globalization, except, perhaps for the the most genuine conservative in the congress, Ron Paul.

Then, let's talk about religion. People have become more educated in the past 45 years-- a lot more college grads, a lot more people learning how to THINK. They don't buy being told HOW to think by their religion. The ones who still buy the barn floor stuff the megachurch preachers dish out are in love with the rapture and the end of the world. That's something to respect or honor?

About Harry Potter-- apparently, you haven't had a kid to read to or take to a movie in the past  nine or ten years. It's hard not to encounter  Potter, if you're a parent of a kid in that age range, and I've kind of gotten to like Harry, Hermione, Dumbeldore, Snape and friends over the years.

The world changes. Some of it good, some bad. We disagree on some things, but it's good to be able to share civil discourse with you John.

Have a good fourth. I'm off to pick up some propane for the grill. We didn't use propane grills then either.

by Rob Kall (808 articles, 3923 quicklinks, 332 diaries, 1703 comments) on Wednesday, July 4, 2007 at 7:58:46 AM
 


Retired concerned citizen
walleyRetired concerned citizen

Rob's grill

Forget the propane use charcoal.  Big Oil loves all those backyard grills.

by walley (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 108 comments) on Wednesday, July 4, 2007 at 9:50:36 AM
 


Mark A. Goldman is an activist, author, financial planner and recent unsuccessful Candidate for Congress.
Mark A. GoldmanMark A. Goldman is an activist, author, financial planner and recent unsuccessful Candidate for Congress.

Longing for what once was

What I observe is that there are those "who long for what once was" so much that they are afraid to take responsibility for what is.  If you want your house to stay clean and neat, you have to be willing to look for dirt and smudges so that you can clean it up, and you have to look to see where the messes are so you can neated them up.  Rather than take responsibility for what has gone awry too many "conservatives" refuse to see anything that disturbes them.  And so they hide the truth rather than take responsibiilty for it.  So if you point out injustice, they ignore you, accuse you of hating America,  and criticise you for being unwilling to look at all the good things.  The truth is that without mom on the warpath the house would be a continual mess and without true patriots our institutions would fall into decay and disrepute.  And when our so called "conservatives" have been put in charge our institutions and our culture have been dismantled, corrupted and are now very much in decay.  They have lead not with the People in mind but with their own greed as their hidden banner.  They are not loyal to the Constitution but to their own power.  The Constitution lies in tatters because of this.

by Mark A. Goldman (81 articles, 2 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 243 comments) on Wednesday, July 4, 2007 at 10:16:01 AM
 


teeem, a writer/researcher and activist recently transplanted to the Los Angeles area, is originally from Virginia and spent from 1989 to 2006 living in Upstate South Carolina (where she was able to observe the Religious Right mindset).  She loves music, film, writing, art, books, ideas, and animals.
teeemteeem, a writer/researcher and activist recently transplanted to the Los Angeles area, is originally from Virginia and spent from 1989 to 2006 living in Upstate South Carolina (where she was able to observe the Religious Right mindset).  She loves music, film, writing, art, books, ideas, and animals.

Errr....

In 1963 the Beatles were still hot ... IN ENGLAND, not the U.S.   In the U.S. in 1963 they were unknown.  In 1964 in the U.S. they appeared on the Ed Sullivan show and became popular thereafter.  Please check your facts before writing.

Also, your theme is very simplistic, using the threadbare conservative mantra that "everything was perfect before the '60s culture took hold."  (1963 was only in the '60s chronologically ... otherwise it was still the '50s.)

 

 

 

 

by teeem (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 41 comments) on Friday, July 6, 2007 at 2:34:39 AM
 

 

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