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Hippies In The 1920s

Decent Essays

The second half of the 1960’s seen another upsurge of young adults; a subgroup opposed to the fundamental thoughts of others and their social and economic supports; mainly because they believed that dominant mainstream culture was crooked and flawed; and needed to believe as they did in a way(s) of life geared to protect something they could not earn, buy, or passed on. The something philosophy is compromised in a complex egotism based on criminality; with an ulterior (self-preservation) motive of exacting some form of Utopia for it and with others relative to its concept. These groups of tie dyed conformists are anti-establishment and commonly known as hippies. They first gained a reputation in the U.S and then England, and are the extent …show more content…

As a group they bonded with movements of direct action protests and then (BP) violence’s; only to separate because one could not trust the other. Nonetheless, in agreement with prior SDS/SNCC and Black Panther progresses; the anti-establishment (hippie) violence’s of the latter sixties crept along and resembled concisely the latter’s methodology too. They slowly moved away from the comforts of middle-class to nonviolent direct action, and then to acts of violent civil disobedience; moreover, they could not move upward because of equality. However, their violence’s were at a variance to earlier SNCC/SDS and Black Panther creativities; because the hippies used drugs, and their spirituality was connective with the statuses and …show more content…

As well, at about the same time black civil rights activists; were at a critical stage after they separated from their white ‘comrades’; as activism grew more violent; with the addition, of drugs, peace, pleasure, sexual liberation and mixed marriages it was easier for Afro-Americans to win their fair share by selling their problems with the norm of (the middle-class malcontent) black unity. The irony of the whole protest movement arrangement is that in all actuality, the law, media and transportation were the only one being paid for their role in it. The combination of participants and viewers were probably more manipulated and/or subverted than anything else during this time in history. Correspondingly, the black civil rights movement is altogether different from the “hippie” movement; for example, because the variety of demonstrations dealt in dimensions totally abstract from their true intended reasons; for example, gun laws, black power, community action, police training, economics, baby boom, equal rights, and the increasing demand on resources and the environment. On the one hand, the civil rights movement was a must priority; and on the other, the hippies were well aware of the costs to society. This created a "counterculture" that sparked a social revolution throughout much of the

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