Wednesday 19 December 2018

Ends and Odds: The Ravings Of An Old Man by Dave Jaffe. Two Cheers For The Hiipies. Part Four by Dave Jaffe.

   Two Cheers For The Hippies. Part Four/




         Many people didn't Like the hippies. Yet business people saw money to be made in this new group. Businessmen produced and sold bright psychedelic posters. Music companies produced rock music by the Doors, Janis Joplin, and Big Brother And The Holding Company. Drug paraphernalia was soon being sold. Meanwhile millions of men and women grew their hair long, practiced what mainstream society called 'free love',and for a time scorned marriage and lived openly with a man or a woman. The changing lifestyles were in some ways a peaceful revolution.
     Then in October 1973 the Oil Producing Exporting Countries threw the Western world a curve ball. In the wake of the Israeli-Arab 1973 OPEC countries raised the price of oil  400 per cent .This price hike set off a worldwide wave of inflation . "In France," wrote economist Robert Heilbroner, "prices rose by 75 per cent in the five years after the OPEC oil shock." In Italy, Heilbroner pointed out, prices rose by 125 per cent, while in Britain prices soared up by 185 per cent.
       "Around the capitalist world production began to fall and unemployment began to rise. In the U.S. the G.N.P. fell 9 per cent  and joblessness rose by 85 per cent." The same trends hit Canada too. The affluence of the 1960's which did exist side by side with large pockets of poverty, seemed to vanish. Now the live and let live ethic of the hippies gave way to a far harsher competitive ethic.
     Fifty years after Jack Newfield wrote his article on the hippies in the 'Village Voice' much has changed. Newfield died many years ago. So has Jerry Rubin. 'The Village Voice' has closed up  shop along with many other countercultural papers, Across the world tyrants and tough rulers like U.S. president Donald Trump. China's Xi Xinping. Russia's Vladimir Putin and other heads of state rule the roost. Yet despite all this, the hippies have left their footprints on the sands of time.
      Casual sex, casual dress, and casual drug use that the hippies pioneered, has been embraced by many people. Marijuana, the drug that hippies openly smoked , is now legal in Canada, Uruguay and many American states. Thousands of young unmarried couples, live together just as hippies did. The hippies that so many people scorned and sometimes even attacked did  help make parts of the world better places to live in.
   "Give flowers to the rebels that failed," said some early 20th century progressives. The hippies also pushed for what they called "Flower Power." They may have failed but they also in part succeeded.
 They should be remembered.

No comments:

Post a Comment