What was it all about?
What was it all about?
I finally realized what your question meant: "What did you take away from that time?" Although I did not get this stuff from "The Strip", per se, I did get it from the cultural transformation of which "The Strip" was a manifestation - one that was easily accessible to an eager and impressionable teenager. So I would say that "The Strip" was one of the things that enabled me to interact with and draw more from "the era" than I otherwise would have been able to.
An open mind.
Readiness to question assumptions and conventional wisdom.
Respect for and tolerance of the views, choices, cultures and lifestyles of others.
Refusal to judge others by what they wear, what they drive, or what they own.
Readiness to defend an individual's freedom to be whoever he/she wants to be.
A never-ending quest for who I am and who I want to be.
Love for democracy and freedom of expression and the press.
Anguish and anger at the wrongs in the world, and a dedication to fight against and help fix them.
Mistrust of institutions and leaders (e.g., government/political, corporate, church) with large vested interests, and an abhorrence for extreme nationalism and absolutist religion.
Abhorrence for war and militarism and a powerful desire for peace.
Powerful curiosity about and fascination with the unconventional, the strange and different, the offbeat and edgy, and an eclectic taste in music and art.
Preference for 'intangible' values over monetary gain.
Courtesy of Bill Mankin’s brain.
Woodstock-Generation Secrets Most People Seem to Have Forgotten
· There were a lot of big rock festivals across America from 1968-1970, and only one took place in Bethel, NY.
· Those festivals were a significant interface for a lot of young Americans with the emerging ‘counter-culture’ and the music that was its soundtrack, and for many, their first and primary interface.
· Many of those Americans did not ignore or forsake the ideals of the Sixties and turn into their paren
Anything you feel should be added?
The Message in 2007
Truth and individual freedom. Freedom of expression. Creativity, love and respect for all things. Freedom for an individual to make a choice - sexually, spiritually and socially. The right to be different and still belong. Honor in refusing to fight without judging those who did. Our right to make a difference. Our right to think independently. Our willingness to share with others.
- from website for 40th summer of love reunion in San Francisco
First Gay Rights gathering in Piedmont drew almost 400 people. Many were afraid to come out. Contrast that with 2007’s massive Gay Pride Week.