Woodstock sums up the ruinous 1960s

http://www.poconorecord.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090819/NEWS04/908190302

By WILLIAM MURCHISON
August 19, 2009

What with baby boomers running our instruments of communication, what 
were we going to talk about this month but, yes, the 40th anniversary 
of Woodstock? Lay it on me, man! Peace! Love! All that '60s stuff!

Or some of it. The marginality of Woodstock as a Great American Event 
will grow more obvious as ­ I hate to put it this way ­ people 
younger than the present writer diminish in number. There wasn't much 
about the '60s one would want to relive, and somewhere on the list of 
forgettables would be the muddy mess in Max Yasgur's pasture that 
August of 1969.

The '60s made more memorable contributions than that to cultural and 
social fragmentation, the foremost of those being the sabotage of our 
educational institutions. Demonstrations against the war weren't nice 
either, but I am minded to speak of education ­ specifically, of 
higher education ­ due to the appearance of an important book, 
"Stanford in Turmoil: Campus Unrest, 1966-1972" by a university 
president of the era, Richard W. Lyman.

It is not a happy account. Gangs of somewhat educated yahoos look up, 
some time, the origin of the term in "Gulliver's Travels") raged 
about, bullying the administration, taking over buildings ­ actually 
burning down the ROTC building, plus two wings of the Center for 
Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences ­ destroying 10 offices and 
one foreign scholar's life work.

Stanford? This went on at Stanford? I'd been there only a few years 
earlier as a graduate student in history. Indeed, one of my 
professors was Richard W. Lyman, in his pre-presidential phase.

He was a very good professor indeed: a gentleman and a scholar, as 
people used to say, when those terms mattered to many.

Many a gentleman and scholar failed to credit his eyes in the '60s as 
placid campuses erupted with hatred, malice and unreason. I wouldn't 
presume to guess how many believed intuitively in Original Sin ­ the 
inborn pride and madness of the human race. I can't imagine that even 
the most irreligious came away from the '60s without some intuition 
of human defectiveness.

Woodstock, my eye! Peace and love ­ mere dumb show; dish towel 
disguises for the awful passions hiding below, starting with the 
passion to have it ­ whatever "it" might be ­ all one's way, without 
reference to norms, traditions, dignity, tolerance, free speech, the 
received wisdom of the species.

"However irrational political processes may be," writes Lyman, "they 
are not made any more rational by 'violent' behavior. Rationality 
itself was widely scored in the 1960s and suffered setbacks. It has 
never entirely regained its place in its supposed Temple, the 
University." No, and probably won't in our lifetimes.

The old system was founded on general consent to the idea of rational 
discourse. We were finding out around the time of Woodstock that 
rational discourse was the last thing on the minds of the moral 
vandals. Who ­ scary thought ­ still live among us. Bill Ayers and 
his wife, Bernardine Dohrn, come to mind, thanks to last year's small 
flap over their friendship with Barack Obama. How many mob members, 
from Stanford and a thousand other campuses, how many or members of 
their cheering sections, live down the street, or, worse, occupy 
places of prominence, as in the media? Neither they nor the marks 
they left have gone away.

Writes Lyman: "Without falling into the trap of blaming the 1960s for 
everything that has gone wrong since, one can argue that American 
politics has never recovered from the blows it suffered at the hands 
of the Sixties radicals." He faults the Right for fostering 
disillusionment with government. "But the New Left got there first. 
Their contempt for ordinary politics, with its compromises and 
evasions, has by now become epidemic in the United States, to the 
point where many people believe that the only way to deal with any 
really important question of public policy is to take it 'out of 
politics.' Students of the rise of fascism in Europe may be forgiven 
for finding this worrisome."

Happy 40th anniversary, folks.

.


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