DTF955Baseballfan
October 14th, 2006, 04:07 PM
People have speculated about a 1960s with no Vietnam with with the other problem, but I wonder, what if it had been the other way around?
Let's say that Civl Rights happens earlier; it doesn't have to be that much earlier, if you still think WW II was needed then it can be late 1940s. However, the key is th4e 1960s.
Starting in the middle '60s, there is growing disenchantment over Vietnam, but the race riots and things don't happen. Is the disenchantment with things by that generation going to be as big? Or will it, with some other movement taking its place?
I'm thinking there might be an earlier feminist moement; ISTR hearing in college that they were trying to make their voices heard, but the Civil Rights movement was seen as much more pressing to men. (It may have even been Gloria Steinem who said this, she spoke on our campus in the fall of '87, I think it was.) But, that overall, it would be about the same. However, if integration had only been accepted more recently, Vietnam could be a force that brings the races closer together, because in that case, young men of both races would be dying in Vietnam in what, by the late '60s, was seen as senseless to many Americans.
Your thoughts?
Let's say that Civl Rights happens earlier; it doesn't have to be that much earlier, if you still think WW II was needed then it can be late 1940s. However, the key is th4e 1960s.
Starting in the middle '60s, there is growing disenchantment over Vietnam, but the race riots and things don't happen. Is the disenchantment with things by that generation going to be as big? Or will it, with some other movement taking its place?
I'm thinking there might be an earlier feminist moement; ISTR hearing in college that they were trying to make their voices heard, but the Civil Rights movement was seen as much more pressing to men. (It may have even been Gloria Steinem who said this, she spoke on our campus in the fall of '87, I think it was.) But, that overall, it would be about the same. However, if integration had only been accepted more recently, Vietnam could be a force that brings the races closer together, because in that case, young men of both races would be dying in Vietnam in what, by the late '60s, was seen as senseless to many Americans.
Your thoughts?