Secretarys report (Rainer Domalski): Our club had 61% attendance
last month.
Treasurers Report (Carl Hill): The report was distributed, and
he pointed out that the Rotary grant monies were received last month.
Membership (Carol Walsh): Carol presented Lester Cutter with his blue
Rotary badge, replacing the red one. (Congratulations, Lester!) She reminded
members to hand out their yellow book Rotary information to prospective
Rotarians, and indicated there will be drawings for restaurant gift certificates
for Rotarians who turn in the cards (cards with the names of prospective
Rotarians). We brainstormed classifications of professions that are not
currently in our club, including teachers, psychologists, builders, florists,
auto dealers, chiropractors, fitness center owners, police, paramedics,
vets, and more. Please consider who might make a great Rotarian!
Fundraising (Jim Eberly): The new Dining and Entertainment Book should
be ready to distribute on November 1. Please think about additional restaurants
and entertainment venues that we might approach about being in the book.
Jim also mentioned that the Festival of Trees will be the first week in
December. Finally, Jim indicated that there will be a new fundraiser later
in the year COW PATTY BINGO! Now THATs a GOOD MOOOOOOVE!
Group Study Exchange (Bob Williams): GSE applications are due on the
24th of August.
Projects Dictionary Project (Roger Vetter): The dictionary project
for elementary school students locally is progressing well. Soon we will
need Rotarians to help with labeling the dictionaries and also to help
distribute them in the areas schools.
Sergeant-at-Arms (Dick Jones): This committee takes care of registration,
note takers, auction items, and thanking speakers. Dick will send reminders
the week that people have duties. The committee is considering adding
a greeter to the registration area.
Fellowship (Marshall Goldstein): Marshall indicated that if the Spikes
game is cancelled tonight, those Rotarians holding tickets should be able
to exchange them for another game. There will be a wine and cheese tasting
on November 9 at the home of Carol Walsh. Our Board voted this week to
give $500 to PAWS (split as $250 and $250 with the Evening Club) to buy
a tree. PAWS is required to plant $40K worth of trees before they will
be permitted to occupy their new building.
Dick Held also announced that there are some Russian professionals who
will be coming to town for an eight-day trip and will need four-day hosts
(the 8 days will be split into two homes for each person). If you are
can help by hosting someone and would like to learn more, please contact
Dick.
World Service (Hugh Mose): The World Service Committee met recently regarding
potential water projects in poor countries, but more questions need to
be answered before any decisions or commitments are made. We may decide
to piggyback on a church project locally where an orphanage in the Dominican
Republic needs assistance. More information will be forthcoming.
Don Bedell introduced John Rainer and his wife Alice, who live in American
Samoa. John works in radio. He presented our club with a banner from their
club, and we also presented one from our club for them to take home.
Linda reminded everyone that the Rotary Leadership Institute is open
to everyone, and she especially encouraged Board members to consider it.
One of the training sessions will take place in Bedford on November 10,
and the Foundation dinner will also take place that evening.
The meeting was dismissed at 12:58.
Laurel B. Sanders
The Aquarians and the Evangelicals
How left-wing hippies and right-wing fundamentalists
created a libertarian America.
by Brink Lindsay in Reason
Online, July 2007 edition
On April 5, 1967, representatives of the San Francisco Oracle, the
Diggers, the Family Dog, the Straight Theater, and other parts of the
Haight-Ashbury hippie scene held a press conference to announce the
formation of the Council for a Summer of Love. The event scored friendly
media notices: The next days San Francisco Chronicle described
the coalition as a group of the good hippies, defined as
the ones who wear quaint and enchanting costumes, hold peaceful
rock n roll concerts, and draw pretty pictures (legally)
on the sidewalk, their eyes aglow all the time with the poetry of love.
Three days earlier and 1,500 miles away, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, a very
different counterculture was holding its own coming-out party. About
18,000 peoplefar more than the 4,000 anticipatedgathered
for the formal dedication ceremonies at Oral Roberts University. Oklahomas
governor, a U.S. senator, two members of Congress, and Tulsas
mayor were on hand. Delivering the dedication address, Why I Believe
in Christian Education, was Billy Graham, the dean of American
evangelists.
The events in San Francisco and Tulsa that spring revealed an America
in the throes of cultural and spiritual upheaval. The postwar liberal
consensus had shattered. Vying to take its place were two sides of an
enormous false dichotomy, both animated by outbursts of spiritual energy.
Those two eruptions of millenarian enthusiasm, the hippies and the evangelical
revival, would inspire a left/right division that persists to this day.
That split pits one set of half-truths against another. On the left
gathered those who were most alive to the new possibilities created
by the unprecedented mass affluence of the postwar years but at the
same time were hostile to the social institutionsnamely, the market
and the middle-class work ethicthat created those possibilities.
On the right rallied those who staunchly supported the institutions
that created prosperity but who shrank from the social dynamism they
were unleashing. One side denounced capitalism but gobbled its fruits;
the other cursed the fruits while defending the system that bore them.
Both causes were quixotic, and consequently neither fully realized its
ambitions. But out of their messy dialectic, the logic of abundance
would eventually fashion, if not a reworked consensus, then at least
a new modus vivendi.
The Summer of Love
By 1967 the San Francisco Bay Area hippie phenomenon had been incubating
for several years. The Beat presence had been strong there from the
days of Allen Ginsbergs debut reading of his famous poem Howl
at the Six Gallery in 1955. And since October 1, 1964, when Jack Weinberg
was arrested in Sproul Plaza on trespassing chargeshe was soliciting
contributions for the Congress of Racial Equality without permissionstudent
unrest had roiled the University of Californias Berkeley campus.
Romantic rebelliousness was in the air, but now it took a new twist,
following the mental corkscrew turns triggered by LSD.
This cultural revolution was a largely underground affair until January
14, 1967, when A Gathering of the Tribes for the First Human Be-In
grabbed national attention. The event was conceived as a show of unity
between hippies and Berkeley radicals, just a few weeks after a glimpse
of that union had been seen on the Berkeley campus. At an anti-war mass
meeting, a sing-along of Solidarity Forever had faltered
because too few knew the words. Then someone broke in with the Beatles
Yellow Submarine, and the whole room joined in.
Held on a brilliant blue-sky Saturday at the Polo Field in Golden Gate
Park, the Be-In was kicked off by Ginsberg and fellow Beat poet
Gary Snyder. As 20,000 people gradually filled the park, the Diggers,
a radical community action group, distributed turkey sandwiches and
White Lightning LSD (both donated by the acid magnate Augustus Owsley).
All the big San Francisco bands played, while the Hells Angels guarded
the P.A. systems generator. Yippie leader Jerry Rubin gave a speech,
and drug gurus Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert both made the scene.
Leary eventually made his way to the microphone and tried out his new
mantra: Turn on, tune in, drop out.
The Be-In served as a coming-out party for the Love Generation, a term
coined by San Francisco Police Chief Thomas Cahill. The organizers of
the Summer of Love were reacting to the Be-Ins fallout, and in
the process they transformed the publicity boomlet into a full-fledged
sensation. By the end of the summer, some 50,000 to 75,000 kids had
made the trek to San Francisco (with or without flowers in their hair).
In the process, the Haights anarchic innocence was destroyed,
as the district was overrun by gawking tourists, crass opportunists,
and criminal predators. Its special magic never returned; instead, it
dispersed throughout the country, and a thousand sparks began to blaze.
Civil Rights and Psychedelics
The 60s counterculture had its roots in the 50s specifically,
in Beat bohemianism and the larger youth culture of adolescent rebellion.
But the Beats never imagined they were the vanguard of a mass movement.
In the wildest hipster, making a mystique of bop, drugs, and the
night life, there is no desire to shatter the square society
in which he lives, only to elude it, wrote the Beat author John
Clellon Holmes.
What begat the transformation from apolitical fringe to passionately
engaged mass movement? First, a mass movement requires massin
this case, a critical mass of critically minded young people. Between
1960 and 1970, the number of Americans between the ages of 18 and 24
jumped from 16.2 million to 24.4 million. Meanwhile, as capitalisms
ongoing development rendered economic life ever more technologically
and organizationally complex, the demand for educated managers and professionals
grew. Consequently, among the swelling ranks of college-age young people,
the portion who attended college ballooned from 22.3 percent to 35.2
percent during the 60s.
With their wider exposure to history, literature, philosophy, and science,
recipients of higher education were more likely to see beyond the confines
of their upbringingto question the values they were raised to
accept, to appreciate the virtues of other cultures, to seek out the
new and exotic. By triumphing over scarcity, capitalism launched the
large-scale pursuit of self-realization. Now, by demanding that more
and more people be trained to think for themselves, capitalism ensured
that the pursuit would lead in unconventional directionsand that
any obstacles on those uncharted paths would face clever and resourceful
adversaries. In the culture as in the marketplace, the creative
destruction of competitive commerce bred subversives to challenge
the established order.
So the tinder was there. But what sparks would set it ablaze? The primary
catalysts were an odd couple: the civil rights struggle and the psychedelic
drug scene. Both inducted their participants into what can fairly be
called religious experience.
By the middle of the 20th century, belief in racial equality was de
rigueur for liberals in good standing. Yet notwithstanding liberalisms
towering intellectual and political dominance, progress toward full
civil rights for blacks was exasperatingly modest. Despite their frustration,
most liberals saw no alternative but steady, gradual gains. But patient
advocacy by white liberals wasnt what gave the cause of civil
rights its irresistible momentum. What made the movement move was the
decision by African Americans, beginning with the Montgomery bus boycott,
to push past liberal nostrums and take matters into their own hands.
Moral suasion was not enough; confrontation, nonviolent but deliberately
provocative, was needed. And to steel themselves for the struggle, African
Americans called on sources of strength more profound than Gunnar Myrdalstyle
social science empiricism.
Black churches were therefore indispensable to the movements
success, not just because they provided organization and fostered solidarity
but because the simple, powerful faith they propounded gave ordinary
people the heart to do extraordinary things. Even those who lacked the
consolation of literalist faith still found some lifeline beyond reason
to cling to.
The resulting defiance was sublime in its absolute audacity. Protesters
took the truly radical step of acting as if segregation did not existordering
lunch, getting on the bus, signing up to vote as if Jim Crow were already
gone. With a movement grounded in such extreme commitment, religiosity
was always in the air. Marches, stately and solemn, were redolent of
religious ritual; beatings, jailings, water-cannon dousings, tear-gassings,
and killings sanctified the movement by providing it with martyrs.
For Americas liberal-minded young, the prophetic grandeur of
the civil rights movement was electrifying. Many joined the movement;
many more were inspired to take up other causes and make their own stands.
Without the civil rights movement, the beat and Old Left and bohemian
enclaves would not have opened into a revived politics, concluded
Todd Gitlin, a leader of Students for a Democratic Society, the premier
organization of the student New Left.
While the civil rights movement fired young mindswith the possibilities
of prophetic dissent, the emerging drug scene was blowing those minds
with visions of mystical experience. Marijuana, which grew in popularity
with the spread of the bohemian subculture during the 50s, served
as the chemical gateway. Heightening sensory pleasures and lubricating
free-associative thinking, it fit perfectly with the Beat cult of intense
experience. Under its influence, consciousness seemed to expand; aggression
melted away, and shared wonder and laughter took its place.
Psychedelic drugs, meanwhile, took consciousness expansion to an entirely
new level. The phantasmagoric hallucinations they induced frequently
led people into the realm of religious experience, and many of the leading
lights of psychedelic culture, including Leary and Alpert, interpreted
and sold the psychedelic experience that way. (Alpert eventually changed
his name to the Hindu-derived Baba Ram Dass.)
Both the civil rights movement and the drug culture were outgrowths
of mass affluence. In a society devoted to self-expression and personal
fulfillment, African Americans found their second-class status intolerable
and latched onto resistance as their path to self-realization. Their
efforts succeeded in large part because one product of technological
abundancetelevisioncarried their struggle into Americas
living rooms. Meanwhile, the newly unrestrained pursuit of happiness
led ineluctably to the pursuit of broadened experience, including the
experience of altered states of consciousness. What made increasing
numbers of young people eager to try drugs, and receptive to their pleasures,
was the cultural shift wrought by the triumph over scarcity.
The struggle for civil rights showed that rapid social progress was
possible, that entrenched evil could be uprooted, that social reality
was more fluid than imagined, and that collective action could change
the world. Likewise, pot and psychedelics revealed wildly different
visions of reality from the straight one everybody took
for granted. If our most basic categories of experience could be called
into question, so could everything else.
Guided into those transcendent realms, many young and impressionable
minds were set aflame with visions of radical change. One assault after
another on conventional wisdom and authority gained momentum. Anti-war
protesters, feminists, student rebels, environmentalists, and gays all
took their turns marching to the solemn strains of We Shall Overcome;
all portrayed themselves as inheritors of the legacy of Montgomery and
Birmingham and Selma. And the scent of marijuana wafted around all their
efforts.
The Counter-Counterculture
The quest for wider horizons and the fulfillment of higher needs, so
exuberantly pursued during the 60s, relied on mass affluence,
which was achieved and sustained only by a vast mobilization of social
energies through an intricate division of labor. There could be no counterculture
without capitalism. And capitalism requires discipline, deferred gratification,
abstract loyalties, impersonal authority, and the stress of competition.
With its hostility to the system that brought it into being, the counterculture
created an opening for hostile worldviews that allied themselves with
capitalisms titanic power. Conservative Protestantism took advantage
of the opportunity and reclaimed a place on societys center stage.
The evangelical revival was the unlikeliest of comeback stories. In
the middle years of the 19th century, the bourgeois Protestant worldview
had enjoyed unquestioned cultural primacy and matchless self-confidence.
The ensuing decades, however, hammered Americas old-time religion
with setback after setback. Darwin and German higher criticism shook
belief in biblical inerrancy; mass immigration filled the country with
rival faiths; urbanization bred cesspools of sin and temptation.
Yet the old-time religion did not die. In the South, in small towns
and rural areas, among the less educated, the flame still burned. Shaking
off their well-earned pessimism, a new generation of conservative religious
leaders worked to rebuild dogmatic Protestantism as an active force
in American life. Dissociating themselves from the now pejorative term
fundamentalist, they called themselves evangelicals. On doctrine, the
evangelicals toed the fundamentalist line. In their posture toward the
outside world, however, they differed dramatically. Fundamentalists
hunkered down in a defensive crouch, refusing any association with mainline
denominations. The new evangelicals were intent on expansion and outreach.
Thus, when the National Association of Evangelicals was founded in 1942,
it adopted as its motto cooperation without compromise.
Evangelicals built up an entire parallel cultural infrastructurea
counterculture by any other name. One landmark was Billy Grahams
1957 crusade in New York Citys Madison Square Garden. Kicking
off on May 15 and running through September 2, the campaign attracted
more than 2 million attendees, with 55,000 recorded decisions
for Christ. In June, ABC began televising Grahams Saturday
night services live. Millions tuned in.
Evangelicals retooled their message to appeal to the unconverted, and
they constructed a robust network of churches and parachurch institutions
where believers could coalesce into a thriving community. Yes, they
remained outsiders, looked down upon when not ignored by the nations
metropolitan elites. Only Graham, with his immense charisma and political
skills, was a fully mainstream figure. Nevertheless, evangelicals were
now a mass movement on the move. Though scorned by the cultural elite,
they had consolidated their position in the nations most economically
dynamic region, and therefore the fulcrum of political change in the
ensuing decades: the Sunbelt.
Conservative proselytizing found a receptive audience as countercultural
chaos erupted around the country. Among what became known as the great
silent majority, including many Americans who considered themselves
good liberals during the 50s, Aquarius and its tumults seemed
like an outbreak of mass insanity. How could the most privileged children
in history reject everything their parents held dear? The mainline Protestant
denominations had thrived as bulwarks of the postwar liberal ascendancy,
but they faltered in the face of the Aquarian challenge. The 1964 slogan
for the evangelicals bête noire, the ecumenical and progressive
World Council of Churches, summed up the situation: The world
must set the agenda for the church. People who believed the world
was going to hell thought that slogan had things precisely backward.
For Americans anxious to defend their way of life against cultural
upheaval, evangelicalism provided the resources with which to make a
stand. It imbued believers with a fighting faith, granting them access
to the same kind of energies that animated the romantic rebellion energies
found only in the realms beyond reason. Exuberant worship, regular prayer,
and belief in prophecy and present-day miracles were the spiritual fortifications
that could stymie the radical onslaught.
Evangelicals vs. Aquarians
The audacious idea of founding a university had come to Oral Roberts
in the middle of dinner with a young Pat Robertson. Roberts began scribbling
on a napkinnot his own words, he believed, but words straight
from God. Raise up your students to hear My voice, to go where
My light is dim, his inner voice instructed, where My voice
is small and My healing power is not known. To go even to the uttermost
bounds of the earth.
In 1947 Roberts, who believed he had been healed of youthful tuberculosis
directly by God via a faith healer, was a minister with his own little
Pentecostal Holiness church in Enid, Oklahoma. He felt frustrated and
trapped as a dirt-poor, small-town preacher with a pleasant but complacent
congregation. One harried morning he picked up his copy of the Good
Book, and his eyes fell on III John 1:2: I wish above all things
that thou mayest prosper and be in health, even as thy soul prospereth.
It changed in an instant his whole understanding of God. God is good,
Roberts now saw: God wants us to be healthy; God wants us to succeed;
God wants us to be rich!
Roberts achieved great success as a revivalist and faith healerwhich
is to say, he became a central figure in a marginal movement. But his
ministry transcended Pentecostalisms lowly origins. Not content
with success as a traveling tent preacher, he built a far-flung empire
of evangelical outreach, complete with television and radio programs,
magazines, newspaper columns, even comic books. In 1967, as he was being
sworn in as president of the university he built from scratch, Roberts
knew he had brought his upstart faith into the American mainstream.
There to pay their respects were not just government officials but representatives
of 120 of the nations colleges and universities.
Roberts rapid ascent was only one spectacular example of the
larger evangelical uprising. Between 1965 and 1975, while mainline denominations
were shriveling, membership in the Church of the Nazarene increased
by 8 percent. The Southern Baptists grew by 18 percent, and membership
in the Seventh-Day Adventists and Assemblies of God leapt by 36 percent
and 37 percent, respectively. Newsweek declared 1976 the year
of the evangelical as Jimmy Carter, who identified himself as
one, took the presidency. A Gallup poll that same year asked Americans,
Would you describe yourself as a born-again or evangelical
Christian? More than a third said yes.
There is no point in mincing words: The stunning advance of evangelicalism
marked a dismal intellectual regress in American religion. A lapse into
crude superstition and magical thinking, credulous vulnerability to
charlatans, a dangerous weakness for apocalyptic prophecy (see the massive
popularity of the best-selling nonfiction book of the 70s, evangelical
Hal Lindseys The Late, Great Planet Earth), and blatant denial
of scientific reality, resurgent conservative Protestantism entailed
a widespread surrender of believers critical faculties. The celebration
of unreason on the left had met its match on the right.
But having beat their intellectual retreat, evangelicals summoned up
the fortitude to defend a cultural position that was, to a considerable
extent, worth defending. In particular, they upheld values that, after
the Sturm und Drang of the 60s and 70s subsided, would garner
renewed appreciation across the ideological divide: committed family
life, personal probity and self-restraint, the work ethic, and unembarrassed
American patriotism.
By no means were the evangelicals purely reactionary. Take race relations.
Although many of them hailed from the South, the leaders of the evangelical
revival dissented from the reigning regional orthodoxies of white supremacy
and segregation. For years Billy Graham had waffled on race, but after
the Supreme Court rejected school segregation in the 1954 case Brown
v. Board of Education, he refused to tolerate segregated seating at
his crusades. In his breakthrough 1957 crusade at Madison Square Garden,
Graham invited Martin Luther King to join him on the podium, introducing
him as one of the leaders of a great social revolution afoot.
Graham was not alone. The Southern Baptist Convention strongly endorsed
Brown and called for peaceful compliance. Pentecostalism, meanwhile,
had begun as an integrated movement, led by the son of slaves.
Most important, evangelicalism aligned Christian faith with the Holy
Grail of the affluent society: self-realization. Unlike the classic
bourgeois Protestantism of the 19th century, whose moral teachings emphasized
avoidance of worldly temptation, the revitalized version promised empowerment,
joy, and personal fulfillment. A godly life was once understood as grim
defiance of sinful urges; now it was the key to untold blessings. Something
good is going to happen to you! was one of Oral Roberts
favorite catchphrases.
The New Synthesis
The evangelicals therapeutic turn, like that of the counterculture,
moved with currents of psychic need sprung loose by mass affluence.
Indeed, the two opposing religious revivals overlapped. The Jesus Freaks,
or Jesus People, emerged out of the hippie scene in the late 60s,
mixing countercultural style and communalism with evangelical orthodoxy.
As the hippie phenomenon faded in the 70s, many veterans of the
Jesus Movement made their way into the larger, socially conservative
evangelical revival.
The peculiar career of Arthur Blessitt illustrates evangelicalisms
debt to the cultural left. In the late 60s, Blessitt hosted a
psychedelic nightclub called His Place on Hollywoods Sunset Strip,
an establishment whose logo combined a cross and a peace sign. Like,
if you want to get high, you dont have to drop Acid. Just pray
and you go all the way to Heaven, Blessitt advised in his tract
Lifes Greatest Trip. You dont have to pop pills to
get loaded. Just drop a little Matthew, Mark, Luke, or John. In
1969 Blessitt began his distinctive ministry of carrying a 12-foot-tall
cross around the countryand, later, around the world. On one of
his countless stops along the way, at an April 1984 meeting in Midland,
Texas, he received word that a local oilman, the son of a prominent
politician, wanted to see him privately. The businessman told Blessitt
that he was not comfortable attending a public meeting but wanted to
know Jesus better and learn how to follow him. Blessitt gave his witness
and prayed with him. The man, George W. Bush, subsequently converted
to evangelical Christianity.
Evangelicals and Aquarians were more alike than they knew. Both sought
firsthand spiritual experience; both believed that such experience could
set them free and change their lives; both favored emotional intensity
over intellectual rigor; both saw their spiritual lives as a refuge
from a corrupt and corrupting world. That last point, of course, was
subject to radically different interpretations. Aquarians rejected the
establishment because of its supposedly suffocating restrictions, while
the evangelicals condemned its licentious, decadent anarchy. Between
them, they left the social peace of the 50s in ruins.
That peace deserved to be disturbed. Its cautious, complacent liberalism
was ill-suited to coping with the emerging conflicts of mass prosperity.
It frustrated the aspirations of blacks, of women, and of the affluent
young. It suppressed and distorted economic energies by throttling competition.
Its spiritual life tended to the bland and shallow.
But no new, improved social consensus emerged to replace the one that
collapsed. Instead, with the culture wars and division between red
and blue America, our ideological categories and allegiances
continue to perpetuate the warring half-truths of the great spiritual
upheavals of the 60s. Yet despite this confusion, a new modus
vivendi has managed to emerge that contains within tolerable bounds
the ideological dissatisfactions of both the countercultural left and
the religious right.
As liberal dominance was shaken by successive blows of social and economic
turmoil in the 1960s and 70s, a New Right energized by the evangelical
counter-counterculture seized the opening and established conservatism
as the countrys most popular political creed by the 80s.
Yet the conservative triumph was steeped in irony. Capitalisms
vigor was restored, and the radical assault on middle-class values was
repulsed. But contrary to the hopes of the New Rights traditionalist
partisans, shoring up the institutions of mass affluence did not, and
could not, bring back the old cultural certainties.
Instead, a reinvigorated capitalism brought with it a blooming, buzzing
economic and cultural ferment that bore scant resemblance to any nostalgic
vision of the good old days. This was conservatisms curious accomplishment:
Marching under the banner of old-time religion, it made the world safe
for the secular, hedonistic values of Aquarius.
The resulting cultural synthesis that prevails today, this accidental
by-product of ideological stalemate, remains nameless. It could be called
liberal, in the larger sense of the tradition of individualism and moral
egalitarianism that America has always embodied. It could also be called
conservative, if that same liberal tradition is understood to be the
object of conservation. But the ideologies that pass for liberalism
and conservatism today are too weighed down with authoritarian elements
for either to lay claim to the real American center. Since American
society today is committed to a much wider scope for both economic and
cultural competition than was allowed before the 60s erupted,
it makes most sense to call that center libertarian.
Brink Lindsey is vice president for research at the Cato Institute.
This article was adapted from The Age of Abundance: How Prosperity Transformed
Americas Politics and Culture (Collins, 2007), by Brink Lindsey.
Copyright© 2007 by Brink Lindsey. Published by arrangement with
HarperCollins Publishers.
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