[lbo-talk] question for those who remember the 70s

Carrol Cox cbcox at ilstu.edu
Fri Sep 3 11:40:40 PDT 2010


I think Gail has gotten the essence of the '70s. Those who remember them favorably are responding to the positive leftovers of the slowly dying struggles of the '60s. It took some time for it to sink in on those of us who had fought the battles of the '60s to wake up to the fact that people were no longer respnding, that our numbers were shrinking rather than growing

In 1982 a Palestinian poet perhaps perhaps epitomized a world-wide experience when he wrote, "the earth is closing in on us."

Carrol

Gail Brock wrote:
>
> The conservatives effectively began ranting about government bureaucracies as
> LBJ's Great Society programs really kicked in. You couldn't enter into
> "voluntary" real estate covenants that excluded minorities any more, and in a
> lot of jurisdictions you couldn't open burn leaves anymore. They were trying to
> make you less free in your own car with haranguing about gas mileage and seat
> belts. The extension of Social Security to domestic and farm labor made upper
> middle-class whites have to start paying and collecting FICA taxes on their
> help, which contributed to their feeling that government had started just
> working for minorities. If you dug a well, you had to have the water tested;
> most of the time the water was fine, which just proved that government threw up
> a lot of silly, expensive regulations. Meanwhile, inflation kicked up, and
> businesses energetically blames price increases on government regulation and
> bureaucracy.
>
> It was in fact true that people had more interaction with government in the
> normal run of things. The slowly improving cleanness of air and water isn't as
> memorable as the sudden banning of leaf burning when you personally have to
> change your habits. Social justice is a pain in the neck when it costs you time
> and money. In other words, the Great Society programs attacked externalities,
> but people experienced the bureaucracy directly.
>
>
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