Author Topic: 1968: The Year the System Lost Its Grip — Part 4, Ideology, Race, and Authority  (Read 64 times)

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Online Luis Gonzalez

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1968: The Year the System Lost Its Grip — Part 4 
Ideology, Race, and Authority

The Last Wire

What began as protest became something larger in 1968. Something harder to contain and even harder to define.

Part 4 examines the point where race, ideology, media, and authority stopped interacting as separate forces and started fusing into a single national pressure system. Universities, city streets, and political institutions were no longer just sites of disagreement. They became stages for a deeper conflict over legitimacy itself.

As civil rights struggles, anti-war demonstrations, and urban unrest intensified, the question was no longer only what America should do, but who had the right to define what America was. Government authority, law enforcement, journalists, activists, and political movements all began operating under competing moral frameworks that no longer overlapped cleanly.

The result was not just instability. It was fragmentation of trust. Institutions that once mediated conflict were now seen as participants in it. Every major event fed into the next. Every response deepened suspicion. The system stopped feeling neutral, and started feeling contested at every level.

By the end of 1968, the country was no longer simply experiencing unrest. It was reorganizing around permanent tension points that would shape politics, culture, and public trust for decades to come.

This installment traces how that shift happened in real time, and why its effects never fully faded.

1968: The Year the System Lost Its Grip — Part 4, Ideology, Race, and Authority

"The growth of knowledge depends entirely upon disagreement." — Karl Popper

“Life, liberty, and property do not exist because men have made laws. On the contrary, it was the fact that life, liberty, and property existed beforehand that caused men to make laws in the first place." — Frederic Bastiat

“You can vote Socialism in, but you’re gonna have to shoot your way out of it.” — Me

“Better a grave full of memories than one full of dreams.” — Me.

Online Free Vulcan

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The thing is, looking from the rural Midwest perspective, is the recognition that much of this was Marxist fomented primarily in the urban areas, taking advantage of at the time young and naive Boomers who grew up with a comfortable suburbanite lifestyle with zero comprehension of the destitute poverty just 30 years earlier during the Great Depression and the sacrifices of WWII.

And they played the classic Marxist passive-aggressive card of 'well it ain't perfect, our institutions 'failed' us, and we can't accept that, so we gotta burn it all down'.

And they did it with rhetoric, sermons, finger wagging, and projection, and it was all smoke and mirrors to trojan horse Marxist dictatorship upon this country, and not much else.

Meanwhile, the rural areas and small towns went on as usual, working hard, being prosperous, and living the Americana life till their foolish DC policies brought the Rust Belt upon is.
The Republic is lost.

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The thing is, looking from the rural Midwest perspective, is the recognition that much of this was Marxist fomented primarily in the urban areas, taking advantage of at the time young and naive Boomers who grew up with a comfortable suburbanite lifestyle with zero comprehension of the destitute poverty just 30 years earlier during the Great Depression and the sacrifices of WWII.

And they played the classic Marxist passive-aggressive card of 'well it ain't perfect, our institutions 'failed' us, and we can't accept that, so we gotta burn it all down'.

And they did it with rhetoric, sermons, finger wagging, and projection, and it was all smoke and mirrors to trojan horse Marxist dictatorship upon this country, and not much else.

Meanwhile, the rural areas and small towns went on as usual, working hard, being prosperous, and living the Americana life till their foolish DC policies brought the Rust Belt upon is.

 :bingo: 

Marxism has been FAR more active for a longer period of time in this country than most realize.
Scientists, like all discoverers of truth, have always asked, "What?” “How?” “Why?” “What if?” and “Why not?” Questioning science is science.

Jaeger, John . Brilliant Creations : The Wonder of Nature and Life (p. 5). Kindle Edition.