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Showing posts from March, 2023

1968

  Most people living during this time period expected conformity and feared anything that went against their perception of normality. During the late 1960s, many groups challenged these perceptions. Many like the Hippies, women, and anti-war protesters were the ones under the most scrutiny. With the Hippies, they threw out many norms and expectations that most middle-class Americans held so close. In a time where most individuals were on the straight and narrow, Hippies were notorious for their drug intake and their go with the flow attitudes. Most individuals during this time were working trying to make ends meet. They had to work so hard to pay off their homes, get their kids through school, and be able to retire. Hippies on the other hand were not working to the degree that their parents were. During this time, women were making a larger uproar than before. Women in the 60s were expected to be perfect little housewives. They were expected to cook, clean, take care of the kids,...

Second Wave of Feminism

     The second wave of feminism was mainly about women's reproductive rights. This movement was started in the 1960's and after the John F. Kennedy's commission. The movement focused on several issues such as gender inequality, reproductive rights, sexism and workplace discrimination. At the time, women were to become housewives and act all the parts to being a more feminine. Betty Friedan wrote a book called The Feminine Mystique which gave others a more perspective view of how women felt about how they are supposed to act and like. Women were often told that they must clean the house, always make their husbands happy, care for the children herself, and if they had a job, they didn't receive the same respect as men did nor the right pay. Women felt unhappy because of how empty they felt doing the things that they did not enjoy. This led to what the doctor called "the housewifes's syndrome" where mainly housewives felt a sort of emptiness inside and not s...

The Vietnam War

The Vietnam War took place from 1955 to 1975 due to the communist influence present in North Vietnam. The U nited States s trongly felt that the Vietnamese needed saving from this communist influence and if we did not stop communism then it would spread to America resulting in the loss of our own freedom. Upon entering the war, American soldiers fe lt happy to be fighting for freedom and d id not care if it cost their life to achieve this mission. As the war continue d, soldiers were seeing increasingly more horrific scenes, casualties, and fear ed their life even in their sleep but they still f ound a way to make their mission in Vietnam enjoyable . To do this, soldiers ma de bets with their fellow members on who would be the first to kill an opponent with a weapon or which day would they achieve 10,000 deaths in their unit . At this point, the American soldiers still felt sorrow for the Vietnamese and still desired to achieve their mission in North Vietnam ; but,...