 In the Great Depression the 
												American dream had become a 
												nightmare. What was once the 
												land of opportunity was now the 
												land of desperation. What was 
												once the land of hope and 
												optimism had become the land of 
												despair. The American people 
												were questioning all the maxims 
												on which they had based their 
												lives - democracy, capitalism, 
												individualism. The best hope for 
												a better life was California. 
												Many Dust Bowl farmers packed 
												their families into cars, tied 
												their few possessions on the 
												back, and sought work in the 
												agricultural fields or cities of 
												the West - their role as 
												independent land owners gone 
												forever. Between 1929 and 1932 
												the income of the average 
												American family was reduced by 
												40%, from $2,300 to $1,500. 
												Instead of advancement, survival 
												became the keyword. 
												Institutions, attitudes, 
												lifestyles changed in this 
												decade but democracy prevailed. 
												Democracies such as Germany and 
												Italy fell to dictatorships, but 
												the United States and its 
												Constitution survived. 
												 
												Economics dominated politics in 
												the 1930's. The decade began 
												with shanty towns called 
												Hoovervilles, named after a 
												president who felt that relief 
												should be left to the private 
												sector, and ended with an 
												alphabet soup of federal 
												programs funded by the national 
												government and an assortment of 
												commissions set up to regulate 
												Wall Street, the banking 
												industry, and other business 
												enterprises. The Social Security 
												Act of 1935 set up a program to 
												ensure an income for the 
												elderly. The Wagner Act of 1935 
												gave workers the legal right to 
												unionize. John L. Lewis founded 
												the Congress of Industrial 
												Organizations (CIO) and 
												conditions for blue-collar 
												workers improved. Joseph P. 
												Kennedy, a Wall Street insider, 
												was appointed Chairman of the 
												Securities and Exchange 
												Commissions.
												 
												
												  
												By the beginning of the next 
												decade the United States had 
												gone from a laissez-faire 
												economy that oversaw its own 
												conduct to an economy regulated 
												by the federal government. The 
												debate over which is the best 
												course of action still rages 
												today.  
												 
												The 1940's were dominated by 
												World War II. European artists 
												and intellectuals fled to the 
												United States from Hitler and 
												the Holocaust, bringing new 
												ideas created in 
												disillusionment. War production 
												pulled us out of the Great 
												Depression. Women were needed to 
												replace men who had gone off to 
												war, and so the first great 
												exodus of women from the home to 
												the workplace began. Rationing 
												affected the food we ate, the 
												clothes we wore, the toys with 
												which children played.  
												 
												After the war, the men returned, 
												having seen the rest of the 
												world. No longer was the family 
												farm an ideal; no longer would 
												blacks accept lesser status. The 
												GI Bill allowed more men than 
												ever before to get a college 
												education. Women had to give up 
												their jobs to the returning men, 
												but they had tasted 
												independence.  
												 
												The end of World War II brought 
												thousands of young servicemen 
												back to America to pick up their 
												lives and start new families in 
												new homes with new jobs. With an 
												energy never before experienced, 
												American industry expanded to 
												meet peacetime needs. Americans 
												began buying goods not available 
												during the war, which created 
												corporate expansion and jobs. 
												Growth everywhere. The baby boom 
												was underway... 
												 
												The sixties were the age of 
												youth, as 70 million children 
												from the post-war baby boom 
												became teenagers and young 
												adults. The movement away from 
												the conservative fifties 
												continued and eventually 
												resulted in revolutionary ways 
												of thinking and real change in 
												the cultural fabric of American 
												life. No longer content to be 
												images of the generation ahead 
												of them, young people wanted 
												change. The changes affected 
												education, values, lifestyles, 
												laws, and entertainment. Many of 
												the revolutionary ideas which 
												began in the sixties are 
												continuing to evolve today. 
												 
												The chaotic events of the 60's, 
												including war and social change, 
												seemed destined to continue in 
												the 70's. Major trends included 
												a growing disillusionment of 
												government, advances in civil 
												rights, increased influence of 
												the women's movement, a 
												heightened concern for the 
												environment, and increased space 
												exploration. Many of the 
												"radical" ideas of the 60's 
												gained wider acceptance in the 
												new decade, and were 
												mainstreamed into American life 
												and culture. Amid war, social 
												realignment and presidential 
												impeachment proceedings, 
												American culture flourished. 
												Indeed, the events of the times 
												were reflected in and became the 
												inspiration for much of the 
												music, literature, 
												entertainment, and even fashion 
												of the decade. Legalized 
												abortion had its birth in 
												America.  
												
											
												
												  
												The 1980s became the Me! Me! Me! 
												generation of status seekers. 
												During the 1980s, hostile 
												takeovers, leveraged buyouts, 
												and mega-mergers spawned a new 
												breed of billionaire. Donald 
												Trump, Leona Helmsley, and Ivan 
												Boesky iconed the meteoric rise 
												and fall of the rich and famous. 
												If you've got it, flaunt it and 
												You can have it all! were 
												watchwords. Forbes' list of 400 
												richest people became more 
												important than its 500 largest 
												companies. Binge buying and 
												credit became a way of life and 
												'Shop Til you Drop' was the 
												watchword. Labels were 
												everything, even (or especially) 
												for our children. Tom Wolfe 
												dubbed the baby-boomers as the 
												'splurge generation.' Video 
												games, aerobics, minivans, 
												camcorders, and talk shows 
												became part of our lives. The 
												decade began with double-digit 
												inflation, Reagan declared a war 
												on drugs, Kermit didn't find it 
												easy to be green, hospital costs 
												rose, we lost many, many of our 
												finest talents to AIDS which 
												before the decade ended spread 
												to black and Hispanic women, and 
												unemployment rose. On the bright 
												side, the US Constitution had 
												its 200th birthday, Gone with 
												the Wind turned 50, ET phoned 
												home, and in 1989 Americans gave 
												$115,000,000,000 to charity. 
												And, Internationally, at the 
												very end of the decade the 
												Berlin Wall was removed - making 
												great changes for the decade to 
												come! At the turn of the decade, 
												many were happy to leave the 
												spendthrift 80s for the 90s, 
												although some thought the 
												eighties TOTALLY AWESOME.  
											 
										 
										
								 
							
	
							  
					 
				 
			 
			 
		 
	
	
            [to top of second column]  | 
            
             
            
			 
											
											The 1990s were truly the electronic 
			age. The World Wide Web was born in 1992, changing the way we 
			communicated (email), spent our money (online gambling, stores), and 
			did business (e-commerce). In 1989, 15% of American households had a 
			computer. And by 2000, this figure increased to 51%, with 41.5% 
			online. Internet lingo like plug-ins, BTW (by the way), GOK (God 
			only knows), IMHO (in my humble opinion), FAQS, SPAM, FTP, ISP, and 
			phrases like "See you online" or "The server's down" or "Bill Gates" 
			became part of our everyday vocabulary. We signed our mail with a 
			:-) smile, a ;-) wink, or a :-* kiss. And - everyone had a cell 
			phone. 
			
											The electronic age continued to 
			flourish. Everyone had a computer, iPhones and “smart” phones became 
			of age along with “flat-screen plasma” and “High Definition” 
			everything. A significant event was the 911 attack on the World 
			Trade Center in New York by terrorists. This started a decade of war 
			with the build-up of the military as the “War of Terror” changed the 
			“doctrine” of the United States to assume “pre-emptive” wars using 
			the 911 attack as the first cause. The economy began the decline 
			with a recession beginning in late 2007 after the election of the 
			new Obama Administration. The national debt began to climb with 
			unprecedented spending. 
			 
			By looking at the socialization decade the people in the particular 
			age group have lived through, and the significant emotional events 
			each significant decade provided, we can see the impact culture has 
			made through the decades related to people’s perceptions and their 
			preferences for various responses to issues of the day. 
			 
			For example, for the group of people born in the late 1940s who were 
			in the socialization decade of 1955 – 1965 would have experienced 
			the impact of the completion of a world war and the Korean conflict. 
			Family members would have experienced those things directly and 
			would have talked and told stories of their experiences. The toys 
			that person played with would have the army theme and much patriotic 
			feelings that would have influenced their feelings and actions 
			regarding national pride. Little girls would have “played house” and 
			played with dolls; the little boys would have played cowboys and 
			Indians and war games. Movies would have extended the theme of war 
			and victory, medial would have reported on the post-war growth, the 
			peace dividends of the Eisenhower Administration with the men making 
			the living while the women raised the children. As the child grew 
			into the America under the Kennedy Administration and the “Military 
			Industrial Complex” and the “Cold War” with the shadow of the USSR, 
			the loom of atomic warfare likely drove some into an underground 
			bunker. While in school the Bible would have been read, the flag 
			would have been honored by the saying of the pledge. Media beyond 
			the radio was coming to life with television being introduced on a 
			massive scale with more households owning them. 
			 
			Contrast that with persons who were born in the late 1980s and early 
			1990s who were in the socialization decade of 1995 – 2005. They have 
			experienced socialization totally immersed in electronics, instant 
			communication, music produced more with electronics than voices, 
			songs that use only phrases repeated over and over driven by a beat 
			that produces an almost hypnotic effect, especially when the lights, 
			stage fog and pyromaniac effects are present. The emotional 
			significant event was the 911 terrorist attacks which changed the 
			innocence of America. Although those people experienced the wars in 
			Iraq and Afghanistan, it could be done at a distance unless the 
			person or immediate family had volunteered to go into the military.
			 
			
			  
			
			 
			When viewing these different perceptions we must remember that each 
			had families and friends who had experienced previous socialization 
			periods that produced different perceptions in the individual. 
			Within each individual’s respective family and community settings as 
			they passed through their respective socialization periods, the 
			changing culture had a great impact on their development of 
			personality and values. It is not unreasonable to expect that each 
			person looking at issues of today is at least thinking about past 
			experiences and their personal values regarding each issue that 
			comes up in culture.  
			 
			Now, how does all this affect the society in which we are living 
			today? For sure we view our society as multicultural, but it is also 
			“multi-generational” as well. But I wonder if we miss a huge point 
			by thinking the culture is only the “culture of today?” We are not 
			only multi-generational; we are “multi-cultural” in our values, even 
			if Caucasian has been our predominately physical ethnicity; and that 
			culture is American culture extended over decades of experience. But 
			ethnicity has changed in our culture to include ethnic groups who 
			share their own experiences from their home cultures, or perhaps a 
			repressed American culture for their ethnicity group, and are 
			reluctant to "assimilate" their culture into what has been a 
			predominately Caucasian culture. 
			 
			Therefore, as we grapple with these issues of world and domestic 
			events and America's response to those events, and with our 
			alignment with external and internal groups and organizations, we 
			need to keep in mind we have a variance of Americans, like it or 
			not, who have been affected by the cultures (decades) in which they 
			have lived and each person’s ethnocentrism produces a discontent and 
			feeling of anxiety at the introduction of each change brought to 
			them (us). 
											
			
									
									[By JIM KILLEBREW] 
									
									
									Click here to respond to the editor about 
									this article. 
			 
			 
											
			  
			
			   |