My apologies; your initial long paragraph in post #40 started with “People need to clearly understand the US in 1965.” I was simply adding to the list which you had, subsequent to that lead-in comment, all of which contributed to the rupture within society.
I see where you’re coming from. What I was saying about 1965 was that most of us were too trusting, and very much surrounded by good. The wolves we did not recognize or judge properly, until it was too late. A kind of misplaced trust developed.
The war created not so much a rupture because I knew that once the protest was done for the day, the peaceniks went home, smoked dope and lived immoral lives. Yes, there were exceptions but the truth was this: the US left the war after dropping more bombs than were dropped on all of Europe during World War II, and testing new military hardware under battlefield conditions. Looking at it from a purely military perspective: there was no stated goal. There was no “we’ll risk the Chinese getting involved” like they did during the Korean Police Action. The leadership in the South and those living in the South were fighting bandits, later labeled Vietcong, who were displaced from the North and were simply trying to survive. What were the French doing in Indochina in the 1950s?
And once the war was over, what was left for the Hippies and Anarchists? Dope, sex outside of marriage, drinking and ignoring Christianity (with some exceptions), but “Hippie culture” was becoming a part of life. Peace did not end that, and I foolishly thought that their preaching to live like they did would end. THAT caused a rupture in society.
Dad: Son, if you love the girl, why don’t you get married instead of living in sin?
Look dad. Things are different now. You don’t understand.
Dad: Look, I didn’t teach you to live like that or your mother. The Church didn’t teach you that.
We got freedom, dad. Freedom to live how we want.
THAT WAS rupture. THAT meant “family” was on the target list. And what has Pope Francis been talking about? Family. Faith and Family.
Ed