Los Angeles Times

Can we stop a return to America before 1964?

- By Robert S. McElvaine Robert S. McElvaine teaches at Millsaps College. He is the author, most recently, of “The Times They Were a-Changin’ – 1964: The Year the Sixties Arrived and the Battle Lines of Today Were Drawn.”

“The United States is now at one of those historic forks in the road whose outcome will prove as fateful as those of the 1860s, the 1930s, and the 1960s,” Nancy MacLean wrote in her 2017 book, “Democracy in Chains.”

History is punctuated by discontinu­ities that alter its trajectory. The key to the occurrence of such watershed moments is less the leaders than a sociopolit­ical environmen­t that is receptive to change. Abraham Lincoln, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon B. Johnson obviously played major roles at the turning points MacLean listed, but the spirits of those times were more fundamenta­l.

The current inflection point has become much more apparent over the past five years — and especially in the last few weeks. The United States in 2022 is at a crossroads and the direction taken will likely determine whether the experiment in democracy launched in 1776 will survive. One of the forks before us leads to autocracy, kleptocrac­y, plutocracy, renewed subordinat­ion of women and people of color, and to a time before the dramatic progress that began in 1964. The other points toward a reignition of the spirit that temporaril­y prevailed in the mid-1960s.

When he took office, President Biden set an ambitious agenda for an activist government, proposing greatly expanded programs that would build a more racially and economical­ly just society. Some say it was an agenda not seen since the Johnson administra­tion.

Johnson’s vision and ability to get things done in Congress were clearly important in the change that occurred in 1964, but more essential was that Johnson found himself in an environmen­t where progressiv­e approaches were possible.

That is apparent in the dramatic cultural change that took place during the same period.

In January 1964, Bob Dylan’s third album, “The Times They Are aChangin’,” was released. Johnson’s declaratio­n of a war on poverty in his State of the Union address that month and Dylan’s title song were, while different in tone and approach, parallel in the thrust of how they viewed the times.

When Dylan sang about the chance not coming again and the loser would later win, he could have been channeling the new president. Dylan and Johnson — the poet and the president — almost seemed to be singing a duet. This synchronic­ity was, of course, unplanned.

When one of Dylan’s friends picked up a typed copy of the song’s lyrics a few months earlier and read aloud the line, “Come senators, congressme­n, please heed the call,” he asked, “What’s this s—, man?” Dylan shrugged and responded, “Well, you know, it seems to be what the people like to hear.”

Such a coincidenc­e of a musician’s words with the arguments of an activist president suggests that something was “in the air.” And one of the things in the air in 1964 was a desire to expand freedom and improve the conditions of society’s “losers.”

Dramatic changes would keep coming at a furious pace over the ensuing months into 1965. The result was a nation reshaped politicall­y, socially, racially, economical­ly and sexually — and one that became a full democracy for the first time.

The enthusiasm with which many Americans greeted Johnson’s calls for fundamenta­l change indicates that he, like Dylan, was voicing sentiments that were in the zeitgeist.

Today, the right-wing extremists who have hijacked the Republican party are determined to reverse all that progress. Their chances for success depend to a substantia­l degree on what the zeitgeist of 2022 is.

Authoritar­ianism has been spreading. Sinister promoters of white supremacy and opponents of democracy control the leading cable news network and dominate one of the two major parties. Political violence has come to be accepted by a sizeable fraction of those who identify with that party. The Texas Republican Party has just adopted an extremist platform that calls for — among other reversals of the modern world — abolishing the income tax, putting into law that life begins at conception, requiring that lies be taught as history, idolizing the traitors who fought the United States to maintain the “right” to enslave human beings, prohibitin­g any gun safety laws.

But do those forces of hate reflect the spirit of our time? Is there reason to hope that our society has the strength to drive out the forces of antidemocr­atic extremism?

The historian Heather Cox Richardson reminds us that there is nothing new about American politician­s and con men using lies about the “great replacemen­t theory” to spread fear and gain power for themselves. But events elsewhere, including Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, may have produced a renewed appreciati­on for democracy around the world, including in the United States.

The freedoms fought for and expanded in the 1960s changed America permanentl­y, and going back is unimaginab­le. Even now, the extremism of the Supreme Court in denying women control over their own bodies and the eagerness of many Republican­s to demolish LGBTQ+ rights and innumerabl­e other freedoms are producing a resurgence of activism.

Perhaps the mounting evidence — most compelling­ly from the Tuesday testimony of Cassidy Hutchinson at the Jan. 6 hearings — that Donald Trump was determined to overturn a democratic election result, through violence if nothing else worked, will diminish the attractive­ness of authoritar­ianism.

The zeitgeist of 1964 was freedom, and a substantia­l majority of Americans embraced it as a path to a better future, out of a past built on racism and oppression. The American soul stands at a crossroads now — whether to reaffirm that legacy or repudiate it.

Whether senators and congressme­n heed the call now depends on voters electing enough Democrats to give them workable majorities in both houses of Congress to block right-wing extremists hellbent on “taking America back” to the time before 1964.

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Top: Associated Press;
 ?? Above: John Byrne Cooke Estate ?? LYNDON B. JOHNSON and Bob Dylan, while different in tone and approach, were parallel in how they viewed the need for change in 1964.
Above: John Byrne Cooke Estate LYNDON B. JOHNSON and Bob Dylan, while different in tone and approach, were parallel in how they viewed the need for change in 1964.

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