Search for parallels: It may feel like 1960s, but it’s worse
The demonstrations in Los Angeles against the federal hunt for immigrants are nowhere near the scale of the protests against the Vietnam War.

A student protest at Columbia University in New York in 1968
Many of us who lived through the 1960s are tempted to seek similarities between then and now. We see the acute polarisation of the nation, the warring ideologies, the National Guard deployed against demonstrators, the presidents who abuse power, and the sense of America losing its bearing. Whereas President Richard Nixon’s silent majority battled flower power and “commies,” President Trump’s MAGA assails wokeness and the radical left. Whereas students closed down campuses over Vietnam, students now — or at least a year ago — rose up over the Gaza Strip.
The list could go on. But it soon becomes evident that there are numerous differences. Some are obvious: the revolutionary advances over the past six decades in technology and communication, especially the prevalence of social media and smartphones, and the absence of a Cold War to clearly define global relationships and a draft to threaten young people with death in a distant jungle.
The demonstrations in Los Angeles against the federal hunt for immigrants are nowhere near the scale of the protests against the Vietnam War. For all their passion and violence, the 1960s were an eruption of idealism, a youth-led rebellion against a misguided war and the racism and misogyny lurking in the placid suburbs and Made in the USA prosperity of the ’50s. There was a conviction in the songs, love-ins, protests and even mind-bending drugs that the world could be made better. “The Times They Are a-Changin’,” sang Bob Dylan in the hymn of that era, while John Lennon pictured its utopia: “Imagine there’s no countries / It isn’t hard to do / Nothing to kill or die for / And no religion, too.”
The student protests in the spring of 2024 against the carnage in Gaza, by contrast, never ignited a broader movement and petered out, mired in accusations of antisemitism and the humiliation of university leaders. The momentum was with Trump and his MAGA campaign, and its goal was, in effect, to reverse the gains of the ’60s — to undo the civil rights, sexual tolerance, environmental protection, campus activism and all the other themes and values clustered under the banner of diversity, equity and inclusion.
Trump’s appeal to a broad swath of America is more complex than that, of course. DEI sometimes deserved the criticism; people who voted for Trump had some valid grievances, and many do not necessarily support his angry, personal and often potentially illegal assaults on varying targets, including immigrants and Harvard University. But the unmistakable message in “Make America Great Again” is that the forces of change unleashed in the ’60s are anti-American and needed to be expunged to restore the “real” America — one of Christian values, respectful students, public order and blinders on racial discrimination, inequality and other blemishes.
That rosy past may be just as illusory as “all the people livin’ life in peace,” as imagined by Lennon. But if dreams shape a generation, then those of almost half a million of my contemporaries (but not me, alas) who gathered for the legendary Woodstock rock festival in August 1969 for three days of peace and music are far more inspiring than a longing to return to Pleasantville.
The search for parallels between then and now often includes the juxtaposition of Trump and Nixon, the president often relegated in popular memory — unfairly, I believe — to a symbol of what the ’60s rose up against. There are tempting similarities. Scandal followed Nixon throughout his career, as it has Trump. Both scrambled back to the forefront of politics — Nixon until Watergate felled him. (“He left. I don’t leave. A big difference,” is Trump’s take.) Both positioned themselves as victims of liberal elites and champions of a silent majority; both maintained an enemies list of people and institutions they wanted to punish.
Curiously, the two men even had more than a decade-long correspondence in the 1980s and early ’90s, when both were in New York, Nixon in retirement and Trump a real estate developer on the rise. Exhibited at Nixon’s presidential library, the letters include one in which Trump writes that he believes Nixon to be “one of this country’s great men”; in another, the older man commiserates with a “massive media attack” on the younger one’s business problems.
But the differences are far greater than the similarities. Nixon entered the fray only at the tail end of the ’60s. His predecessors John F Kennedy and Lyndon B Johnson were far more responsible for the upheavals of that time. The idealism of “ask not what your country can do for you” and the Great Society was on their watch, as was the tragedy of the Vietnam War.
Trump, by contrast, defines what is happening today. The troubles of the country and world — whether the Gaza protests, the war in Ukraine or unchecked immigration — may predate his second term, but how he has incorporated them into his broad assault on American institutions and values stamps this era with his brand.
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