miriam_e: from my drawing MoonGirl (Default)
[personal profile] miriam_e
It wasn't very long ago that it was common for people to positively hate anybody who looked different, or dressed differently, or even fellow countrymen who spoke with slightly different accents. Nowadays people are more tolerant that at any time in history.

I remember back in the 60s how ordinary Australians (some of the most educated and tolerant people in the world) expressed utter disgust at people whose hair was just an inch or so longer than "normal". I remember people saying that they couldn't possibly shake hands with people of another color because they couldn't bear to touch their skin. I remember people speaking out publicly that rock music was evil, and I remember how amazingly common that feeling was.

The present day sees popular enjoyment of more kinds of music than ever before, classical, trance, rock, jazz, punk, pop, metal, ambient, tribal, hip-hop, rap, bebop, big band... literally hundreds of different kinds. In the past you could number on the fingers of one hand all the popular forms of music. Now many colors and cultures of people are readily accepted by the bulk of society, and slightly different accents pass by almost unnoticed. Dress, hair, and even body decorations are considered largely irrelevant by most people.

People are getting much more tolerant, and this change for the better is happening incredibly quickly.

Date: 2005-08-07 12:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] slave-driver.livejournal.com
I agree with you. Long hair became acceptable in the 70's and the stigma toward rock music ended in the 60's. Clinton and the internet have both contributed to this change toward social acceptance, but you're right, it started long before that.

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miriam_e: from my drawing MoonGirl (Default)
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