Peace, love, and rock music. For some people, when thinking about the 1960's, these three words were what they first thought. In fact, these words represent more important things. In the 1960s, people began to express their beliefs and even through media, protests, hippies, and even music, they were able to change the American society forever and freely. Most of the national drama of the 1960s was the result of the Vietnam War. Many citizens are no longer pleased to rejoin the war. And this time it seems like an endless war.
The protest campaign in the 1960s was a group of extremist students who are simple and utopian, who were spoiled and whose achievement was not achieved. Anti-war protests in the 1960s did not end the war, they only succeeded in making Vietnam war veterans enemies. Protestors are mainly university students who are exempted from participating in the draft and may never fight for their country and may die. I do not think much about sports
College students took part in social movements as early as the 20th century, but the most dramatic student movement began in the 1960s. In the 1960s, students organized civil rights and opposed the Vietnam War. In the 1970s, in South Africa students led women 's rights and gays' rights, protest against apartheid, and the student' s GPA rose sharply. For profit-oriented universities were born in the colonial era, the growth of these schools was most pronounced from the 1980's to the year 2011. However, as a result of many federal surveys, the enrollment rate of for-profit universities has declined sharply since 2011. For-profit universities are criticized for predatory marketing and sales practices. Failure of Collins University and ITT Institute of Technology is the most important ending.
Most of the opposition culture of the 1960s was born on the university campus. In 1964, the freedom of freedom of speech of the University of California at Berkeley began with a civil rights movement in southern United States, but this is an early example. In Berkeley, a group of students began to think that they are interested in being a class contradictory to the interests and customs of the university and its corporate sponsors. Not a student, but other non-rebellious young people have also contributed to freedom of speech.