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Social Critics of the 1950’s Primary Source Documents Name: __________________________ Date: ______________ Per: __ Our Right to Require Belief Billy Graham (1956) In 1956, “In God We Trust” became the official national motto, reflecting both a Cold War culture where Americans contrasted the United States with the atheistic Soviet Union and the widespread appeal of traditional moral values embodied in the Judeo-Christian tradition. Evangelist Billy Graham emerged within this context, becoming the most significant evangelical preacher of the postwar era. His message of salvation through Christ spoke to middle-class Americans in search of some meaning in their lives. There is a movement gathering momentum in America to take the traditional concept of God out of our national life. If this movement succeeds, IN GOD WE TRUST will be taken from our coins, the Bible will be removed from our courtrooms, future Presidents will be sworn into office with their hand on a copy of the Constitution instead of the Bible, and chaplains will be removed from the Armed Forces. The issue of prayers in public schools is now before the Supreme Court and, if the Court decrees negatively, another victory will be gained by those forces which conspire to remove faith in God from the public conscience. With each passing Christmas season the observing of Christmas in the school becomes a sharper issue. Many public schools, from California to New Jersey, have already ruled out the singing of carols in the classroom. Those who are trying to remove God from our culture are rewriting history and distorting the truth. But those who advocate drastic changes in our traditional faith are only a tiny minority. Most Americans not only believe in God themselves but want their leaders to have faith in God. The Associated Press recently reported the findings of Dr. Paul Bussard, editor of the Catholic Digest, who learned that 99 percent of the American people believe in God; that 77 percent believe in the hereafter, and that 75 percent believe that religion is important.… It is true that our forefathers meant this nation to be free from religious domination. The men who built America were primarily victims of oppression. They felt that the terrors of the wilderness were as nothing to that of government oppression of religious faith. But the founding fathers in their determination to have freedom “of” religion never meant to have freedom “from” religion. Separation of church and state in no way implies separation of religion and state affairs. They are spiritually inseparable.… Early American history was hallowed with a purpose greater than material wealth and a cause greater than democracy. It was forged in the fire of a burning faith in God. Many early settlers came to America with one goal in mind — namely, to advance the Kingdom of the Lord Jesus Christ. The tremendous prosperity, power and blessing which America has enjoyed through the years came because we as a nation have honored God. It is, I believe, a direct fulfillment of the promise, “Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord.” Comic Books and Juvenile Delinquency: Interim Report of the Committee on the Judiciary (1955) The 1950s postwar affluence affirmed conventional values of middle-class morality and idealized the nuclear family with a working father and stay-at-home mother. At the same time, the economic comforts provided opportunities for consumer indulgence and a relaxation of social and moral constraints. Concerns about immorality haunted the middle class as reformers began defining a problem of juvenile delinquency that they attributed to the sexual and violent themes appearing in comic books, according to Democratic senator Estes Kefauver of Tennessee. The Senate investigated the link between comic books and juvenile delinquency in 1955 and determined that the mass media was a “significant factor” in the crisis of America’s youth. It has been pointed out that the so-called crime and horror comic books of concern to the subcommittee offer short courses in murder, mayhem, robbery, rape, cannibalism, carnage, necrophilia, sex, sadism, masochism, and virtually every other form of crime, degeneracy, bestiality, and horror. These depraved acts are presented and explained in illustrated detail in an array of comic books being bought and read daily by thousands of children. These books evidence a common penchant for violent death in every form imaginable. Many of the books dwell in detail on various forms of insanity and stress sadistic degeneracy. Others are devoted to cannibalism with monsters in human form feasting on human bodies, usually the bodies of scantily clad women. … A Communist magazine, printed in East Germany and devoted to bitter criticism of the United States, appeared under the name, “USA im Wort und Bild” (USA in Word and Pictures). The publication ridicules comic books and similar American attempts to present the classics in simple form. Some of the phrases read: Shakespeare in Yankee dialect is the latest “cultural triumph” *** The “cultural” achievement of the publishers is expressed on the jacket of the pamphlet: “You can quote the best quotations of Shakespeare and impress your friends, without reading the play.” … Soviet propaganda cites the comic book in support of its favorite anti-American theme — the degeneracy of American culture. However, comic books are but one of a number of instruments used in Soviet propaganda to illustrate this theme. The attacks are usually supported with examples drawn from the less-desirable American motion pictures, television programs, literature, drama, and art. It is represented in the Soviet propaganda that the United States crime rate, particularly the incidence of juvenile delinquency, is largely incited by the murders, robberies, and other crimes portrayed in “trash literature.” The reason such reading matter is distributed, according to that propaganda, is that the “imperialists” use it to condition a generation of young automatons who will be ready to march and kill in the future wars of aggression planned by the capitalists.… While not attempting to review the several findings included in this report, the subcommittee wishes to reiterate its belief that this country cannot afford the calculated risk involved in feeding its children, through comic books, a concentrated diet of crime, horror, and violence. There was substantial, although not unanimous, agreement among the experts that there may be detrimental and delinquency-producing effects upon both the emotionally disturbed child and the emotionally normal delinquent. Children of either type may gain suggestion, support, and sanction from reading crime and horror comics. John Kenneth Galbraith Criticizes the Affluent Society (1958): “The final problem of the productive society is what it produces. This manifests itself in an implacable tendency to provide an opulent supply of some things and a niggardly yield of others. This disparity carries to the point where it is a cause of social discomfort and social unhealth. The line which divides our areas of wealth from our area of poverty is roughly that which divides privately produced and marketed goods and services from publicly rendered services. Our wealth in the first is not only in startling contrast with the meagerness of the latter, but our wealth in privately produced goods is, to a marked degree, the cause of crisis in the supply of public services. For we have failed to see the importance, indeed the urgent need, of maintaining a balance between the two. This disparity between our flow of private and public goods and services is no matter of subjective judgment. On the contrary, it is the source of the most extensive comment which only stops short of the direct contrast being made here. In the years following World War II, the papers of any major citythose of New York were an excellent example- told daily of the shortages and shortcomings in the elementary municipal and metropolitan services. The schools were old and overcrowded. The police force was under strength and underpaid. The parks and playgrounds were insufficient. Streets and empty lots were filthy, and the sanitation staff was underequipped and in need of men. Access to the city by those who work there was uncertain and painful and becoming more so. Internal transportation was overcrowded, unhealthful and dirty. So was the air. Parking on the streets should have been prohibited, but there was no space elsewhere. These deficiencies were not in new and novel services but in old and established ones. Cities have long swept their streets, helped their people move around, educated them, kept order, and provided horse rails for equipages which sought to pause. That their residents should have a nontoxic supply of air suggests no revolutionary dalliance with socialism. The discussion of this public poverty competed, on the whole successfully, with the stories of everincreasing opulence in privately produced goods. The Gross National Product was rising. So were retail sales. So was personal income. Labor productivity had advanced. The automobiles that could not be parked were being produced at an expanded rate. The children, though without schools, subject in the playgrounds to the affectionate interest of adults with odd tastes, and disposed to increasingly imaginative forms of delinquency, were admirably equipped with television sets. We had difficulty finding storage space for the great surpluses of food despite a national disposition to obesity. Food was grown and packaged under private auspices. The care and refreshment of the mind, in contrast with the stomach, was principally in the public domain. Our colleges and universities were often severely overcrowded and underprovided, and the same was even more often true of mental hospitals.” Michael Harrington Describes the Other America (1962):