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When Does It All Hit You?
By Ed Driscoll · November 8, 2004 01:51 AM
· Bobos In Paradise · Oh, That Liberal Media! · The Return of the Primitive
Long before Tom Wolfe started releasing big honking 700-page novels, he was the absolute master at the 3000 to 5000-word non-fiction magazine article. His potent writing style was perfectly suited to covering the wildness of the 1960s and 1970s, as a sedate post-World War II America started going crazy with hippies, protestors, dropouts, love-ins, bed-ins, be-ins, et al. His 1976 book, Mauve Gloves & Madmen, Clutter & Vine, collected several of them, including "The Intelligent Coed's Guide To America", an article based on a lecture at a Midwestern university where Wolfe was one several speakers who all flew-in via O'Hare airport. Also on the panel was a Paul Ehrlich-style "ecologist" who saw the world ending in the year 2000, because pollution would destroy a key ion element in the atmosphere, which would cause our bones to decay. (As today, there were so many eco-terror doom and gloom fantasies going around back then.) After mock-fearing that the women of Wolfe's Lexington Avenue would be walking around like deboned "denim and patent-leather blobs", Wolfe has a brilliant passage featuring a student attending the seminar asking a question of the ecologist: I was so dazed, I was no longer wondering what the assembled students thought of all this. But just at that moment one of them raised his hand. He was a tall boy with a lot of curly hair and a Fu Manchu mustache.That's what the past year has felt like, as the press went into maximum overdrive to convince the American public that the world was coming to an end, and the only solution was a lanky aging windsurfer from Massachusetts, who by the way, once served in Vietnam. The economy was described as being this close to collapsing, even though the Dow spent an uncertain election year right around 10,000; unemployment was rampant, even though it was at about the same low level it happily spent in 1996 when Bill Clinton was re-elected; Iraq was a quagmire, even though the average young man faced a greater odds of being knifed in a bad neighborhood in Chicago or killed in a traffic accident on I-237 than in combat, where casualties in Iraq have been remarkably lower than any major battle we've ever faught. I'd love for someone to ask one of the folks at the Times, or AP, or Reuters, or even Michael Moore...when did it hit you? What made you decide that the world was coming to end--and why was it all George Bush's fault?
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