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40 Years After Woodstock

By Bea McManis

Forty years after the Woodstock music festival glorified and exacerbated the generational fractures in American life, the public today says there are big differences between younger and older adults in their values, use of technology, work ethic, and respect and tolerance for others.Some key findings from the survey:

■Only about a quarter of the public (26%) says there are strong conflicts these days between young people and older people. By contrast, much higher shares of the public see strong conflicts today between immigrants and the native born (55%); between rich and poor (47%); and between blacks and whites (39%).
■Despite this spirit of generational rapprochement, overwhelming shares of the public say the young and old are different in many aspects of their lives, including in the way they use new technology (87% say very or somewhat different); their taste in music (86%); their work ethic (80%); their moral values (80%); the respect they show others (78%); their political views (74%); their attitudes toward different races and groups (70%); and their religious beliefs (68%).
■By lopsided margins, the public says that older adults are superior to younger adults when it comes to their moral values, work ethic and respect for others. Even younger adults share in these assessments. The only exception to this pattern has to do with attitudes toward people of difference races. Here, a plurality of the public says that younger adults have the upper hand.
■Just as people don't see much generational conflict today in society at large, they don't see much generational conflict in their own families -- at least not as much as there had been a generation ago. Only 10% of parents of older children say they often have major disagreements with a teenage or young adult child. By contrast, nearly twice as many adult respondents (19%) say that when they themselves were in their late teens and early 20s, they often had major disagreements with their parents.
■Seven-in-ten respondents in our survey were able to correctly identify what Woodstock was, but among respondents ages 16 to 24, only about half could.
■Descriptions of Woodstock offered by survey respondents serve as a reminder of the passions and polarization of the times. For some, it was "a hippie drug-fest"; "a total moral mess"; "wild kids having sex." For others, it was "a love-in"; "a celebration of freedom and new ideas"; "a peace festival that was supposed to bring unity and togetherness.

" http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1309/gentler-generation-gap-music-tastes?src=prc-latest&proj=peoplepress

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