https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beat_Generation


 Quote:
The Beat Generation was a literary movement started by a group of authors whose work explored and influenced American culture and politics in the post-war era. The bulk of their work was published and popularized throughout the 1950s. The central elements of Beat culture are the rejection of standard narrative values, making a spiritual quest, the exploration of American and Eastern religions, the rejection of economic materialism, explicit portrayals of the human condition, experimentation with psychedelic drugs, and sexual liberation and exploration.[1][2]

Allen Ginsberg's Howl (1956), William S. Burroughs' Naked Lunch (1959) and Jack Kerouac's On the Road (1957) are among the best known examples of Beat literature.[3] Both Howl and Naked Lunch were the focus of obscenity trials that ultimately helped to liberalize publishing in the United States.[4][5] The members of the Beat Generation developed a reputation as new bohemian hedonists, who celebrated non-conformity and spontaneous creativity.

The core group of Beat Generation authors — Herbert Huncke, Ginsberg, Burroughs, Lucien Carr, and Kerouac — met in 1944 in and around the Columbia University campus in New York City. Later, in the mid-1950s, the central figures, with the exception of Burroughs and Carr, ended up together in San Francisco, where they met and became friends of figures associated with the San Francisco Renaissance.

In the 1960s, elements of the expanding Beat movement were incorporated into the hippie and larger counterculture movements. Neal Cassady, as the driver for Ken Kesey's bus Further, was the primary bridge between these two generations. Ginsberg's work also became an integral element of early 1960s hippie culture.



In softer euphemistic language, neurotic weirdos indoctrinated in cultural marxism at the universities they attended, who expanded the movement.


 Quote:
ORIGIN OF NAME

Kerouac introduced the phrase "Beat Generation" in 1948 to characterize a perceived underground, anti-conformist youth movement in New York.[6] The name arose in a conversation with writer John Clellon Holmes. Kerouac allows that it was Huncke, a street hustler, who originally used the phrase "beat", in an earlier discussion with him. The adjective "beat" could colloquially mean "tired" or "beaten down" within the African-American community of the period and had developed out of the image "beat to his socks",[7][8][9] but Kerouac appropriated the image and altered the meaning to include the connotations "upbeat", "beatific", and the musical association of being "on the beat", and "the Beat to keep" from the Beat Generation poem.[10]



 Quote:
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY

The origins of the Beat Generation can be traced to Columbia University and the meeting of Kerouac, Ginsberg, Carr, Hal Chase and others. Kerouac attended Columbia on a football scholarship.[11] Though the beats are usually regarded as anti-academic,[12][13][14] many of their ideas were formed in response to professors like Lionel Trilling and Mark Van Doren. Classmates Carr and Ginsberg discussed the need for a "New Vision" (a term borrowed from W. B. Yeats), to counteract what they perceived as their teachers' conservative, formalistic literary ideals.


That gels well with the goals of cultural marxism:
To tear down the support pillars of Western democracy, to undermine the belief systems that resist and block marxist indoctrination, primarily undermining
1) patriotism/nationalism by creating a belief that the nation's political system is inherently unfair/racist/corrupt, paving the way for marxism as a more fair replacement system,
2) undermining Christianity similarly, to prevent it from being a widespread shared opposition belief-system to marxist indoctrination. Christianity's effectiveness seen in the 1980 fall of communism in Poland due to Catholicism, led by the Pope and Ronald Reagan.
3) undermining family values taught by parents and extended family, another way that traditional values are preserved, that resists state/socialist indoctrination.

Cultural Marxism teaches rejection of all these beliefs, to pave the way for abolishing Western Democracy, and replacing it with a new socialist order, over a period of 50 years or so.

In the age of Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders, it's clear that Cultural Marxism is on the threshold of becoming a majority and establishing a new socialist/marxist order. And emboldened by that, showing their hand, unable to resist showing their repellant true face.