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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 July 2009
The 1960s were one of those decades that occur two or three times a century and have a profound transformative effect on a society by compelling it to either reaffirm its values or reorient itself in a different direction. Our country has done both in response to the questions raised during those tumultuous years. Domestically, it has reaffirmed the basic value of equality, and given it a prominence it has not enjoyed in a century. In foreign policy a reorientation has occurred, and although we are not quite sure of what kind, America no longer glibly views itself as the annointed leader of the “free world” with the right—the duty—to spread the “American Way of Life.”
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