Counterculture in the 1960'sMain MenuCounterculture in the 1960'sZaccaria FaridCounterculture Movements during the 1960'sIntroductionThe Beat GenerationCountercultural Community also know as Hippies"Night Raiders" - Political StickersGraphic Protest Towards Imperialism, War, and EqualityPsychedelic Art EmergingNew Art Forms and Techniques Developed Through the Use of LSDThe Acid TestsKen Kesey and the Merry Pranksters with the Grateful DeadThe Summer of Love 1967Crucial Moment in the Counterculture Hippie MovementBibliography and Works CitedZaccaria Farid4f659fe3667e9237c5cab359f6e5d5fd98928fc7
12017-12-05T10:47:12-08:00"Night Raiders" - Political Stickers2Graphic Protest Towards Imperialism, War, and Equalitygallery2017-12-05T10:48:31-08:00“Night Raiders” were a series of mass produced stickers with slogans printed on them in protest of the Vietnam war, civil rights, and various other problems the counterculture society felt needed to be addressed. These stickers were often blunt, straight to the point, and sometimes vulgar to further exemplify their views. An example would be “Children are not for burning” which was in response to the bombings and mass killings of innocent village people living Vietnam pursued by U.S. military during the war. These stickers were often put up in various places at night by groups of counterculturists who stood against U.S imperialism and its conformist values. Another phrase that was originally printed on a Night Raider was “Make Love, Not War, [which] symbolized the conflation of hippies and political radicals,” which is now a worldwide known phrase describing the want of peace between nations. (Addis, “On Fire: 1960s”)