The Summer of Drugs

The Summer of Drugs
Forty years ago, dirty, stinky hippies converged on San Francisco to “turn on, tune in and drop out.”

BY TED NUGENT
Wednesday, July 4, 2007 12:01 a.m. EDT
This summer marks the 40th anniversary of the so-called Summer of Love. Honest and intelligent people will remember it for what it really was: the Summer of Drugs.

Forty years ago hordes of stoned, dirty, stinky hippies converged on San Francisco to “turn on, tune in, and drop out,” which was the calling card of LSD proponent Timothy Leary. Turned off by the work ethic and productive American Dream values of their parents, hippies instead opted for a cowardly, irresponsible lifestyle of random sex, life-destroying drugs and mostly soulless rock music that flourished in San Francisco.

The Summer of Drugs climaxed with the Monterey Pop Festival which included some truly virtuoso musical talents such as Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin, both of whom would be dead a couple of years later due to drug abuse. Other musical geniuses such as Jim Morrison and Mama Cass would also be dead due to drugs within a few short years. The bodies of chemical-infested, brain-dead liberal deniers continue to stack up like cordwood.

As a diehard musician, I terribly miss these very talented people who squandered God’s gifts in favor of poison and the joke of hipness. I often wonder what musical peaks they could have climbed had they not gagged to death on their own vomit. Their choice of dope over quality of life, musical talent and meaningful relationships with loved ones can only be categorized as despicably selfish.

I literally had to step over stoned, drooling fans, band mates, concert promoters and staff to pursue my musical American Dream throughout the 1960s and 1970s. I flushed more dope and cocaine down backstage toilets than I care to remember. In utter frustration I was even forced to punch my way through violent dopers on occasion. So much for peace and love. The DEA should make me an honorary officer.

I was forced to fire band members and business associates due to mindless, dangerous, illegal drug use. Clean and sober for 59 years, I am still rocking my brains out and approaching my 6,000th concert. Clean and sober is the real party.

Young people make mistakes. I’ve made my share, but none that involved placing my life or the lives of others at risk because of dope. I saw first-hand too many destroyed lives and wrecked families to ever want to drool and vomit on myself and call that a good time. I put my heart and soul into creating the best music I possibly could and I went hunting instead. My dream continues with ferocity, thank you.

The 1960s, a generation that wanted to hold hands, give peace a chance, smoke dope and change the world, changed it all right: for the worse. America is still suffering the horrible consequences of hippies who thought utopia could be found in joints and intentional disconnect.

A quick study of social statistics before and after the 1960s is quite telling. The rising rates of divorce, high school drop outs, drug use, abortion, sexual diseases and crime, not to mention the exponential expansion of government and taxes, is dramatic. The “if it feels good, do it” lifestyle born of the 1960s has proved to be destructive and deadly.

So now, 40 years later, there are actually people who want to celebrate the anniversary of the Summer of Drugs. Hippies are once again descending on ultra-liberal San Francisco–a city that once wanted to give shopping carts to the homeless–to celebrate and try to remember their dopey days of youth when so many of their musical heroes and friends long ago assumed room temperature by “partying” themselves to death. Nice.

While I salute and commend the political and cultural activism of the 1960s that fueled the civil rights movement, other than that, the decade is barren of any positive cultural or social impact. Honest people will remember 1967 for what is truly was.

There is a saying that if you can remember the 1960s, you were not there. I was there and remember the decade in vivid, ugly detail. I remember its toxic underbelly excess because I was caught in the vortex of the music revolution that was sweeping the country, and because my radar was fine-tuned thanks to a clean and sober lifestyle.

Death due to drugs and the social carnage heaped upon America by hippies is nothing to celebrate. That is a fool’s game, but it is quite apparent some burned-out hippies never learn.

Mr. Nugent is a rock star releasing his 35th album, “Love Grenade,” this summer.

Good read… even though I don’t think it really delves into the motivation of such a drastic turn of lifestyle these people took on fully( the pendulum always swings after severe oppression of creative thought… like in the well-oiled souless machine that was the 50’s), but I will agree that with the good, came the bad… as it does with everything. You take the good with the bad.

Ted Nugent=tool.

so, does this mean I have an excuse this summer???

OOOOWWwwweeee!!! yeah!

I’ll definitly admit that he has a point. I’ve seen lots of people that overdue it at shows and festivals, and it kind of scares me a little. I’ve met people that almost lack a personality due to how much shit they put into their body. I’m all for experimention and having a little fun, but there are some people that take it the extreme and its a little disgusting. It’s a siren of temptation, because its fun, but in excess it almost takes away your soul. Ok maybe that is a little too dramatic of a statement, but just take a look around you.

Sure there were excessive behaviors in the 60’s, but there was also the excessive behavior in the Regan 80’s and there sure as hell excessive abuse of power with the Bush administration.

“America is still suffering the horrible consequences of hippies who thought utopia could be found in joints and intentional disconnect.” And we’re not suffering consequences from Bush??? Please…

Anyway, the funniest part of the article is “I put my heart and soul into creating the best music I possibly could and I went hunting instead.” Wang Dang Sweet Poon Tang and Cat Scratch Fever is the best he could come up with??? Shit, I’d put his “Love Grenade” album up against my Coventry CD’s anyday, and Phish would still win…

I like Ted and most of what he says DOES make sense. Of course, he leaves out that his personal addiction was women. If he was dying of AIDS right now, then perhaps he couldn’t be saying the same thing. But, maybe, he was careful with his women, like many musicians should be CAREFUL with their drug use. He’s mostly pissed with the folks who let drugs take over and kill them. There’s plenty of folks who can do them reasonably and still live normal live. Whatever…

“Honest and intelligent people will remember it for what it really was…”

Wouldn’t you folks like it if phish was still on tour? If Jerry was still alive? And they should be!

^but they wouldn’t be as good and we probably would have never heard of them.

i’m not a fan of going overboard on drugs but that’s the truth i think.

I dont condone excessive behavior.

But this guys a Conservative Prick.

What about the Senseless War that was going on Back then?

What about a Corrupt President that made George Dubya look like Mother Teresa?

What about a Draft that was forcing young kids to be dropped in the middle of a jungle to fight in a Civil war we had no business being a part of? Oh yeah and guess what the government was peddling to any soldier that was in need of a “morale Booster”?

What about Teds own excessive behavior in the form of scamming any fourteen year old girl that got caught in his radar? The fucken guy was notorious for that!

Ted nugent, what an Ass-Hat!

Go play the same tired Rock block riffs with your bullshit VH1 reality band Ted!

I fucking hate the Nuge.

I don’t understand. What is the tl and dr for above?

Ted Nugent = my hero

too long.
didn’t read.
a

I need to become more well versed in my internet lingo.

Thanks!

LOL I didn’t read the whole thing either

just got a general gist

hahahahahaha

^