“Roadside Americans” by Jack Reid

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  • Prosperity eroded trust in our neighbors (because we needed them less)
  • Hitchhiking is a paradox to The Protestant Work Ethic: Youth feel entitled to a ride but need the charity of the driver to accomplish their work
  • Cars used to be concentrated among farmers
  • Hitchhiking becomes more acceptable with economic downturns
  • Hitchhikers put effort into distinguishing themselves from vagrants
  • Hippies embraced hitchhiking as a physical version of mind-altering drugs… Letting go and, literally, losing control
  • Adjusting hitchhiking enforcement was a way to throttle the flow of hippies and liberal youth movements
  • Reagan era politics shifted us from communal to personal
  • As youth matured and gained wealth, they started to shun hitchhiking as a “poor person” thing

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