By the middle of the XXth
Century, following World War II, the United States was a world power. While
from across the seas it might have appeared as a gigantic monolith of commerce
and culture, within the United States proper the nation was still a collection
of distinct sections. There was great variance within the social orders of
these various sections: New England, The Midwest, The Old South, The Great
Southwest, The Plains, The Pacific Northwest and California. Within these major
divisions, there were major subdivisions as well. Social structures varied
significantly within each, largely driven by distinct racial groupings of
immigrant populations. The earliest colonists from England, Ireland and Europe
predominated in New England. The descendants of the slave population were a
major influence in The Old South. Hispanics and Native Americans formed much of
the social landscape in The Great Southwest while large immigrant populations
from the Scandinavian countries and those of Northern and Eastern Europe
influenced The Plains and The Midwest. Hispanic populations were plentiful in California
along with an influx of Asian laborers into both California
and The Pacific Northwest. Each section encompassed its own set of tensions
wrought by the intermingling of social orders. Recalling the protocol stacks
through which we have examined interactions in general, the situation following
World War II was one in which the high level stimuli were emerging, lacking
only the low order protocol layers of the stack to instigate mutational
interactions of the prevailing social orders. At this point, enter the
Interstate Highway System.
A widely recounted but ill-referenced
homily related to warfare suggests that “Amateurs study tactics, armchair
generals study strategy, true military leaders study logistics and those that
win wars study intelligence.” As with most such sayings, there is a bit of
truth and a bit of wishful thinking to be found therein. World War II did,
however, illustrate the importance of logistics in the conduct of warfare on a
global scale. A similar homily suggests that “Armies are trained to fight the
last war.” The aftermath of World War II lends some credence to this
observation as well. Keying on the effectiveness of the great autobahn roadway
system in Germany that allowed rapid movement of military forces and materiel
between the two fronts on which Germany fought the war, in 1956 under the
leadership of President Dwight Eisenhower who led the Allied Armies in Europe
in World War II, the United States undertook the construction of the Interstate
Highway System. The underlying benefit of this gigantic effort was to ensure
the rapid movement of goods and services throughout the country. While
ostensibly aimed at improving commerce, it had a significant contributory
effect in transforming the distinct sections of United States’ social structure
into a relatively homogenous blend. As we noted in the case of Martin Luther’s
instigation of what became the Protestant Reformation, with the correct
superposition of stimulus and environment an anecdotal trial balloon can become
a societal mutation of the first order. In this case, the seeds of social
change unleashed by the United States Supreme Court ruling in the case of Brown
versus Board of Education fell into the fertile ground offered by seamless
transport connectivity among all parts of the United States. The result is a
continuing extension of the federal policy infrastructure into all subordinate
social orders.
Brown versus Board of Education was a
landmark ruling of the Supreme Court issued on May 17, 1954.
The ruling overturned the doctrine of “separate but equal” facilities that was
used as the rationale for segregation along racial lines in the provision of
public education. The ruling required enforcement from the federal government,
in some cases involving military troops, to dismantle segregated school systems
around the country. The underpinnings in law on which this ruling was based
were subsequently used to dismantle both de
jure segregated facilities in areas of social discourse beyond public
education as well as practices that led to de
facto segregation. The social aspect of the ruling provided legal mobility
for individuals of all races to seek equality of treatment throughout the United
States. The parallel development of the Interstate Highway System provided
physical mobility for those aspiring to such equality. The confluence of social
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