13 of the Stupidest Things the Hippies Ever Attempted
Peace, love and banana peels?
Published 7 months ago in Funny
Though they may have been generally right about the Vietnam War, music, and then-President Richard Nixon, the hippies got really weird with it during their heyday. Between enjoying festivals and calling for world peace, a handful of young people decided to throw logic to the wind, denouncing the laws of gravity, nominating a pig for president and even attempting to telepathically levitate the Pentagon.
From joining cults to trying — and failing — to get high on banana peels, here are the 13 stupidest hippie ideas ever.
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“TIL of the Brotherhood of Eternal Love, a church composed of LSD users that was active in 60's and 70's California. The Brotherhood distributed mass-produced LSD in an effort to lower the drug's price. They also smuggled Afghan hashish (one method was stashing the drugs in hollowed-out surfboards).”4
After roughly 100,000 young people flocked to the Haight-Ashbury district in San Francisco and other Northern California locales, leading to overcrowding and other issues, like homelessness and an increase in crime, several hippies hosted a mock funeral on October 6, 1967, urging young people to stay at home. “We wanted to signal that this was the end of it, to stay where you are, bring the revolution to where you live and don't come here because it's over and done with,” organizer Mary Kasper said of the event.5
While hippies got it on more than the average American, per the Washington Post, free love was largely a myth. “We had parties where people would smoke too much or drink too much and sleep with their friends, but there were emotional repercussions the next day,” recalled Micah Lee, author of “Hippies: A Guide to an American Subculture.” “Free love is like a free lunch — there’s no such thing. . . . Even n—ituy was rare.”6
In March 1967, underground tabloid Berkeley Barb published a satirical article alleging that people can get high off of banana peels thanks to a fictitious psychoactive substance known as "bananadine.” Several hippies fell for the story, leading many to try smoking bananas for themselves. This fiasco dubbed “the Great Banana Hoax of 1967” by historian John McMillan, was so widespread that it is said to have inspired the song “Mellow Yellow” by Donovan.8
In 1970, Youth International Party leader Abbie Hoffman decided to take breaking rules to the next level, telling students at the University of Maryland that gravity was just a formality. “We defy every law in the world, including the law of gravity,” he said. “What goes up doesn’t necessarily have to come down.”11
In 1968, the Youth International Party nominated a pig named Pigasus the Immortal for President before the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. Despite their slogan of "if we can't have him in the White House, we can have him for breakfast,” their plan backfired after Pigasus was confiscated by police and several Yippies were arrested for disorderly conduct.12
“TIL about Louis Abolafia, man who ran against Richard Nixon in 1968 elections as the naked hippie ‘love candidate’ under the Cosmic Love party with the slogan ‘What have I got to hide?’ for his performance art. He also was president candidate under the Nudist Party, and was friends with Bob Dylan.”13
“[Jeremy Spencer,] one of the original members of Fleetwood Mac went out to the store while on tour in California in 1971. He never returned and, after the band, record producers, and the police searched for him for several days, it was discovered that he had joined a cult called The Children of God.”