Feb. 1, 2009

30 Years of Tragedies and Triumphs

Rita Braver Looks Back at the Past 30 Years, and Into the Future

  • Play CBS Video Video 30 Years of Change

    The last three decades of world history have been marked by the speed of change. As Rita Braver reports, there have been other revolutionary periods, but none on such a global scale and at such lightning speed.

  • Thirty years ago, the Cold War threats of the Soviet Union were about to pass from the world stage, replaced by a new threat: the Islamist revolution in Iran led by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

    Thirty years ago, the Cold War threats of the Soviet Union were about to pass from the world stage, replaced by a new threat: the Islamist revolution in Iran led by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.  (AP Photo)

(CBS)  It has been 30 years of transformation, of good times and troubled times. From the movie magic of "E.T." dazzling audiences worldwide to Three Mile Island, to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

Three decades of change in our culture, our communications and our politics, from Jimmy Carter to Barack Obama.

Our enemies have changed too. In 1979, the Cold War was still in full spate, and yet, ten years later, the Soviet empire began to fall a part, beginning with the collapse of the Berlin Wall; just two years after that, the Soviet Union didn't exist.

Correspondent Rita Braver spoke with Niall Ferguson, a Scotsman by birth who teaches history and economics at Harvard University.

"Now I think for most Americans, the great threat is Islamic terrorism," Braver remarked.

"And it's worth remembering the extent to which 1979 was the year that that properly began to be a threat to the United States, with the Iranian revolution," Ferguson pointed out.

It was a time when the whole world seemed to be shifting. China became an economic power, while South Africa ended apartheid.

And the social order changed in this country, too. For example, Sandra Day O'Connor became the first woman ever to sit on the U.S. Supreme Court.

"It does seem that over the last 30 years we've gotten to a period where white men are no longer calling all the shots," Braver remarked.

"If there's one thing that has changed since 1979, is that women have significantly increased their influence in almost all walks of society, and the status of African-Americans and other racial ethnic minorities has greatly improved," Ferguson said. "I think most people in 1979, if you’d polled them, 'Will there ever be an African-American president,' would have said 'inconceivable.'"

"Is this a 30-year period in which there have been more changes than in other 30-year periods, or is it about the same?" Braver asked.

"I don't think so," Ferguson replied. "But there's been much more rapid adoption of change. I mean, what's interesting is the speed with which a new technology gets adopted now."

"Thirty years ago I was probably sitting in a dorm room, trying to figure out how to make my IBM Selectric correct the paper I was typing," said Marian Salzman, the chief trendspotter for the Porter Novelli Public Relations Agency. "And today, I'm figuring out how to Twitter off my BlackBerry while I'm using my second BlackBerry to place a conference call."

Salzman says the past 30 years have not only brought us advances in phones, computers and other technology, but also in science: the Hubble space telescope, awareness of global warming, cloning (remember Dolly the sheep?), decoding of the human genome, and many medical breakthroughs.

Talking about Viagra, Salzman says it was the "great liberator."

"This blue pill came along and suddenly men could be boys or they could be studs. Or they could be whatever they wanted to be right up until their cardiologist told them absolutely not," she said.

Like any era, this one had its crazes, like parents fighting over Cabbage Patch Kids in toy stores. It was the dawn of reality TV, of 24-hour cable news, of celebrity culture.

We invented new words and phrases for things we started to be, have and do: multitasking, 24/7, googling, texting, ringtones, drama queens, metrosexuals, big box, bling. In fact, it’s been an era of "ginormous" dreams.

"Marketers realized that the big profit was in constantly trading up," Salzman explained. "The first car you bought was about getting the next car. The first credit card you got was about trading up to the next level of credit card membership. The first house you bought was never gonna be the house you were gonna stay in."

We also super-sized our portions - and ourselves. In the late '70s, 15 percent of us were obese; now it's 35 percent. We grew taller, too - women now average 5'4", men 5'9.5".

Our families changed, too. We have children later and there are more single moms. Our lives our busier, but there seems to be kind of a trend that there's more communication, but it's less meaningful.

"We do have a lot more contacts today, a lot more people that we're loosely in communication with. I don't think the extended family has that same reach when you’re connecting with someone via gmail as maybe they did when you were connected with them every Sunday at your grandmother's house over a big kettle of soup," Salzman said.

But before you get too nostalgic, remember this: When Sunday Morning went on the air in 1979, we were in the middle of an economic nightmare - inflation above ten percent, mortgage rates almost 12 percent, and lines at gas stations.

"You had not just recession, you had stagflation, double-digit inflation, high unemployment and there was a sense at the time of profound national malaise. That was the term Jimmy Carter used in the late 1970s which was in many ways, the worst decade of the American century," says Niall Ferguson.

We came out of it and into years of relative prosperity. But there's no doubt that in the last third of this 30-year period America has faced increasing challenges: the Sept 11th attacks, wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the collapse of the housing and financial markets, the big three automakers in crisis, and a jump in unemployment.

Marian Salzman says Americans of today will have to get used to a new way of living. "Some comforts, but they’re not gonna be material comforts, they're going to be comforts of the soul. People looking to find satisfactions they can get from quality relationships and accomplishing things."

And Niall Ferguson reminds us that some important things have not changed: American optimism and creativity. "And my bet is that even in the midst of this financial crisis, Americans will invent extraordinary new companies with extraordinary new technologies that will transform the world over the next 30 years."

Tragedies and triumphs, behind us, and to come.

© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by metaeconman September 7, 2009 12:51 AM EDT
Great segments today, but oh so disappointing, such a missed opportunity! We had everyone's attention, looking back 30-years, looking forward 30-years; pointing to the Sun as the center of it all, as a powerful nuclear fusion reactor producing our energy; and pointing to the central role of the Sun in the cultures and religions of many people in our past. The opportunity was on the table to integrate, put this all together into the powerful message that in next 30-years we need to once again put the Sun at the center of our attention, and move back in synch with that Sun! We need to power our business and industry, our economies and communities on the renewable energy produced by the Sun, as represented in photovoltaics, biofuels, hydropower (yes, the Sun powers the climatic system, giving the annual flow of power), solar hydrogen, etc. The future... 30-years from now, has to run on that annual, renewable flow of the Sun's energy: If we do not make the transition, little of what was projected will be possible...
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by jxart September 6, 2009 10:46 AM EDT
Congratulations for 30 year birthday! Here are my top 3 favorite TV programs: CBS Sunday Morning, CBS 60 Minutes, PBS Evening News. I and my family have been enjoyed the program so much. When main stream media biased towards more 'Popular' direction, CBS Sunday Morning Program still keeps its high quality of culture contents. I would like to thank all of you for making such a high quality program for 30 years, and more to come.
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by litdst September 6, 2009 10:34 AM EDT
Happy Anniversary to everyone that has put on this most wonderful program. For the last 30 years I have watched this show. As a 20 yr old, I was taken with the fast pace of subjects. In my 30s I loved the travel. In my 40s I loved the art, and now in my 50s I love it all. As I have literally grown up with every interview,each moment taken to update us tenderly and every place that you have left us each Sunday Morning. I have been touched to tears with some of the interviews, and even a few have prompted brunch debates. The creators of this show were thoughtful and had a true vision. Sunday morning would not be the same without you, so to Charles and his poems and piano, Thank you. To the balance of the men and women who work so hard on this program, Thank you! God Bless you all and keep you on the air for another 30 years!!
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by clayholt1 September 6, 2009 10:28 AM EDT
How could you do a report on tragic songs about Sunday without mentioning "Sunday Bloody Sunday" by the great Irish band U2?

There are 2 Bloody Sundays in Irish history. The first was in 1920 when British troops fired into the crowd at a football match in Dublin in retaliation for the killing of British undercover agents. The second was on January 30, 1972, when British paratroopers killed 13 Irish citizens at a civil rights protest in Derry, Northern Ireland. The song is more about the second Bloody Sunday. (thanks, Céire - Dublin, Ireland)
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by kerriglover September 6, 2009 9:53 AM EDT
Congratulations to everyone in front of and behind the cameras on your 30th anniversary! Sunday Morning has been one of the highlights of my week for the last 30 years. You never fail to put together the most thoughtful, interesting news program of the week - I love everything about it. Your reporters are at the top of their game. Everyone you have doing commentary brings an informed, unique perspective. Your reporting on the arts and music is among the best. And I particularly look forward to the nature segments at the end of the show...they provide better perspective than anything the most eloquent journalist could say. You do extraordinary work, folks -- thank you!
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by barbaram99 February 1, 2009 10:40 PM EST
I am 54. Things have changed.
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by tjgholar February 1, 2009 1:28 PM EST
I just wanted to say that CBS Sunday Morning is one of my favorite things about Sunday. And I was born in 1979 and will be turning 30 soon. Thank you for this story. It makes me feel a little better about turning 30 after seeing all the history that was made during my lifetime.
Reply to this comment
by tjgholar February 1, 2009 1:28 PM EST
I just wanted to say that CBS Sunday Morning is one of my favorite things about Sunday. And I was born in 1979 and will be turning 30 soon. Thank you for this story. It makes me feel a little better about turning 30 after seeing all the history that was made during my lifetime.
Reply to this comment
by tjgholar February 1, 2009 1:22 PM EST
I just wanted to say that CBS Sunday Morning is one of my favorite things about Sunday. And I was born in 1979 and will be turning 30 soon. Thank you for this story. It makes me feel a little better about turning 30 after seeing all the history that was made during my lifetime.
Reply to this comment
by tjgholar February 1, 2009 1:21 PM EST
I just wanted to say that CBS Sunday Morning is one of my favorite things about Sunday. And I was born in 1979 and will be turning 30 soon. Thank you for this story. It makes me feel a little better about turning 30 after seeing all the history that was made during my lifetime.
Reply to this comment
by tjgholar February 1, 2009 1:17 PM EST
I just wanted to say that CBS Sunday Morning is one of my favorite things about Sunday. And I was born in 1979 and will be turning 30 soon. Thank you for this story. It makes me feel a little better about turning 30 after seeing all the history that was made during my lifetime.
Reply to this comment
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