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The
slogan button
was first used in 1896 in the presidential campaign
between McKinley and Bryan, but became a means to make
political statements and sexual innuendoes in the sixties.
These decorative buttons made out of a piece of paper
with a printed message, celluloid, and a metal backing,
were covering hippies' backpacks and young students'
book bags everywhere.
Many buttons denounced the Vietnam
war: "Make Love, not War " and "Draft beer, not boys,"
while others simply promoted sex: "If it moves, fondle
it." "If it feels good, do it." As the fad continued
into the seventies the mottos became less political
and more meaningless for example: "Mary Poppins is a
junkie." In 1971, the Happy Face button took over the
market. Within six months, 20 million of these simple
yellow buttons were sold. The Happy Face represented
the Peace, Love, and Happiness the "flower children"
of the 70s craved.
Soon,
the fad was not limited to the hippie community. Many
conservatives wore their own versions, as well as school
teachers, businessmen, political candidates, etc. However,
by the mid-seventies, the fad began to die out altogether,
and before long people preferred displaying their pithy
remarks on t-shirts. |