[3] One of the most influential icons in the counterculture movement which formed in the late 1960s out of opposition to the Vietnam War's escalation, Leary gained influence among much of the youth by advocating the use of LSD as a way of mind expansion and the revelation of personal truth.
The president of the United States, whom many Americans and the rest of the world thought was a crazed, psychotic danger, for him to be calling me that, […] that’s my Nobel Prize, that’s my bumper sticker, that’s my trophy on the wall.
[11] In their book Question Authority to Think for Yourself, psychologists Beverly Potter and Mark Estren alleged that the practice of Leary's philosophy enhances a person's self-interest and greatly weakens the ability to cooperate with others.
Authority formally resides "in the people", but the power of initiation is in fact held by small circles of men.
[12] Mills noted earlier that "It is in this mixed case – as in the intermediate reality of the American today – that manipulation is a prime way of exercising power.