Hippie, occasionally spelled hippy, refers to a "nonpolitical subgroup" of the 1960s countercultural movement that began in the United States, becoming an established social group by 1965 before declining in numbers during the 1970s. Hippies, along with the New Left and the civil rights movement, are considered one of the three dissenting groups of the 1960s counterculture.
Timothy Miller describes the hippies as a new religious movement composed mostly of white teenagers and people in their early twenties. Miller argues that the hippies were part of a long tradition of cultural dissent inherited from the bohemians and the beatniks.
Hippies came to feel that a monolithic entity had emerged—composed of corporate industry, corporate media, the military and government—that exercised undue power over their lives. [citation needed] They often referred to this monolithic entity as "The Establishment," "Big Brother," or "The Man."
Hippie opposition to "The Establishment" quickly spread worldwide through a fusion of early rock and roll, folk music, the blues and psychedelic rock that eventually redefined rock music itself. The other creative arts, especially the dramatic arts and the visual arts, contributed to this worldwide impact.
Moving beyond unconventional attire, long hair for both genders, facial hair for men, and rebellion against long-established institutions, hippies sought to champion and implement change by opposing the Vietnam War, corporate influence, and consumerism; by criticising Western middle class values; by embracing aspects of non-Judeo-Christian religious cultures (including much Eastern philosophy); and by adopting nomadic lifestyles. They also embraced the civil rights movement, the expansion of free speech, sexual liberation, interracial dating, intentional community, free love, recreational drug use, simple living, holistic health, environmental consciousness, and alternative technology.
According to Time-Life, hippies were against "political and social orthodoxy", choosing a "gentle and nondoctrinaire" politics that favoured "peace, love, and personal freedom."
Hippie influence was felt worldwide, especially in Canada, Great Britain, Western Europe, Australia and New Zealand, and to a lesser extent in Eastern Europe, Mexico, Argentina, Brazil and Japan. The 21st century has brought with it a neo-hippie movement, with an ethos similar to that of the original hippies.