All of the following were critics of and lamented the implications of this new consumerist and technological lifestyle of the 1950s except
A) traditionalists who felt as if it was degrading to the public's aesthetic, moral, political, and educational standards.
B) Harvard economist John Kenneth Galbraith, who highlighted the troublesome connection between private opulence and public squalor in a series of books, beginning with The Affluent Society.
C) William H. Whyte, Jr., editor of Fortune magazine, in his bestselling book The Organization Man.
D) televangelists like Billy Graham and Oral Roberts, who refused to take part.
E) Harvard sociologist David Riesman, who criticized the postwar generation as a pack of conformists in his book The Lonely Crowd.
Correct Answer:
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