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America 1950 vs. America 2020
Economic Collapse Blog ^ | 9/14/2020 | Michael Snyder

Posted on 09/15/2020 11:32:24 PM PDT by MacNaughton

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To: MacNaughton

The article is drivel that is meaningless

The rest of the world esd destroyed. Today we are dealing with a resurgent world that has transcended toe destruction


21 posted on 09/16/2020 5:08:37 AM PDT by bert ( (KE. NP. N.C. +12) Progressives are existential American enemies.....all of them)
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To: MacNaughton


22 posted on 09/16/2020 5:13:08 AM PDT by Bonemaker (invictus maneo)
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bump


23 posted on 09/16/2020 5:13:09 AM PDT by foreverfree
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To: bert
The rest of the world esd destroyed. Today we are dealing with a resurgent world that has transcended toe destruction

"Toe destruction"? By the grace of God I still have the full set of my toes. Hope you do, too, bert.

ff

24 posted on 09/16/2020 5:16:51 AM PDT by foreverfree
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To: MacNaughton

No thanks. There were plenty of things wrong in the 1950s and you can start with the treatment of blacks and women. What would be nice is the return of civics to our educational system.


25 posted on 09/16/2020 5:18:39 AM PDT by Renkluaf
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To: foreverfree

The rest of the world was destroyed. Today we are dealing with a resurgent world that has transcended the destruction


26 posted on 09/16/2020 5:21:58 AM PDT by bert ( (KE. NP. N.C. +12) Progressives are existential American enemies.....all of them)
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To: MacNaughton

It was awful back in the 1950s because there was still slavery back then. My history teacher told me that.


27 posted on 09/16/2020 5:25:34 AM PDT by 17th Miss Regt
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To: Secret Agent Man

“hatred of socialism and communism and other individual destroying isms”

Then there was Sen. Joe McCarthy, who did his best to alert the nation of the commie menace, but was destroyed by the commie loving democRATS and leftist media.


28 posted on 09/16/2020 5:27:46 AM PDT by kenmcg (tHE WHOLE)
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To: MacNaughton

My parents were kids in the 1950s. They often say the best years ever were the late ‘50s, early ‘60s. Aside from polio and air raid drills. When I shop with Mom and we hear an oldie, she’ll usually comment. 1960, good year, sorry you missed it.
I do know the music was wonderful, and the movies, and Broadway. The folks passed down what they could. But I understand the atmosphere, the outlook, must be lived and I only have a living sense of our current era. It’s often stifling, discouraging. People my age seem illiterate, intolerant, rude, slovenly, and there’s little warmth or fellowship. If it wasn’t that way in 1950, I’m sorry I missed it.


29 posted on 09/16/2020 5:29:37 AM PDT by Buttons12
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To: Renkluaf
No thanks. There were plenty of things wrong in the 1950s and you can start with the treatment of blacks and women. What would be nice is the return of civics to our educational system.

The life expectancy at birth in the USA in 1950 was 68 years; the life expectancy at birth in 2020 is 79 years. Eleven years is a lot of life to give up for nostalgia.

30 posted on 09/16/2020 5:48:18 AM PDT by Labyrinthos
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Comment #31 Removed by Moderator

To: MacNaughton

Well I wouldn’t want to be a US military soldier in Korea in the ‘50s...


32 posted on 09/16/2020 6:14:36 AM PDT by Wildbill22 ( They have us surrounded again, the poor bastards- Gen Creighton William Abrams)
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To: SaveFerris

After 1972 there were no great cars.


33 posted on 09/16/2020 6:14:50 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: MacNaughton

Like anything, it depends on where you were.

I grew up in the 1950s, in Southern California; we lived a mile from the beach. Back then there was still a lot of open space; bean fields, canyons, scrub brush, etc. We hunted jackrabbits, caught countless lizards in the fields, tadpoles and frogs too numerous to count; we played hide-and-go-seek, statue maker, capture the flag, and in the summer we were outside from dawn to dark. We’d chase after the Helms Bakery truck in hopes of getting a free donut, and we tried the same with the Good Humor truck for an ice cream, but without success (the old geezer who drove the truck would pop out a dime from the coin changer on his belt and hold it up to us, saying “One thin dime, one-tenth of a dollar, and it’s yours!”). We were Boomers, and there were kids EVERYWHERE!

I loved it.


34 posted on 09/16/2020 6:35:19 AM PDT by ought-six (Multiculturalism is national suicide, and political correctness is the cyanide capsule.)
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To: MacNaughton

Polio.

Korean War.

On the other hand, there was only one tranny in the whole world (Christine Jorgensen).


35 posted on 09/16/2020 8:04:39 AM PDT by Colinsky
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To: ought-six

We all tend to look back on the days of our youth with some nostalgia, but you are right. I grew up in Long Beach and it was paradise for a kid back then. Rode bikes everywhere, went trick or treating without adult supervision and it was safe.
There were poor neighborhoods but there weren’t dangerous neighborhoods.

I’m glad I got the gift of getting to experience it.


36 posted on 09/16/2020 8:34:22 AM PDT by hanamizu
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To: STUDABAKER
I grew up in the fiftys and we never even locked our doors.

Same here. Boomer kids everywhere in the neighborhood. We would play in front of our homes with other kids, until our moms called us back inside. No house key needed, no one locked the door during the day. We had a front door with plain window glass, so a lock would not really keep out a robber, but there weren't any incidents of robbery in the neighborhood that I knew of.

This was in the Mission District of San Francisco. Fast forward to the 1980s and owners put up metal security gates over entrances and street-level windows. Mexicans and other latinos had flooded in during the 1970s and ruined the quality of life for others. High-end art-deco theaters closed (5 favorites within a few blocks of each other), and were gutted into parking lots. Fancy stores and soda shops closed. Lots of vegetable stands replaced them. Lots of assaults, prostitution and car thefts. After having our cars stolen 5 times, and my mother getting assaulted and purse-snatched, the family moved away in the early 1970s. Now in the 21st century, white techies moved into the Mission District and gentrified it, and the latinos are complaining that the whites are "stealing" their "traditionally" latin neighborhood, never mind the latinos stole it 30 years earlier. Nothing stays the same forever.

37 posted on 09/16/2020 12:09:00 PM PDT by roadcat
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To: Wildbill22

My dad was a medic with an Army infantry company in Korea.

My father in law was with a Marine rifle company also in Korea.


38 posted on 09/16/2020 12:14:14 PM PDT by Texas resident (Remember in November)
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To: ought-six

My wife and I grew up in different small towns in the 60’s.

Both of our parents came from very small towns also and they grew up in the 40’s.

Very different world back then.


39 posted on 09/16/2020 12:17:35 PM PDT by Texas resident (Remember in November)
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To: central_va

One could argue after 1971, when compressions were lowered for 1972.

Still lots of beautiful cars - the engines could be powered-up. Plenty of 1960’s cars to be found, too.

Even the 1980’s had some good-looking cars, though by then Camaro and Firebird.

I’d happily take a new condition 1973 Mach 1 today though I’d prefer a 1971 Boss 351 in the same condition.

They are still out there, but expensive.


40 posted on 09/16/2020 1:15:38 PM PDT by SaveFerris (Luke 17:28 ... as it was in the days of Lot; they did eat, they drank, they bought, they sold ......)
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