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America 1956 vs. America 2016
Director Blue ^ | April 6, 2016 | Michael Snyder

Posted on 04/06/2016 9:00:44 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

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To: Olog-hai

You actually think the Interstate Highway program was a bad investment ? Hooooboy


61 posted on 04/07/2016 2:07:03 AM PDT by bigdaddy45
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

My parents bought their house for 8500.00 in 1956

two bedrooms in the attic
two bedrooms upstairs, full laundry room upstairs, nursery and bathroom
full kitchen, dining room, living room, pocket doors between the front door and living room!, bedroom downstairs
we never locked the front door
we had eggs, milk and bread delivered to the house, the delivery men walked right in the back door and put them in the refrigerator
we had one phone, and one tv set
we played outside all day, even in the rain
we sat on the front porch and watched thunderstorms, I love them!

I think that house is now worth half a million dollars

Yes, life was better in the 50’s and 60’s


62 posted on 04/07/2016 2:34:41 AM PDT by siamesecats (God closes one door, and opens another, to protect us.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

In 1956, we still had Democrat instituted Jim Crow laws; that, at least, has changed for the better, thanks to Republicans.


63 posted on 04/07/2016 4:05:47 AM PDT by sima_yi ( Reporting live from the far North)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

In 1951, the difference in unemployment between white teens and black teens was 1%. That is, there was no difference.

By 1975 it was 37%.


64 posted on 04/07/2016 4:45:24 AM PDT by LS ("Castles Made of Sand, Fall in the Sea . . . Eventually" (Hendrix))
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Hi Vet. I received the following email yesterday along the same vein. BTW, thanks for all your great posts.

I know some of you will not understand this message,but I bet you know someone who might. I came across this phrase yesterday. 'FENDER SKIRTS'

A term I haven't heard in a long time, and thinking about'fender skirts' started me thinking about other words that quietly disappear from our language with hardly a notice like 'curb feelers'

And 'steering knobs.' (AKA) 'suicide knob,' 'neckers knobs.'

Since I'd been thinking of cars, my mind naturally went that direction first. Any kids will probably have to find some older person over 50 to explain some of these terms to you. Remember 'Continental kits?'

They were rear bumper extenders and spare tire covers that were supposed to make any car as cool as a Lincoln Continental.

When did we quit calling them 'emergency brakes? At some point 'parking brake' became the proper term. But I miss the hint of drama that went with 'emergency brake.'

I'm sad, too, that almost all the old folks are gone who would call the accelerator the 'foot feed.' Many today do not even know what a clutch is or that the dimmer switch used to be on the floor. For that matter, the starter was down there too.

Didn't you ever wait at the street for your daddy to come home, so you could ride the 'running board' up to the house?

Here's a phrase I heard all the time in my youth but never anymore - 'store-bought.' Of course, just about everything is store-bought these days. But once it was bragging material to have a store-bought dress or a store-bought bag of candy.

'Coast to coast' is a phrase that once held all sorts of excitement and now means almost nothing. Now we take the term 'worldwide' for granted. This floors me.

On a smaller scale, 'wall-to-wall' was once a magical term in our homes. In the '50s, everyone covered his or her hardwood floors with, wow, wall-to-wall carpeting! Today, everyone replaces their wall-to-wall carpeting with hardwood floors. Go figure.

When was the last time you heard the quaint phrase 'in a family way?' It's hard to imagine that the word 'pregnant' was once considered a little too graphic,a little too clinical for use in polite company, so we had all that talk about stork visits and 'being in a family way' or simply 'expecting.'

Apparently 'brassiere' is a word no longer in usage. I said it the other day and my daughter cracked up. I guess it's just 'bra' now.

'Unmentionables' probably wouldn't be understood at all. I always loved going to the 'picture show,' but I considered 'movie' an affectation.

Most of these words go back to the '50s, but here's a pure '60s word I came across the other day 'rat fink.' Ooh, what a nasty put-down!

Here's a word I miss - 'percolator.' That was just a fun word to say. And what was it replaced with 'Coffee maker.' How dull... Mr. Coffee, I blame you for this.

I miss those made-up marketing words that were meant to sound so modern and now sound so retro. Words like 'Dyna Flow' and 'Electrolux' and 'Frigidaire'. Introducing the 1963 Admiral TV, now with 'Spectra Vision!'

Food for thought. Was there a telethon that wiped out lumbago? Nobody complains of that anymore. Maybe that's what Castor oil cured, because I never hear mothers threatening kids with Castor Oil anymore.

Some words aren't gone, but are definitely on the endangered list. The one that grieves me most is 'supper.' Now everybody says 'dinner.' Save a great word. Invite someone to supper. Discuss fender skirts.

65 posted on 04/07/2016 5:40:40 AM PDT by norwaypinesavage (The Stone Age did not end because we ran out of stones)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

We stopped being great in 1973 when our Supreme Court decided that it was ok to kill a baby and since then thousands are killed every day like some sort of mass Roman spectacle.


66 posted on 04/07/2016 5:57:42 AM PDT by TomasUSMC (FIGHT LIKE WW2, WIN LIKE WW2. FIGHT LIKE NAM, FINISH LIKE NAM.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

https://youtu.be/MMmljYkdr-w

In 1956 we had Elvis, 2016 the biggest “star” is Kanye West, any questions?


67 posted on 04/07/2016 6:05:55 AM PDT by word_warrior_bob (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vs6qZd_xP1w)
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To: bigdaddy45

Since it was the executive branch who did it, it was not an investment but a power grab. And the highway trust fund is an insolvent Ponzi scheme just like SS and Medicare; has been for decades. No, what I’m saying is that the private sector could have done it instead, not that it shouldn’t have been built.


68 posted on 04/07/2016 6:13:35 AM PDT by Olog-hai
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To: Pelham

The pay was tiny by today’s standards but I was in high school in the 1950’s and it was my ticket to what I thought was financial independence. Ice cream cones at Dairy Queen were $.05 and you could buy a Ship ‘n Shore 100 percent cotton shirt for $3.99. We used to ride the street car in town and used either red or green plastic tokens - believe they called them mills but it was too long ago to remember. No credit cards, counter checks at all the stores and people used layaway and paid $1.00 or so a week until their items were paid for. Life was good.


69 posted on 04/07/2016 6:34:44 AM PDT by Grams A (The Sun will rise in the East in the morning and God is still on his throne.)
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To: equaviator

I do believe that the good Lord above agrees with you.


70 posted on 04/07/2016 7:31:26 AM PDT by Slyfox (Donald Trump's First Principle is the Art of the Deal)
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To: alexander_busek

“And how long would an average worker have had to work in order to save that much money?”

LOL with principal and interest, usually thirty years. :-P


71 posted on 04/07/2016 7:45:45 AM PDT by rhoda_penmark
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To: alexander_busek

They had this weird thing called home mortgages even back then


72 posted on 04/07/2016 8:01:36 AM PDT by wardaddy (is Cruz last name a coincidence or a blessing or is he the anti Christ?)
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To: Olog-hai

Then why didn’t they? I’ve never read of private companies chomping at the bit to build interstates in the 50’s. And you’d enjoy paying a toll every time you got on one?


73 posted on 04/07/2016 8:02:15 AM PDT by bigdaddy45
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To: Olog-hai
And what with Eisenhower inspired by the Reichsautobahn, perhaps he forgot that those roads made things easier for the Allies to get to Berlin? Strategically problematic to introduce the same vulnerability to the home front.

We are protected on two sides by oceans. No foreign power is ever going to come to our shores and invade us from there (exploiting our highway system).

(Please: No cheap jokes about the invasion already taking place along the Mexican border!)

Regards,

74 posted on 04/07/2016 8:05:23 AM PDT by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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To: bigdaddy45

Of course you won’t hear about it. Certainly enough private contractors were “chomping at the bit” to take the people’s tax money to build the system, which suppressed any initiative, never mind suppressed any questions about constitutionality.

I’d be fine paying tolls if it meant not having to pay Uncle Sam any gas tax. At least I would not be wondering what they did with that money, since it all goes into the general fund and gets “transferred on paper” to the so-called “dedicated fund” (per the FHWA themselves).


75 posted on 04/07/2016 8:08:35 AM PDT by Olog-hai
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To: alexander_busek

Those jokes write themselves; one of the biggest was Kerry declaring the Monroe Doctrine “over”, remember. Kerry’s inviting them in.


76 posted on 04/07/2016 8:09:45 AM PDT by Olog-hai
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

“In 2016, our parks and our playgrounds are virtually empty and we have the highest childhood obesity rate on the entire planet.”

Virtually empty except for men wanting free, guaranteed, anonymous sex with other men in the middle of the night.

The obesity thing is almost a guarantee against some sort of armed rebellion. Has there ever been a revolution in the history of the world where the poorest people were also the fattest?

FReegards


77 posted on 04/07/2016 8:10:51 AM PDT by Ransomed
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To: bigdaddy45

PS. What I described with respect to private contractors building interstate highways was one of the biggest instances of “crony capitalism”.


78 posted on 04/07/2016 8:12:31 AM PDT by Olog-hai
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I am a child of the 50s and 60s. Many, many things were much better than today. I’ll add to the list:

How was it that we had good schools, roads, fire departments, police, water, and even great libraries on 2 to 3% sales tax? We can’t do crap on four times as much now. Mind you that is four times as much in real inflation adjusted dollar terms.

Bicycle and walk to school

We were of modest means and we could AFFORD to take the dog to the vet.

Life was quiet and we didn’t miss much at all

Property tax assessment changes came once in a blue moon instead of once a year.

There were less people but we were almost ALL just AMERICANS not this polyglot mess we have now.

If you asked someone to do work at your house you could be pretty much assured they spoke ENGLISH.

We did not live in constant concern or fear of not knowing what law we had broken. The things you should not do were just common sense.

An upscale house was over 2000 square feet and modest houses were 1500 square feet or more. We did fine with a family of four or five. When we moved up to 1800 square feet we thought we had moved into a mansion that today would hardly merit a first glance let alone a second one.

And on and on.

I have no doubt at all that times were better than they are now. I remember bad things and I remember the Cuban Missile crisis, Duck and Cover and fear when the air raid siren went off but they were still much better days than these.


79 posted on 04/07/2016 8:28:04 AM PDT by Sequoyah101 (It feels like we have exchanged our dreams for survival. We just have a few days that don't suck.)
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To: siamesecats

you lived lush but other than the house we lived much the same. Our little house that was new in 1959 is gone now.

I think Mom and Dad paid 13,500 for the house but that sounds high. I know they sold it for 18,000 in 1968.


80 posted on 04/07/2016 8:34:56 AM PDT by Sequoyah101 (It feels like we have exchanged our dreams for survival. We just have a few days that don't suck.)
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