Posted on 07/13/2018 7:45:15 PM PDT by vannrox
Today, Americans have taken so much for granted. We look at our life and think that it is as it has always been. Indeed, it is assumed that the way things are today have always been that way. Yet, the simple and plain truth is that America has changed. Over the last few decades there has been tremendous changes at all levels of American society and culture.
For instance, it is a recent phenomenon that restaurants can charge $8 for a cup of coffee. Or, that we have to take a urine sample to get employed. Casual day on Friday, or having a co-pay on your medical insurance was unheard of just a few decades ago.
Lets take a moment to reflect on our shared past. Lets look at what it was like to work for a company in the 1960s. Just because things have changed does not mean that they have changed for the better.
"All federal workers will be ordered to spend 75 percent of their time on government work"
-President Donald Trump's (R) "cruel" executive order demanding that Federal Workers must actually work in order to get paid. If they do not work the bare minimum, they can be fired.
Today
Mr. Waturi: But can he do the job. I know he can get the job but can he DO the job? I'm NOT arguing that with you. I'm not arguing that with YOU. I'm not ARGUING that with you. I'm not ARGUING that with you Harry! Harry... Harry... Yeah Harry... but can he DO the job. I know he can GET the job but can he do the job?
(Excerpt) Read more at metallicman.com ...
First, it was nearly doubling the workforce within 2 decades, by the NOW gang convincing women that staying at home to raise children was somehow a "raw deal". THEN we started adding millions more from poorer nations... AND started allowing government to finance everything, which always causes prices to skyrocket (tuition, health insurance, etc).
People have no privacy. It’s the comms.
Trust in America is crap.
I was a dishwasher and we played nerf-ball on saturday night in the PL of the western steer. good times
[[If oil was needed we had the metal quarts stacked on the island and we would puncture the spout into the cans and pour.]]
Worked in a gas station in the 70’s-early 80’s they were still using those cans then- We’ve still a few oil spouts-
Check out article.
Thanks, grey_whiskers.
Indeed. No privacy, and that probably has as much to do with it as anything.
In years past, I remember going to some pretty wild corporate parties, but with ubiquitous video recording, nearly anyone from those years past would today be a candidate for 15 minutes of fame...unwanted fame.
I remember going with my father to Sears to buy paint to paint the barn. The man in the paint center in Sears KNEW paint. He had sold paint at Sears for over 20 years and Sears had trainee him and sent him to the paint manufacturers. So he knew what type of paint worked best for every situation. And back then, Sears VALUED salesmen like that.
Today, they are disposable minimum wage workers who neither know nor care about the customer. Profits and ONLY short term profits are all that matters.
My aunt used to live next to Arlington Stadium. I stayed with her one summer in the ‘80s. My cousins and I used to hang out on the stadium steps until the 7th inning, then we could get in for free.
Ping for later read.
Your wore a jacket and tie, or a dress/skirt, and actually did something to make society go.
No one asked about your socio-political beliefs, and nobody gave a sh*t. You were there for the company, not your personal psychic healing or to cater to society’s pet foibles.
Add to that generous cash and prizes for bored women divorcing their husband in the vain hope of reliving their slutty 20s, and generous welfare as a generational choice for kids getting pregnant at 16.
All inflationary (money going into the system but no product or service coming out).
When I started working in the 1965 I got paid $1.25 an hour.
Had a conversation on this topic with a long-term coworker just yesterday. He and I are both pushing 60.
He was reminiscing about the comraderie and bonhomie he enjoyed with his coworkers in the 1970s. After the factory whistle blew, he and his buddies would sit right down on the factory floor and open a keg.
What he fails to appreciate is that:
1) He and those coworkers are no longer in their teens. They are no longer on the look-out for hook-ups, no longer seeking a "place in life," no longer still enjoying the first rush of young adulthood (freedom, money, but no responsibilities like kids and mortgages). Instead, they have found their "places in life." They are no longer boarding in some crowded dorm, squalid bachelor flat, or living in Mama's basement. They have had decades to set themselves up in comfortable, nicely decorated, well-furnished homes - with a wife, children, and maybe even grandchildren. Thus, they have better things to do than to "hang out" with their drinking buddies.
2. They are older. When you are in your late teens / early 20s, your personality is still only half-formed. Nothing is completely "baked in." The personality differences between individuals is thus less noticeable. And youths are so callow, they are less judgemental about their peers. "Wow, Fred's girlfriend just got an abortion. I guess I'm cool with that." After after reaching true adulthood and acquiring more maturity can one properly reflect upon such things - and recognize moral faults.
3. Technology (computers, the Internet, DVDs, Netflix, cell phones, etc.). Sitting on a dusty factory floor throwing back some "brews" with some random strangers one just happens to work with simply doesn't compare with sharing one's thoughts with the select few like-minded individuals one has found amongst the millions in the Internet. If such things hadn't been invented, most people would probably still be spending their evenings in sewing circles, Bible study groups, bowling teams, etc.
Regards,
Reminds me of a hilarious skit of some airhead millennial being interviewed for a job.
I suppose this is why tech and (I hope not) aerospace companies have to go offshore to find anyone that can do engineering work.
Read: "Culturally diverse, with social justice being a common connection between us"
You're remembering Orwell incorrectly.
Aside from strictly regimented 15-minute exercise programs in the morning and endless, boring propaganda broadcasts about the latest "victories" on distant fronts that may have been totally faked, the telescreens provided no engaging "entertainment" - nothing that people with a shred of individuality, insight, or humanity would watch unless they were forced.
The main function of the telescreens was not to be watched, but rather to monitor the populace.
Regards,
Social media has changed everything. Now anything you say or do can be blasted around the globe.
Look what happened to the CEO of Papa Johns.
Remember the old Yakov Smirnoff joke, “In Russia, Television Watches You”.
It ain’t just Russia, anymore.
Well, certainly not since....
"He Hates These Cans!"
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