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![]() "Jeffrey D Angus" wrote in message ... Hagstar wrote: I don't remember much of anything good about the old days. They're gone- that's good. Mostly I remember JFK's death, duck and cover drills, Cuban Missiles, Vietnam body counts, Selma, Watts, Newark, then RFK and Martin Luther King, Lest we forget, "The gun control act of 1968" and wage and price controls. Charles Manson and the Manson Family. The Symbionese Liberation Army. The John Birch Society. The Great Society. Students for a Democratic Society. And with Watergate, the media's ascension to serial killer status in that from that time forward, they've made it their goal to destroy anyone in office. Oh, and personally, graduating from high school just in time for the first collapse of the aerospace industry. "Help wanted: Service station attendant. NO engineers!" Oh yeah, trying to make sense of it all trying to grow up living under the fear of a nuclear holocaust or ending up as a box gift wrapped by the Army. The only nice thing about that time was not knowing about AIDS, crack cocaine, crystal meth, disco or reality TV. Jeff, There is good and bad in every time and in every endeavor. Things I remember from the 60's: Television worth watching, where the most violence you saw was on Road Runner cartoons. Tuning across the (AM) dial at night to hear all the interesting things.. programs (mostly all different) from thousands of miles away, it was almost like being there. Going to school to learn things, from teachers that went there to teach. And the most dangerous thing in school was the playground bully.. and he only used fists. Riding bicycles without having to get geared up to look like some sort of unearthly monster. Being able to do things like mow lawns or do field work to earn money (try that now if you're under 16!) Secret prisons were something that the bad guys had. You could drive for a week (or more) on $5 worth of gas. (now you can just about get home from the gas station) I could walk into a radio shop and watch the tech work on things for hours, and not only did he not get upset, he tought me as he went. (now there are virtually no repair shops left, and most of the ones that are, don't repair, they exchange). A hamburger was 19 cents. If you wanted fries and a Coke, it was 45 cents. If you felt like going to eat at a real cafe, sit in a booth and have someone serve you, the price went up to a dollar. You could take a Greyhound to ANYWHERE for under $20! (now they have cancelled most routes completely, and stop in far fewer towns on the ones they still have) Sometimes, kids would get in a fight during a Little League game. The parents broke it up, instead of participating. You weren't worried about whether your neighbor was a serial killer, abductor, or politician. You could go out all day, and never lock your door. You knew your neighbor, and even shared your time, your lawn mower or your BBQ with them. Kids played outside, instead of sitting endless hours in front of the TV or computer. So, yeah. There was Richard Speck, Sirhan Sirhan, Jack Ruby, Herbert Hoover's dossier's, the Cuban missile crisis, the Watts riots... but overall, things were not so bad. The Russians did a lot of sabre rattling, but I don't recall any bombs. |
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