by 68Camaro » Sun Jan 06, 2013 3:15 pm
Interesting points on how life is different Barry, but I don't think you're addressing his question.
Several things are fundamentally different.
1) we were fundamentally a manufacturing driven economy then. Most of our manufacturing has been sent overseas and it continues to decline. We have far less ability now to take care of ourselves, and more of the jobs now are less challenging and pay far less.
2) the government was far more careful about lying to us; not so now. Now they lie with impunity, especially about statistics.
3) we had a far higher effective employment rate. Don't look at the unemployment rate, especially now, as it is a rigged statistic.
4) we have far fewer people on government assistance, and it was considered a stigma to take it, or to declare bankruptcy. Not so now. We are still very productive as a people, for those that do work we have the highest gross worker productivity in the world, but those that work are bearing an ever increasing burden of the non-working, and the net population productivity is declining at an alarming rate. As a result of the number of people on assistance, the people have now figured out how to vote themselves benefits and are now in the process of actively killing the goose that laid the golden egg.
5) the forced low interest rates are a blessing for some but a curse for pension plans, and the retirement plans of the retired. They are forcing artifical changes in the way the economy functions - it's a "low interest bubble" which will collapse.
6) the change in presidency in 1980 came at the right time with the right will to kill inflation, which was the will to absorb some short-term pain by allowing the Fed to force super high interest rates in order to get inflation under control. I felt that pain, but it was better for the long-term. Inflation came under control, the government was able to use supply-side economics then to reduce taxes and stimulate investment, and the 80s and 90s were - in general - high-growth times as a result. There is no will for that same solution to be employed now to stimulate the economy.
7) The boomers (and I'm one of them) have proven to be - in general - miserable failures as parents. (I consider myself and my children an exception to this.) They have catered to their children and grandchildren and left us with two generations and counting of spoiled, gimme-mine people who have too high an opinion of themselves. Too many of the children of the boomers are whiney, lazy, complainers who don't know the meaning of hard work.
8) we were fundamentally a better educated people then. The larger portion of the population has become a type of idiocracy. I'm constantly embarrassed at how stupid Americans have become as a population.
Individual exceptions to the above abound, but there is a reason that many stereotypes exist - because they capture aspects of truth.
In the game of Woke, the goal posts can be moved at any moment, the penalties will apply retroactively and claims of fairness will always lose out to the perpetual right to claim offense.... Bret Stephens
The further a society drifts from the truth, the more it will hate those that speak it. George Orwell.
We can ignore reality, but we cannot ignore the consequences of ignoring reality. Ayn Rand.