RR GUY wrote: Saving and investing were the at the core of the middle class explosion in post-war America, not consumption. Most of the wealth was created by the WWII generation, who having lived through the depression were keenly aware of what it was like to live without. First during the depression and then during the war when rations limited consumption of household goods. To answer your question, I believe that many here do invest in hard assets as a result of cultural influence. While many of us do not like the government we have today, I'm not sure most of us concur with the believe that the country will fall into a lawless society.
i like what what you wrote RR. i was raised by my Grandmother, she was a woman of the Depression era. i miss her so much. She'd tell me tales of what happened, how the family got up into one household, about 7 of them, two of the men had jobs, my great grandmother was a whiz at gardening and baking, my grandmother was one heck of a cook herself, could make something out of nothing.
when i was a lad, oh boy, we had to do without...my mom and dad were kinda twiggy, a ruined marriage, my dads gone, mom's still around, God love her, but as twiggy as ever, LOVES rich people, LOVES money, but my grandmother was my ever present influence and guardian until she passed when i was 12. My grandmother had that Depression era/WW2 mindset in spades, thank God she passed it on to me, i save EVERYTHING...not alike some crazy packrat, but stuff of utility, those neat blue Maxwell House plastic coffee containers'?...the kind with the snap top?..they are great for putting stuff in, airtight. i buy the American apple juice, i forget the name of the firm, but they make a real sturdy bottle, thick plastic, i wash all them out, and use them for water jugs, which i put into OAK apple crates, i snapped up from the largest orchard around her, best hundred dollars i ever spent.
when i was 10, 11, and 12, sometimes we wouldnt have any money for supper, i'd go to the big grocery store on both fridays and saturdays and hang outside and offer to help folks with their packages to the car...most of them said yes and would tip me, i'd make anywhere from 6 to 12 dollars and in the early 70's...that was a lot back then and we'd use that to go buy supper fixings. I dont say that in a "BOO HOO poor me".....NO!...that shaped me, toughened me up, helped get my priorities straight, and i'm MORE than thankful for that...the one thing i was NEVER denied was books, i might have had two pairs to my name, but when the Scholastic book folks would come with their catalogue, my grandmother told me to get whatever i wanted, which i did...and READ...she was swell, and i miss her.
she died when i was 12, and then life got to be like hell, my poor mother didnt have a clue, suffered for 5 years, then took off for the Navy at 17...i was planning on doing that after college anyway, at 21, but...lol..i had to accelerate my plans. hee hee hee, and here we are today, the second Depression...GOOD!...maybe it'll change this nation for the better, but i sure am sorry there's a lot of anger in this thread...thats too bad...i mean that...you men will NEVER get an argument from me...the worst time to be fussing is when your struggling to survive...during that battle?...to me, thats the time to be really gentle and cool and compassionate with each other, but its easy to whale on one another on this medium...but face to face?...naw, gotta be strong, pull together, quit tearing at one another....this coming week, the week of August 11 thru the 15th promises to be a hell week...lots of bad stuff coming down the pike...so what?...BRING IT, i say...i know i can take it, i just hope that we as a nation , can take it, and come out stronger, and if we dont?....hey, thats called history...history wil be the judge...what did they do as a nation when things got tough? fold?...okay...or did they grow up and get stronger?...history will judge. neil, bondservant of Christ