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adultinnovation 05-01-2024 11:17 AM

was the 70's the worst decade
 
seemed like a really corny, cringy decade

CurrentlySober 05-01-2024 12:02 PM

Nahh... Looking back, you didnt have much, but at the time what you did have was better than the stuff today!

Mr Pheer 05-01-2024 12:11 PM

It was my first 10 years of life. I had a bb gun and a bicycle, and later on an Atari so it was ok. I had a chauffer, a housekeeper, laundry was done for me, I didn't have to pay bills or even cook for myself.

How was it bad?

Rochard 05-01-2024 12:13 PM

Their clothes were ugly. And so much fucking hair.

https://d1u6g1e1nisfhs.cloudfront.ne...n-overview.jpg

leming 05-01-2024 12:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rochard (Post 23259284)
And so much fucking hair.

Even too much, sometimes :upsidedow

https://cdni.shavedpics.com/460/1/24...8_011_6572.jpg

CaptainHowdy 05-01-2024 01:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by adultinnovation (Post 23259264)
seemed like a really corny, cringy decade

https://gfy.com/image.php?u=397631&dateline=1694189124

adultinnovation 05-01-2024 01:45 PM

reported

TheLegacy 05-01-2024 02:34 PM

I grew up in the 70s it was one of the greatest periods for many things. From music to cars and girls. We had nothing like woke culture - and high schoolers often met in forests for something called bush parties where you had a campfire and drank most of the night.

Schools had smoking areas - blacks were treated normally (at least in my city) and education was better because you had to actually read and go to libraries to do research which meant you couldn't really cheat why using internet etc. so yes - you got smarter

There was so much positive stuff to the 70s - so if you were younger you probably didn't see the best

The Porn Nerd 05-01-2024 02:35 PM

The best post World War II decades (in this order):

1960's
1970's
1990's
1980's
1950's

The 21st Century has SUCKED ASS for 24 years now. :(

blackmonsters 05-01-2024 02:48 PM

The 70's was probably the least racist decade in the history of America.

:2 cents:

sarettah 05-01-2024 03:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by blackmonsters (Post 23259326)
The 70's was probably the least racist decade in the history of America.

:2 cents:

This^^

Best decade of my life.

No AIDs, Free sex, lots of cheap smoke. Star Wars! A whole lot less fat people.

JesseQuinn 05-01-2024 04:13 PM


The Porn Nerd 05-01-2024 04:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by blackmonsters (Post 23259326)
The 70's was probably the least racist decade in the history of America.

:2 cents:

Yes!

The Jeffersons
Good Times
Roots
Blacula
Shaft
The Wiz
Mahogany
Sanford and Son
Richard Pryor AND Gene Wilder - TOGETHER....

Let's get back to the 1970's. :) :thumbsup

JesseQuinn 05-01-2024 04:21 PM

I think some at the time felt the 70's was a hangover of the 60's (not my words, I read that and found it interesting)

but still:

-continuation of the civil rights struggle
-reproductive freedom (in North America at least, then, way to turn back the clock USA)
-no AIDS as mentioned
-'hard' drugs were soft by today's standards
-birth of hip hop

not an idyllic time (has there ever been one) but setting aside appalling apparel (as if the 80's were much better) it was an important decade

Huggles 05-01-2024 04:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheLegacy (Post 23259323)
I grew up in the 70s it was one of the greatest periods for many things.

Everyone I know that is older than me said the 1970's was fucking amazing, and things got even better in the 1980's but there was a brief period in the 80's with some economy slowdowns, but overall it was a really good time. If you worked and even bagged groceries, you could afford a house. Those people that bagged groceries in the 1980's are now multi-millionaires from their housing values.

Now, if you just bag groceries, you are making minimum wage and sharing a bedroom in a basement suite with 0 chance of ever saving up for a down payment without eating at dollar stores and investing every dollar you have in the stock market and anything else that can appreciate in value.

sarettah 05-01-2024 05:26 PM

that is bullshit about grocery baggers affording houses.

Huggles 05-01-2024 05:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sarettah (Post 23259366)
that is bullshit about grocery baggers affording houses.

Bruh it was absolutely not, if you had a government liquor store job bagging booze, you could absolutely afford a home in Vancouver. There were plenty of people that could on even the most basic jobs of garbage man, janitor, grocery clerk.

TheLegacy 05-01-2024 05:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Huggles (Post 23259352)
Everyone I know that is older than me said the 1970's was fucking amazing, and things got even better in the 1980's but there was a brief period in the 80's with some economy slowdowns, but overall it was a really good time. If you worked and even bagged groceries, you could afford a house. Those people that bagged groceries in the 1980's are now multi-millionaires from their housing values.

Now, if you just bag groceries, you are making minimum wage and sharing a bedroom in a basement suite with 0 chance of ever saving up for a down payment without eating at dollar stores and investing every dollar you have in the stock market and anything else that can appreciate in value.


I may get in trouble for saying this but things changed during the 80's when homes along with cost of living went up and no longer was there a single source of income - now the wife had to work. Having a 2 income family not only broke apart families but now kids after school were not monitored by a parent so they could do anything they wanted such as taking their gf or bf home and having sex. Birth rates went up - kids had nothing to do with their time so they got into trouble because parents weren't around.

Women's rights were now pushing for more equality and ability to look after themselves without someone else. In short - the family unit was being torn apart during that time.

sarettah 05-01-2024 06:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheLegacy (Post 23259373)
I may get in trouble for saying this but things changed during the 80's when homes along with cost of living went up and no longer was there a single source of income - now the wife had to work. Having a 2 income family not only broke apart families but now kids after school were not monitored by a parent so they could do anything they wanted such as taking their gf or bf home and having sex. Birth rates went up - kids had nothing to do with their time so they got into trouble because parents weren't around.

Women's rights were now pushing for more equality and ability to look after themselves without someone else. In short - the family unit was being torn apart during that time.

There were many 2 income households in the 60's and in the 70's.

House prices have always risen. My Dad and Mom bought our house in Levittown, NY in 1960 for $21k. It was sold in 1973 for $73k and that was a low price for the area. That house shows on zillow for 680,600. If the housing prices had risen as fast as they did in the 60's (3.47 times value in a decade) the house would have been in the mid $800k range by 1993. It is not.

Families were hardly being forced apart. As kids we had responsibilities that kids no longer have, I could cook on a stove by the time I was 5. By 8 I was allowed to use a stove unsupervised. We were expected to take on more responsibilities the older we got and more freedom as we showed we were responsible.

We were not given cars, we had to earn our own money. I started earning money when I was 5 or 6, collecting deposit bottles. The small ones were worth 2 cents and the big ones were a nickel. By age 12 I had a paper route and did babysitting for neighbor kids. By age 15 I was working as a waiter or busboy for several catering companies and at age 17 I started life guarding. My brothers and sisters and my friends were all working as that was the only way to get money because our parents sure weren't giving it to us.

Woman's rights were a very big issue in the 60's, culminating in the legalization of abortion in 1973. It wasn't until 1974 that a woman in the US could get a credit card in their own name. Politicians worked to keep women down and the corporate world tried to paint the picture of the Happy Housewife. In reality there was an epidemic of tranquilizer abuse. (insert here video of Mother's Little Helper by the Stones).

It is total bullshit that woman's rights and women working led to the breakdown of the American Family. It was divorce and the keeping women down that led to the breakdown of the American family.

And I still call bullshit on Huggle's minimum wage worker's buying house's easily at anytime in history. Could a minimum wage worker buy a house? Sure, if they saved up for a hell of a long time and signed onto a ridiculous interest rate. But the same is true today. With minimum wages hitting $20 ($40,000/year income) it is easier than ever before for a minimum wage worker to get into a house. Not all houses are in the $500k+ range. You can still score a decent house in the $150k range in many areas and with decent credit you can get approved on a $40k/year income.

Fact of the matter, after WWII a shitload of soldiers, sailors, marines and airmen came back from WWII and went to college on the GI bill. Thus a whole bunch of then were making quite a bit more than minimum wage. Then add top that the VA loan programs and developers creating low price housing for the returning vets. So between 1945 and 1960 it was a lot easier for many folks to get into houses but most were not minimum wage. They were predominantly white, middle class, protestant men that could afford housing.


Huggles 05-01-2024 07:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheLegacy (Post 23259373)
I may get in trouble for saying this but things changed during the 80's when homes along with cost of living went up and no longer was there a single source of income - now the wife had to work. Having a 2 income family not only broke apart families but now kids after school were not monitored by a parent so they could do anything they wanted such as taking their gf or bf home and having sex. Birth rates went up - kids had nothing to do with their time so they got into trouble because parents weren't around.

Women's rights were now pushing for more equality and ability to look after themselves without someone else. In short - the family unit was being torn apart during that time.

When I was growing up in the 80's my mother worked part-time and practically none of the women in my neighbourhood worked. We used to be able to walk into any of our neighbour's homes and get fed as well. The entire block I lived on had an open-door policy for all the kids, basically. Everyone was friendly. It was really blue-collar and everyone worked regular jobs like the phone company, janitor, garbage man, in fact, my neighbour, Gordon the garbage man, had the most toys! He bought a brand new Corvette and would rip up the street for all the kids.

Current assessment: 2.8 mil.

https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/3...14350929_zpid/

Huggles 05-01-2024 07:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sarettah (Post 23259385)
Could a minimum wage worker buy a house? Sure, if they saved up for a hell of a long time and signed onto a ridiculous interest rate. But the same is true today.

:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh :1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh

The Porn Nerd 05-01-2024 08:07 PM

Millenials and Gen Z-ers should just chill the fuck out. They will get all that sweet Baby Boomer money (and houses, and businesses, and real estate, and...) in a few years.

THEN they can fuck everything up and lose it all on Bitcoin and Only Fans. Woohoo what a future!!

Look Chang 05-01-2024 10:12 PM

Hippy girl in the 70s, I'm nostalgic of this period . . . :stoned

https://th.bing.com/th/id/OIP.q8Wjky...pid=ImgDetMain

Look Chang 05-01-2024 10:44 PM

And the 69' Woodstock Love Fest with its 400,000 spectators . . .

https://assets.editorial.aetnd.com/u...y=75&auto=webp

https://th.bing.com/th/id/R.92241391...pid=ImgRaw&r=0

JesseQuinn 05-01-2024 11:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheLegacy (Post 23259373)
Women's rights were now pushing for more equality and ability to look after themselves without someone else

yes, quite terrifying. almost as scary as having to rely on someone else for income

follow up S's Stones track with Under My Thumb


Quote:

Originally Posted by sarettah (Post 23259385)
...

props for mentioning that the VA loan programs excluded many. a fundamental economic shift in the transfer of intergenerational wealth down the road and so many left out. love everything you write


I was born in the late 70's (number one reason why it was an awesome decade) but child of the 80's. I had my own house key, TTC (public transit) pass, no fucking phone. I just...went out. not like my parents were afraid of me not doing my homework. never learned to cook cuz why? I do know how to work a stove though. in theory

never even had a curfew, I was just raised to be aware of my surroundings and where possible make sure I had my friends around

my parents did get freaked out when Leslie Mahaffy's body parts were discovered in a lake. my mom put in me in a self defense class, which was fun, and they kept going on about ish that was obvious about safety, which was irritating

I feel sad reminiscing on kids having more freedom to explore. in large part cuz it makes me feel old


now off to build a white picket fence and acquire an apron to wear when I open tins of Fancy Feast so my girls don't feel neglected

Look Chang 05-01-2024 11:32 PM


Look Chang 05-01-2024 11:34 PM


Victor-E 05-02-2024 01:29 AM

The 70s were the best years of my life. Long hair, Rock-n-Roll and bell bottoms ruled. Blondie and Boston rocked and Exorcist shocked. SNL was brand new and funny. Big Mac, a gallon of gas, and movie tickets were still under a dollar. I bought my first car, a mint 1964 Mustang hatchback, for $1400. College was $45 per credit. Vietnam was over and everyone was still celebrating and enjoying the peace. Space race was ahead and wars were behind us. We were naive and happy.

Grapesoda 05-02-2024 05:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheLegacy (Post 23259323)
I grew up in the 70s it was one of the greatest periods for many things. From music to cars and girls. We had nothing like woke culture - and high schoolers often met in forests for something called bush parties where you had a campfire and drank most of the night.

Schools had smoking areas - blacks were treated normally (at least in my city) and education was better because you had to actually read and go to libraries to do research which meant you couldn't really cheat why using internet etc. so yes - you got smarter

There was so much positive stuff to the 70s - so if you were younger you probably didn't see the best

Let's see here for a moment, ban the bra and birth control.... and NO Aids, NO Herpes.... oh yeah it was fucking horrible :1orglaugh:thumbsup

Grapesoda 05-02-2024 05:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Huggles (Post 23259369)
Bruh it was absolutely not, if you had a government liquor store job bagging booze, you could absolutely afford a home in Vancouver. There were plenty of people that could on even the most basic jobs of garbage man, janitor, grocery clerk.

My first adult job as a heavy equipment operator in 1973 paid $3.75 per hour. The guys I worked with had at stay at home wives and owned their homes.... :2 cents:

Huggles 05-02-2024 06:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Grapesoda (Post 23259489)
My first adult job as a heavy equipment operator in 1973 paid $3.75 per hour. The guys I worked with had at stay at home wives and owned their homes.... :2 cents:

Today a heavy equipment operator / class 1 with air brakes driver job pays like $22-$26 an hour in Canada, at least in the Okanagan where I am... that is like $1500 every 2 weeks...

BUT

A meager 1-bedroom apartment is $1500 a month... utilities, food, car insurance, gas... probably add another $800 a month... so you're basically looking at $600 a month left over for investing, fun, etc etc... :Oh crap

Grapesoda 05-02-2024 06:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Huggles (Post 23259498)
Today a heavy equipment operator / class 1 with air brakes driver job pays like $22-$26 an hour in Canada, at least in the Okanagan where I am... that is like $1500 every 2 weeks...

BUT

A meager 1-bedroom apartment is $1500 a month... utilities, food, car insurance, gas... probably add another $800 a month... so you're basically looking at $600 a month left over for investing, fun, etc etc... :Oh crap

yes the big boys are sucking the wealth from the middle class.

sarettah 05-02-2024 06:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Huggles (Post 23259498)
Today a heavy equipment operator / class 1 with air brakes driver job pays like $22-$26 an hour in Canada, at least in the Okanagan where I am... that is like $1500 every 2 weeks...

BUT

A meager 1-bedroom apartment is $1500 a month... utilities, food, car insurance, gas... probably add another $800 a month... so you're basically looking at $600 a month left over for investing, fun, etc etc... :Oh crap

1/4 monthly pay for rent is what I also considered standard, nothing new there.

When I got out of the Navy in 1982, in the midst of the Reagan recession, I was making $2.75/hr (minimum wage) as a computer operator. So, I was making $440/month before taxes and my rent for a ghetto type apartment was $100/month.

sarettah 05-02-2024 07:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JesseQuinn (Post 23259417)
props for mentioning that the VA loan programs excluded many. a fundamental economic shift in the transfer of intergenerational wealth down the road and so many left out. love everything you write

Hey Jesse,

The VA program did not exclude. It was the bankers and the developers that excluded. For example, in the town I grew up in you could not buy a house unless you were white Christians. That was the rules Levitt set in 1949 or 1950 for buyers of the homes. In reality, by 1960 there were Protestants, Catholics and Jews living in Levittown, mainly because you can't tell a Jew from a Christian by just looking.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levittown,_New_York

Quote:

Discriminatory practices
As well as a symbol of the American Dream, Levittown would also become a symbol of racial segregation in the United States, due to Clause 25 of the standard lease agreement signed by the first residents of Levittown, who had an option to buy their homes. This "restrictive covenant" stated in capital letters and bold type that the house could not "be used or occupied by any person other than members of the Caucasian race."[13]

Such discriminatory housing standards were consistent with government policies of the time.[14] The Federal Housing Administration allowed developers to justify segregation within public housing. The FHA offered mortgages only to non-mixed developments, which discouraged developers from creating racially integrated housing.[15] Before the sale of Levittown homes began, the sales agents were aware that no applications from black families would be accepted. As a result, American veterans who wished to purchase a home in Levittown were unable to do so if they were black.[16][13]

William Levitt attempted to justify their decision to only sell homes to white families by saying that it was in the best interest for business.[16] He claimed their actions were not discriminatory but intended to maintain the value of their properties. The company explained that it was not possible to reduce racial segregation while they were attempting to reduce the housing shortage. Levitt said "As a Jew, I have no room in my heart for racial prejudice. But the plain fact is that most whites prefer not to live in mixed communities. This attitude may be wrong morally, and someday it may change. I hope it will."[17] The Levitts explained that they would open up applications to blacks after they had sold as many homes to white people as possible.[16] They believed that potential white buyers would not want to buy a house in Levittown if they were aware they would have black neighbors.

Though the Levitts were Jewish, they did not wish to sell homes to Jewish families either; despite this, by 1960, although it was still a completely "white" suburb,[18] the population of Levittown was roughly a third Jewish, with the remainder about a third Catholic, and a third Protestant.[19]

An opposition group was formed, the Committee to End Discrimination in Levittown, to protest the restricted sale of Levittown homes, and to push for an integrated community. In 1948 the United States Supreme Court, in Shelley v. Kraemer, declared that property deeds stipulating racial segregation were "unenforceable as law and contrary to public policy".[20][13] Only well after the 1954 racial integration decisions, including Brown v. Board of Education, was Levittown racially integrated, and even as late as the 1990 census, only a tiny fraction of the community was non-white. [21][13] Starting primarily in the 2010s, Levittown's demographics have been shifting as it has been attracting middle-class South Asian and Hispanic residents to the community.

The houses he built originally sold for around $8,000. But with the GI bill and such you could get into one for about $400 (5%).

Quote:

His mass production of thousands of houses at virtually the same time allowed Levitt to sell them, with kitchens fully stocked with modern appliances, and a television in the living room, for as little as $8,000 each (equal to $109,162 today), which, with the G.I. Bill and federal housing subsidies, reduced the up-front cost of a house to many buyers to around $400 (equal to $5,458 today).[10]

CaptainHowdy 05-02-2024 07:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by adultinnovation (Post 23259315)
reported

https://gfy.com/image.php?u=397631&dateline=1694189124


TheLegacy 05-02-2024 07:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sarettah (Post 23259385)
There were many 2 income households in the 60's and in the 70's.

House prices have always risen. My Dad and Mom bought our house in Levittown, NY in 1960 for $21k. It was sold in 1973 for $73k and that was a low price for the area. That house shows on zillow for 680,600. If the housing prices had risen as fast as they did in the 60's (3.47 times value in a decade) the house would have been in the mid $800k range by 1993. It is not.

Families were hardly being forced apart. As kids we had responsibilities that kids no longer have, I could cook on a stove by the time I was 5. By 8 I was allowed to use a stove unsupervised. We were expected to take on more responsibilities the older we got and more freedom as we showed we were responsible.

We were not given cars, we had to earn our own money. I started earning money when I was 5 or 6, collecting deposit bottles. The small ones were worth 2 cents and the big ones were a nickel. By age 12 I had a paper route and did babysitting for neighbor kids. By age 15 I was working as a waiter or busboy for several catering companies and at age 17 I started life guarding. My brothers and sisters and my friends were all working as that was the only way to get money because our parents sure weren't giving it to us.

Woman's rights were a very big issue in the 60's, culminating in the legalization of abortion in 1973. It wasn't until 1974 that a woman in the US could get a credit card in their own name. Politicians worked to keep women down and the corporate world tried to paint the picture of the Happy Housewife. In reality there was an epidemic of tranquilizer abuse. (insert here video of Mother's Little Helper by the Stones).

It is total bullshit that woman's rights and women working led to the breakdown of the American Family. It was divorce and the keeping women down that led to the breakdown of the American family.

And I still call bullshit on Huggle's minimum wage worker's buying house's easily at anytime in history. Could a minimum wage worker buy a house? Sure, if they saved up for a hell of a long time and signed onto a ridiculous interest rate. But the same is true today. With minimum wages hitting $20 ($40,000/year income) it is easier than ever before for a minimum wage worker to get into a house. Not all houses are in the $500k+ range. You can still score a decent house in the $150k range in many areas and with decent credit you can get approved on a $40k/year income.

Fact of the matter, after WWII a shitload of soldiers, sailors, marines and airmen came back from WWII and went to college on the GI bill. Thus a whole bunch of then were making quite a bit more than minimum wage. Then add top that the VA loan programs and developers creating low price housing for the returning vets. So between 1945 and 1960 it was a lot easier for many folks to get into houses but most were not minimum wage. They were predominantly white, middle class, protestant men that could afford housing.



Perhaps I forgot to mention that my experience was from a Canadian point of view living in a medium sized city so things may have been much different where you iived. Yet for me I still stand by my assessment since it happened in my region.

sarettah 05-02-2024 07:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheLegacy (Post 23259518)
Perhaps I forgot to mention that my experience was from a Canadian point of view living in a medium sized city so things may have been much different where you iived. Yet for me I still stand by my assessment since it happened in my region.

Ok, I get it. In Canada the breakdown of the household is all women's fault because they dared to want equal rights.

That doesn't sound misogynistic at all.

JesseQuinn 05-02-2024 08:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sarettah (Post 23259512)
Hey Jesse,

The VA program did not exclude. It was the bankers and the developers that excluded.

thanks for clarifying my miswording, and yeah, 100% correct what you stated above

as a canuck I only know about this cuz it was part of a high school project I did on housing discrimination in North America. was trying to not get too political here by stating that Black vets were in large part locked out of it. even though it's historical fact and shouldn't be 'political'. these days though?

but yeah, the VA was def not to blame *tips cap

TheLegacy 05-02-2024 09:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sarettah (Post 23259523)
Ok, I get it. In Canada the breakdown of the household is all women's fault because they dared to want equal rights.

That doesn't sound misogynistic at all.

Wow you're very sensitive today. The fault was both parents not just one... and even then it was the government who kept raising prices and taxes thereby forcing both parents away from home. NOTE parenting is a responsibility of both

I didn't do it - and I was in my teens at the time so cut me some slack.

sarettah 05-02-2024 09:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheLegacy (Post 23259557)
Wow you're very sensitive today.

nope, not sensitive at all. just calling them like i see them.


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