by I_Like_Plants » Fri 20 Jul 2007, 15:18:24
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Hawkcreek', '
')Ok, not true. In the 1950's a man could provide for a family without the wife working. They didn't have Wally world junk, but I know a lot of hard working people today who can't afford Wally World junk, and it still takes both the husband and wife working to afford the necessities for the family. That seems like a large cut in pay to me. And the government took a much smaller slice out of the middle class paycheck in the 50's also.
If you argue that the standard of living today is better than 50 years ago, you go against the perceptions of most older people who remember those days. And much of that reduction is caused by excessive taxes and the hidden tax of inflation.
The standard of living was LOWER back in the 50s but people were happier. Mom stayed at home and cooked all the food, my mom made clothes from patterns! Anyone seen the movie Apollo 13? How that one guy's wife made him a new vest? That was not an eccentricity, wives made clothes. They did all the mending, cooking, cleaning, and for yard work there was Dad with his mower and us kids. We got a newspaper maybe. We had "a' TV not one in every room. You didn't buy books you went to the library. Kids were eating a lot less calories and much much fewer junk calories. Kool-Ade only really came in in the 1960s, normally it was lime ade from the neighbors' trees or old old ice water. Breakfast was Quaker Oats or eggs'n'toast. Toys were self-made (my faves were ones I made myself, I was a weird kid) or stuff like paper dolls, Revell models, stuff you built from plans in Boys Life or something, the odd matchbox car. Seasonally there were kites, which cost something like 12 cents!
My own memories are what I remember of the late 60s but you get the idea.
As it's measured today, the standard of living was decidedly lower. As people are starting to wake up and realize, it was actually higher and here's why - safe neighborhoods to walk to school. Dad had a pension waiting for him when he retired. Food was home-cooked and nutritious (unless your mom cooked like mine it was also delicious!) There was a lot more parent-child time and wholesome activities like fishing and hiking. Dinner time was family discussion time around the table too. Today, only the more affluent get to live this way.