And do you sign up for them all?
No, no you don't.
Thus proving our point. If it was the banks' fault, you'd sign up for them all and be massively in debt. Blaming the banks is like blaming the grocery store if you weigh 450 lbs. Just because it's available, doesn't mean you have to indulge. Whether it's debt, or food, or alcohol.
My son officially is a doctor now, he tells me that he gets several unsolicited credit card applications every month. Being a doctor, people are falling over themselves extending loan, line of credit, credit cards etc. to him. So far he has thrown away every one of those applications.
He only has a Master Card. I suggested to him that he apply for a Visa as well, it is useful to have both Master Card and Visa. But it is really up to him to decide how much of a debt he is going to carry (abd having our example before him, he told me that he is not going to carry any, except the morgage he is carrying), not up to the bank or the credit card company.
Talloola, apparently you have jumbled up posts by several posters and attributed them all to me. For instance, I never said that women who stayed home were given an allowance, somebody else said that. Anyway, you have responded to some of the points I made, and I will try to respond to them.
You describe one particular type of woman who stayed home, but forgot to mention the many other types who
stayed home, you pack them all in a description that makes them all the same, like cookies from a cookie
cutter, you are very very misinformed, and that is too bad, you have tunnel vision, and don't seem to
realize that women of every generation were individuals just as they are today, and made decision for
different reasons just as they do today. society slowly changed, and many more women joined the work
force, they enjoyed the independence and financial freedom, and that is fine.
The idea that women who stayed home were like the black slaves in the south is 'laughable', and my husband and I had a
good laugh at your expense, when he also read your post.
I did not compare 50s housewives with black slaves. I gave slavery as an example, to illustrate the point that just because people may be happy in some situation, does not necessarily mean that the situation is desirable.
Again, I did not say that, you are attributing somebody else's quote to me.And the idea that women who stayed home were 'given' an allowance fits a small percentage of couples, but
you again forgot to mention all of the rest of the women staying home, who were 100% in charge of the
finances, had good heads for money and budgeting, and husbands were happy to have them to it, because many
men, certainly not all, don't budget very well and hate doing it.
I never said that 50s were poor or unhappy years. Again maybe somebody else may have said it.All of the examples you gave only fit a small percentage of people, but you generalize so much that it seems
like the 50s were slave years, poor years, unhappy years, and the opposite is true, yes society was slowly
changing, that is the way life is, that is normal, things don't stay the same, especially when there was
so many openings out there for women to go out and work.
It may have been middle class compared to 1950s, but compare that to today, and the standard of living was low.The standard of living we had in the 50's was not 'low' it was middle class for the day, good wages, money
for everything we needed to do.
That indeed is how it works out. As years go by standard of living for most people increases. So you may have a middle class standard all along, but 50 years ago standard of living was much lower compared to today. And that indeed is what I said, we are richer today, enjoy a higher standard of living compared to 50 eyars ago.Our standard of living in the 90s was still middle class, we had money
for all of the things we need to do. In the 50's we had many things that they didn't have in the 40s and
30s, and in the 60s,70s,80s,90 and on they all had many things that the decade before them did not have.
Quite so, you had a middle class standard of living in those days, but compared to today, it was low.You make it sound like life in the 50s was sad, people didn't have much of anything, but that is not true, we had everything, (to a point) that a middleclass family was able to have in that day, not a low standardof living at all.
And again, I never said that life in the 50s was sad (where do you get these things?). On the contrary, I have specifically said that life in the 50 was tranquil, peaceful compared to today. There were very few problems in those days, mainly because nobody talked about any problems. Everybody knew their place and nobody made waves. Women were oppressed, but didn't know they were oppressed and were happy and contented in being housewives.
In the 60s and 70s they realized that they were oppressed, that they did not enjoy equal rights with men and then they were unhappy and rebelled.
No, I don't get it. Having stuff (house, cars, wealth, money etc.) describes how successful people are. The stuff inside is what makes you happy, that doesn't tell us how successful you are. Successful and happy are two different things.Having 'stuff' doesn't describe how successful people are, it's the 'stuff' inside the people that describes how successful people are.
Some 'get it' some 'don't'.
So are we happier today compared to 50s? That is a very difficult question, and everybody has to answer it for him or herself. But are we healthier, wealthier, living longer, more tolerant today, is the world a more just place today? Indubitably.