HarpPlayerGene
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 4,682
- Location
- North Central Florida
Feel free to agree, to disagree, to add your own insights. Here's what I mean:
Specifically I am tired of hearing people say that we have a "bad economy".
My father was born in 1914. His father was born in the 1880s. So, in my family one wouldn't have to go many generations back to arrive at a time when most people considered themselves fairly well off if they had more than two pair of shoes and ate some meat now and then. No kiddin'. There have been no aristocrats or nobles in my line, just working stiffs, and I've researched the surname back to the mid-1600s.
Even though I find no sport in considering the people who are now in-between employers or who have seen their businesses shrink, it is still generally the case that we live like kings and queens compared to just a few short generations ago. I know there are some out there who are really on the skids (always have been, always will be) but the vast majority have automobiles, color TVs, stereos, music players, clothes and shoes galore, refrigerators, wall-to-wall carpeting, cooling and heating, hot water and showers, telephones, full complements of furniture, watches, glasses, a variety of food, and on and on. The one thing most universally lacking is gratitude.
The "good" economies of the tech bubble and the more recent housing bubble were fiction and people at nearly every station in life imagined themselves to have more money than actually existed. Sure, since it has come to roost my business is down - but I am not upset about that. It HAD to settle down. I am no longer seeing the use of credit cards and equity lines as methods for people to live beyond their means. Is that really so "bad"?
I do not see the present situation as a "bad economy". It is a different economy lately in that it is more realistic. I believe that to chase more of the phantoms which are popularly considered the makings of "good economy" is to deny just how well we live in the 21st century and is a set-up for another fall back down to reality.
Most of the people who I hear complaining would be the envy our parents' and grandparents' generations.
Specifically I am tired of hearing people say that we have a "bad economy".
My father was born in 1914. His father was born in the 1880s. So, in my family one wouldn't have to go many generations back to arrive at a time when most people considered themselves fairly well off if they had more than two pair of shoes and ate some meat now and then. No kiddin'. There have been no aristocrats or nobles in my line, just working stiffs, and I've researched the surname back to the mid-1600s.
Even though I find no sport in considering the people who are now in-between employers or who have seen their businesses shrink, it is still generally the case that we live like kings and queens compared to just a few short generations ago. I know there are some out there who are really on the skids (always have been, always will be) but the vast majority have automobiles, color TVs, stereos, music players, clothes and shoes galore, refrigerators, wall-to-wall carpeting, cooling and heating, hot water and showers, telephones, full complements of furniture, watches, glasses, a variety of food, and on and on. The one thing most universally lacking is gratitude.
The "good" economies of the tech bubble and the more recent housing bubble were fiction and people at nearly every station in life imagined themselves to have more money than actually existed. Sure, since it has come to roost my business is down - but I am not upset about that. It HAD to settle down. I am no longer seeing the use of credit cards and equity lines as methods for people to live beyond their means. Is that really so "bad"?
I do not see the present situation as a "bad economy". It is a different economy lately in that it is more realistic. I believe that to chase more of the phantoms which are popularly considered the makings of "good economy" is to deny just how well we live in the 21st century and is a set-up for another fall back down to reality.
Most of the people who I hear complaining would be the envy our parents' and grandparents' generations.