F. J.
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 221
- Location
- The Magnolia State
Well said!
:eusa_clap Well said, Ms. McLeod, well said.
Most of us here are well aware that the Era (note how I refer to it) was not art-deco splendor with Fred and Ginger tipping cocktails on a cloud of Lucky Strike smoke wafting out over a glittering Manhattan skyline. Most of us know that the real 1930s were a time of frowsy, unpainted houses, half-finished abandoned construction projects, mobs dragging foreclosure judges into the street, MacArthur gassing unemployed veterans, and economic royalists claiming prosperity was just around the corner if all those shiftless poor people would just spit on their hands and work a little harder. It was also a time when ordinary working people stood up to fight for their rights -- and *won.* Not without shedding blood, not without many setbacks -- but in the end, they *won.* Whatever prosperity came out of "The Fifties" was built with the blood and the sweat and the rage of "The Thirties."
Small wonder, then, that we find something deeply admirable in the character of the people who endured that period. If there's anything "Golden" about the Era, that's what it is. That's not idealization, that's simple observation.
:eusa_clap Well said, Ms. McLeod, well said.