Fresh Start
Banned
So being a 10-year-old child at the time gives you enough perspective to create this comparison?
Yes. (Also a lot of my core beliefs are influenced by the accounts of people that I associate with.)
I was born in 1982 and I couldn't tell you much from the decade except for what happened in my community. I retrospect though, I think Canada was probably better off in the Mulroney years than the Chrétien years. Our economy didn't suck back then, everybody wasn't all paranoid about ID theft, school shootings, terrorism, online predators, "PC" crap, job outsourcing - and when you phoned customer service, you actually talked to someone in Canada that spoke clear English, we weren't scared about the big 3 automakers collapsing, etc. Yeah, the 80s were really fun and carefree and it's too bad I was born 15-20 years too late to really be a part of it.
My older friends and relatives don't remember in 1985 a person in Canada having to compete with someone in another country for a wage. In 1985, they didn't recall people having to work all hours of the evening or overnight just to make a living either. We are in an economic depression. I do not remember that happening in the 1980s - mid 1990s. A few hiccups sure, but nothing on this scale. Also medical, insurance, and gas were very inexpensive. The 90s felt good too to a lot of people because so many of the fears that had come to a head in the 80s seemed to be receding: the Cold War, recessions, unemployment, and people coming off welfare rolls.
The 1980s were a major turning point in many ways but at least back then - there was still some common sense i.e. 20% down; starter "existing” home; 30-year fixed rate mortgage; people actually wore clothes that fit them and those that had children actually knew how to discipline them and teach them how to be adults; greed with everything was not running un-regulated and rampant everywhere and it goes on and on. People could afford a home in the 1980s. And people who built houses were paid 25-30 bucks an hour. But those days are gone.
Everything today is "me, me" - be impressed with me!
Yup - so many couples - like in two people w/ no children or pets - need brand new 2500+ sq ft homes (first home must be brand new - starter home - what is that??); brand new SUVs; go all over the world on vacations; eat out all the time - easy credit has meant easy times and now the house of cards has come down. Today salaries are in the toilet and everything is either pirated or made in China leaving no margins to support the workforce. People now grow up with such a sense of entitlement, offense is taken with any perceived slight.
Our entertainment industry has been on a slippery slide to the bottom of the moral ladder for a long time (possibly beginning in the late 80s with Madonna). There are some things I miss about the 80s/90s - better television, instant cult classics at the movies, and the proliferation of youth tribes - the New Romantics, the punks, the Goths, the hair metallers et al. Youth culture today seems so homogenized, pretentious and fake by comparison. In comparison to the music of the 80s and 90s, today’s music largely sucks. Over-produced, over-commercialized, with that horrible, clean, pink-and-silver crystalline sound and lip-synched vocals. The 80s at least were before American Idol and boy bands ... music still existed. If you wanted decent music in the 00s, you had to look beyond the Top 100 and go indie. That's another thing I miss about the 80s/early 90s - indie was actually indie.
Because the way the world is now, the 2010s are no time for a child to grow up or try to afford college. And if I could get into Doc Emmett Brown's Delorian, I would go back to the 80's in a heartbeat!