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Sunday, November 26, 2006
George Will :: Townhall.com Columnist
Circa 1950
by George Will
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


``There was, too, a wonderful simplicity of desire. It was the last time that people would be thrilled to own a toaster or waffle iron.''

-- Bill Bryson

WASHINGTON -- What Thanksgiving is to gluttony, the three days after it are to consumerism -- the main event. So, with Americans launching the Christmas season by storming the stores, let us recall when consumption had an exuberance remembered now only by those who experienced the 1950s.

Bill Bryson remembers. The author of 13 books (e.g., ``A Walk in the Woods'' and ``A Short History of Nearly Everything''), Bryson's latest is ``The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid,'' a memoir of growing up in Des Moines in the '50s, when downtown department stores -- with white-gloved operators in the elevators and pneumatic tubes carrying money and receipts to and from cashiers -- served the pent-up demands of a nation making up for consumption missed during the Depression and World War II.

In 1951, when the average American ate 50 percent more than the average European, Americans, Bryson says, controlled two-thirds of the world's productive capacity, owned 80 percent of the world's electrical goods, produced more than 40 percent of its electricity, 60 percent of its oil and 66 percent of its steel. America's 5 percent of the world's population had more wealth than the other 95 percent, and Americans made almost all of what they consumed: 99.93 percent of new cars sold in 1954 were U.S. brands.

By the end of the '50s, GM was a bigger economic entity than Belgium, and Los Angeles had more cars than did Asia -- cars for a gadget-smitten people, cars with Strato-Streak engines, Strato-Flight Hydra-Matic transmissions and Torsion-Aire suspensions. The 1958 Lincoln Continental was 19 feet long. And before television arrived (in 1950, 40 percent of Americans had never seen a television program; by May 1953 Boston had more televisions than bathtubs) America made almost a million comic books a month.

Consider what was new or not invented then: ballpoint pens, contact lenses, credit cards, power steering, long-playing records, dishwashers, garbage disposals. And remember words now no longer heard: icebox, dime store, bobby socks, panty raid, canasta (a card game). In 1951, a Tennessee youth was arrested on suspicion of narcotics possession. The brown powder was a new product -- instant coffee.

Fifties food was, Bryson reminds us, not exotic: In Iowa, at least, folks did not eat foreign food ``except French toast,'' or bread that was not ``white and at least 65 percent air,'' or ``spices other than salt, pepper and maple syrup,'' or ``any cheese that was not a vivid bright yellow and shiny enough to see your reflection in.'' Continued...

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About The Author
George F. Will is a 1976 Pulitzer Prize winner whose columns are syndicated in more than 400 magazines and newspapers worldwide.
 
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Hoos...ier Daddy, George!
You seem to have your knuckles wrapped firmly around the head of the matter! (Knucklehead!)

But pray tell, when you are called to testify, make sure that you know where the hand's been that's on the good book, eh?


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/27/AR2006112701063.html

50s > 90s
I would advise people to stop using "segregation" and the other social issues to blindly suggest that today must be better than the 50s. Someone might be crass enough to suggest that maybe there's a connection. If you argue that minorities didn't have the freedom they have today, you might well find yourself strengthening the argument of those bad ole pre-desegregation racists who used to predict that what has happened to society today would happen after desegregation.

We desegregated the military after WWII... we also haven't won a war against an equal since. Could it be the desegregation? (actually, desegregation was just one aspect of the social engineering the idiot liberals perpetrated upon our military after WWII).

Nee:
"As for the Auto industry, well, perhaps if the American made cars were produced with quality unlike the Ford I owned. (it needed auto locks replaced,tie-rods, brakes and the transmission before 50K)Competition is what drives our market and they are losing the challenge."

This is a myth, perpetrated like the working-women myth. NOW American car makers make crappy cars. Why? Because in the 70s, Japan, Inc subsidised their auto industry so it could sell cars here cheaper than we could; they built crappy rattletraps with metric parts that got incredible gas mileage and practically sold for a fraction the cost of a real car. So Detroit adjusted, and gave America what they wanted. Now I drive a Mercury Villager... one of those terrible American crappy autos... cept it's really a rebadged Nissan (nee Datsun) Quest. We didn't fight back as a nation, so yet another industry is taken over by the enemy. Similarly, people claim women "have" to work.. well they do, because they DEMANDED inclusion in the workforce, and then the economy adjusted (as I predicted it would when I was a teen).

Man with the big Iron:
"Then, sportsmanship was the norm; there were no fights on the field of play or in the stands. Today, it’s winning by any means regardless of the consequences. "

After WWII, Japan embraced American culture (and was somewhat forced to do so.) We see the result.
After WWII, Americans became increasingly enamored of Eastern culture. They quote Sun Tsu (who's philosophy could be summed up, "win by any means") and sneer at Machiavelli, whose writing was to politics what Sun Tsu's writing was to war. (but he was a mundane European, not an exotic Asian...)

There's a line from a Kipling poem... "... because we know we once were gods...." Compared to the squeaking monkeys we are in the U.S. today, the Americans of the 1950s were gods.

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