Has America changed
for the better, or has it changed for the worse?
By Michael
Snyder, on April 5th, 2016
Is America
a better place today than it was back in 1956?
Of course many Americans living right now couldn’t even imagine a world
without cell phones, Facebook or cable television, but was life really so bad
back then? 60 years ago, families would
actually spend time on their front porches and people would actually have
dinner with their neighbors. 60 years
ago, cars were still cars, football was still football and it still meant
something to be an American. In our
country today, it is considered odd to greet someone as they are walking down
the street, and if someone tries to be helpful it is usually because they want
something from you. But things were very
different in the middle of the last century.
Men aspired to be gentlemen and women aspired to be ladies, and nobody
had ever heard of “bling”, “sexting” or
“twerking”. Of course life was far from
perfect, but people actually had standards and they tried to live up to them.
So how did
it all go so wrong?
Could it be
possible that life in America
peaked back then and we have been in decline ever since?
Before you
answer, I want to share with you a list of comparisons between
life in America in 1956 and life in America in 2016
In 1956, John Wayne, Elvis Presley and Marilyn Monroe were
some of the biggest stars in the entertainment world.
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In 2016, our young people look up to “stars” like Miley
Cyrus, Justin Bieber and Lady Gaga.
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In 1956, Americans were watching I Love Lucy and The Ed
Sullivan Show on television.
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In 2016, the major television networks are offering us
trashy shows such as Mistresses and Lucifer.
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In 1956, you could buy a first-class stamp for just 3
cents.
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In 2016, a first-class stamp will cost you 49 cents.
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In 1956, gum chewing and talking in class were some of the
major disciplinary problems in our schools.
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In 2016, many of our public schools have been equipped
with metal detectors because violence has gotten so far out of control.
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In 1956, children went outside and played when they got
home from school.
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In 2016, our parks and our playgrounds are virtually
empty and we have the highest childhood obesity rate on the entire planet.
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In 1956, if a kid skinned his knee he was patched up and
sent back outside to play.
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In 2016, if a kid skins his knee he is likely to be
shipped off to the emergency room.
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In 1956, “introducing solids” to a baby’s diet may have
meant shoving a piece of pizza down her throat.
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In 2016, we have “attachment parenting” which advocates
treating children like babies almost until they reach puberty.
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In 1956, seat belts and bicycle helmets were considered to
be optional pieces of equipment, and car safety seats were virtually unknown.
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In 2016, millions of us are afraid to leave our homes
for fear that something might happen to us, and if something does happen we
slap lawsuits on one another at the drop of a hat.
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In 1956, many Americans regularly left their cars and the
front doors of their homes unlocked.
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In 2016, many Americans live with steel bars on their
windows and gun sales are at all-time record highs.
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In 1956, about 5 percent of all babies in
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In 2016, more than 40 percent of all babies in
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In 1956, one income could support an entire middle class
family.
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In 2016, approximately one-third of all Americans don’t
make enough money to even cover the basics even though both parents have
entered the workforce in most households.
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In 1956, redistribution of wealth was considered to be
something that “the communists” did.
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In 2016, the federal government systematically
redistributes our wealth, and two communists are fighting for the Democratic
nomination.
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In 1956, there were about 2 million people living in
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In 2016, there are only about 688,000 people living in
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In 1956, millions of Americans dreamed of moving out to
sunny
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In 2016, millions of Americans are moving out of
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In 1956, television networks would not even show husbands
and wives in bed together.
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In 2016, there is so much demand for pornography that
there are more than 4 million adult websites on the Internet, and they get
more traffic than Netflix, Amazon and Twitter combined.
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In 1956, the American people had a great love for the U.S.
Constitution.
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In 2016, “constitutionalists” are considered to be
potential terrorists by the
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In 1956, people from all over the world wanted to come to
the
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In 2016, 48 percent of all
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In 1956, the
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In 2016, the
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And there
is one more thing that I would like to share with you before I wrap up this
article.
This is
what the New York
skyline looked like on March 31st, 1956 … (see picture in the link)
And this is the kind of thing that we are seeing displayed on
the Empire State Building
these days (in 2016) … (see picture in the link)
For those
that don’t know, that is an image of the Hindu goddess of death, time and
destruction known as Kali. And next month a reproduction of the
48-foot-tall arch that stood in front of the Temple
of Baal in Palmyra ,
Syria is going up in Times Square .
So now that
you have seen what I have to share, what do you think?
Has America changed for the better, or
has it changed for the worse?
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