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I think the term 'living in the Golden Era' is subjective.
I grew up out in the middle of nowhere on a farm, all the people in my life were people who had lived through the Golden Era. Everybody was old farmers, my parents were the youngest adults for miles. All our neighbors were born between the turn of the century and the 1940's.
My whole life was influenced by these people and what they taught me. I worked on their farms, spent time with them socially, sometimes, even moreso than with my own parents. Those values, those beliefs, and that way of life was and is what I believe in.
I don't know if you know much about rural America, but things don't change as rapidly as they do in the cities. My childhood was much like every other farm kid's childhood in generations prior. The only thing perhaps more modern is that we had the 'farmer five' as it was called. That was all the TV channels available over the rabbit ears.
Though the Golden Era is just a date in text to many folks who can't see past such confines, in many places the world hasn't changed so much from 75 years ago, and why should it? That life still works, if you're willing to work with it.
I grew up out in the middle of nowhere on a farm, all the people in my life were people who had lived through the Golden Era. Everybody was old farmers, my parents were the youngest adults for miles. All our neighbors were born between the turn of the century and the 1940's.
My whole life was influenced by these people and what they taught me. I worked on their farms, spent time with them socially, sometimes, even moreso than with my own parents. Those values, those beliefs, and that way of life was and is what I believe in.
I don't know if you know much about rural America, but things don't change as rapidly as they do in the cities. My childhood was much like every other farm kid's childhood in generations prior. The only thing perhaps more modern is that we had the 'farmer five' as it was called. That was all the TV channels available over the rabbit ears.
Though the Golden Era is just a date in text to many folks who can't see past such confines, in many places the world hasn't changed so much from 75 years ago, and why should it? That life still works, if you're willing to work with it.
Does the modern era truly suck all that badly compared to others, or are we all just escapists and non-conformists? Based on how many of the people posting in this thread never lived for a second in the golden era, I could say the latter hypothesis is most appropriate. Surly there are issues in the modern world that were much less of a concern back in those days (like the growing decline in family life and values, for example), but the Golden Era definitely had its own share of major problems that I'm sure nobody on this forum would want to experience if they had the opportunity to travel back in time to those days.