• @cogman@lemmy.world
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    1659 months ago

    Here’s what’s changed

    • The market has collapsed into a few companies. That means that monopolistic forces are in nearly full force
    • Labor unions have been severely weekend. In the 60s almost out of fear companies were practicing “corporate charity” to try and keep employees from unionizing. They’ve lost that fear.
    • Regulations around corporate stock price manipulation have been all but eliminated. Buybacks use to be illegal because they allow a company to artificially inflate their stock completely unrelated to the actual performance of the company.
    • Social safety nets have been gutted or underfunded.
    • Public education has been destroyed. We used to have a fairly robust public university system that’s been uber privatized with funding reduced to almost nothing.
    • Hospital systems have consolidated as has insurance agencies which not only drives up the price of medical care, it drives down the wages of doctors and nurses while keeping them as minimally staffed as possible. This translates into terrible care that fucks you over when you need any medical work done.
    • The Picard ManeuverOP
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      1069 months ago

      We’re all sacrificing life experiences so that a very, very, very small percentage of people can live like kings.

      • @cogman@lemmy.world
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        539 months ago

        Pretty much, it’s the very natural consequence of a deregulation and the an-cap philosophy. We’ve seen this before in america during the 1900s. It’s the whole reason Teddy and FDR ended up getting elected.

          • @Asafum@feddit.nl
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            489 months ago

            We can’t because we have corporate propaganda news outlets that will work tirelessly to frame this “new FDR” as a fascist communist racist woke elite conman.

            Pick your outlet and that will determine the words chosen to disparage them.

            Hell just look at the supposed “liberal media” treating Bernie Sanders when he looked to be taking the lead in the primaries, suddenly every story was “Bernie loves Castro! Bernie loves Cuba! Be afraid! He likes communist stuff! Boo! Ahhh! Oh no it’s Bernie!”

            • @thesystemisdown@lemmy.world
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              179 months ago

              Don’t forget the low blow campaign tactic of the “Bernie Bros” - and how I cannot be a feminist if I don’t cast my vote for Clinton. I couldn’t believe how biased NPR was in their coverage and framing of that primary. It caused me to stop being a supporter.

              • @Kalysta@lemmy.world
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                19 months ago

                I’m still proud to be considered a 21 year old russian man named Vladimer online!!! (I am not even close to any of those but my twitter replies insist i’m wrong about that actually)

            • @Kalysta@lemmy.world
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              29 months ago

              In addition to this, the government is working to ban any news outlet that disagrees with them. They’re starting with “foreign” outlets like RT and TikTok, but they’ll soon move to anything that doesn’t toe the party line.

              Democracy is dead.

              • @Asafum@feddit.nl
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                19 months ago

                I can understand literal propaganda outlets, government run news from countries we know have their orgs run with specific orders to run whatever stories would be an obvious thing to want to curtail here. I used to check into RT and all I’d see are anti-american stories or even using Americans to tell an anti-american government story from someone like Abby Martin. I can’t imagine we’d be getting any news from say North Korean news outlets that isn’t specifically meant to manipulate foreign countries citizens.

                Tiktoc isn’t really news, it’s more like YouTube. If anything I’d say assholes like Zuckerberg lobby the government to kill foreign competitors in our market which is a whole nother issue that also sucks :(

    • @danc4498@lemmy.world
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      329 months ago

      First and foremost you should mention the corporate tax cuts. How can corporations afford consolidation and other malicious shit they do? Their tax bill was cut in half. And their executive income tax rate was cut dramatically.

      Rather than paying their employees, they give massive bonuses to their executives and save the rest for buying out competitors or attracting suitors.

      • @cogman@lemmy.world
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        169 months ago

        It’s not so much the corporate tax rate that did it, it’s capital gains tax (and especially how it’s implemented) that’s the big problem.

        The fact that capital gains isn’t treated as regular income tax creates all sorts of really bad incentives. It means that executives are generally primarily paid in stock which means they are incentivized to push the value of that stock up. And since everyone making those decisions are also primarily paid in stock they’ll authorize things like stock buybacks to boost their own personal wealth.

        5 regulations I’d make to fix this problem.

        1. No executives can be paid with equity.

        2. The maximum salary can not be more than 10x the lowest salary in a company.

        3. Tax capital gains as regular income.

        4. Bring back the 90% top income tax bracket

        5. Introduce a wealth tax. Perhaps 3% for a networth over 1 billion.

    • 4grams
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      9 months ago

      So, republicans happened.

      Edit- before you tar and feather me, democrats went along. But all of those have been articles of faith in the GOP.

      • @cogman@lemmy.world
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        269 months ago

        I mostly blame Reagan and Nixon. They were the harbingers of modern republican governmental stupidity. Nixon courted the racists out of the democrat party and Regan push dumbass deregulation. Bigotry + being the whipping boys for rich people is basically the only principles republicans stand on today.

      • TurtleJoe
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        9 months ago

        Civil Rights happened.

        Once it became clear to racist whites that Black Americans would have full access to the social programs that they enjoyed, they decided that they’d rather burn all those social programs to the ground before they’d share them. This is the basis of the modern Republican party, so you weren’t wrong.

        Incidentally, the scenario in this original post was never true for almost all black Americans.

    • @some_guy
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      189 months ago

      While all of this is true, I’ll also add that this was an unrepeatable condition: WWII gutted Europe and the US was untouched. All of perks of the past society were part of an unsustainable economic bubble. USA citizens have never quite realized that.

      • @NounsAndWords@lemmy.world
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        199 months ago

        The only part I would disagree with you on is that in the past 80 years productivity has grown by a huge margin, and if that translated into increased wages (as opposed to increased corporate profits) as it once did I think that quality of life would not be so unsustainable.

        • @beebarfbadger@lemmy.world
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          69 months ago

          The richest 1% own almost half the world’s wealth. The hoarders have mostly dug in and ensured that their hoarding is legal, will stop at nothing, is easier than ever, and is well defended and unopposed.

          We live in the joke where the billionaire takes 99 cookies from the table, leaves one and says “Careful, peon, the [member of the minority you dislike] is after your cookie”.

    • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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      69 months ago

      While I agree with all of that and more, the world has gotten much more complex over the years. It’s not a bad thing to try to raise the bar on minimum education for everyone.

      Also, for the part of it due to global outsourcing … there’s only so much protectionism can give you without ruining importer/exporters. A better approach is to try to bring a more educated workforce than offered by cheap third world labor

    • Neato
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      29 months ago

      Regulations around corporate stock price manipulation have been all but eliminated. Buybacks use to be illegal because they allow a company to artificially inflate their stock completely unrelated to the actual performance of the company.

      In that case, once a company sold stock to investors, they could never recoup it then? The only way for that to happen would be a single person or group organized to buy up a lot to get a controlling stake?

    • @Wanderer@lemm.ee
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      -19 months ago

      Effects ofWW2

      Immigration

      Lack of training in general.

      Offshoring.

      People buying loads if crap. Like seriously how many coats did your grandparents have in their adult life. Probably about the same you have in your closet right now, maybe less. Not to mention TV, phones, exotic food.

      The housing market is fucked because land is undervalued.

      Oil? (I might be wrong on this)

      Somethings need to change but there are some things missed here.

      • tb_
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        59 months ago

        Coats, and devices for that matter, used to be built to last and be repairable. But if your customer consumer never needs to buy another product from you now that wouldn’t make much business sense would it?

        • @Wanderer@lemm.ee
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          09 months ago

          It would if you stole everyone else’s business and that’s what businesses used to compete on.

          But consumers want fast fashion. They want cheap clothing and it doesn’t matter if it only last 5 years instead of 30 because they are going to throw it out after 1 anyway.

          Consumers have forced the hand of businesses in this case. People want cheap more than they want anything else.

          • tb_
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            19 months ago

            Personally I don’t feel that way, but my personal experience isn’t a particularly large sample size.

            Consumers may want various things, but those wants aren’t created in a vacuum. Otherwise advertising would be pointless.

  • Flying Squid
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    589 months ago

    I’ve pointed this out before-

    On TV in the 1980s, Tom and Roseanne were out of work constantly, but they owned a house and they never lost it.

    On TV in the 1980s, Al Bundy supported his housewife and two kids on a shoe salesman’s salary.

    You know what the criticism was? It wasn’t that they owned a house. It was “their house is too big for what they make.”

    I don’t remember anyone thinking it was ridiculous that Al Bundy was a homeowner. Because of course he would own a home.

    Even renting and even in the 90s… no one said that it would be impossible to live in Manhattan and work in a cafe like on Friends. The criticism was that the apartment was too big. The idea that it was something you could do was not in question.

    Yes, it’s all TV and it’s all fantasy, but the public reaction to it should show you something.

    • @darkpanda@lemmy.ca
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      189 months ago

      Simpsons did it too. That was part of Frank Grimes’ (Or Grimey, as he liked to be called) criticism of Homer.

      • shastaxc
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        139 months ago

        I should hope that a technician at a nuclear power plant could afford that house. Sure, he was an idiot, but he still did the job.

        • @Bear_pile@lemm.ee
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          29 months ago

          @┬──┬◡ノ(° -°ノ)depending on which episode you see grandpa either won the home in a crooked game show or he sold the farm to help Homer pay for it

    • The Picard ManeuverOP
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      159 months ago

      Because of course he would own a home

      This hits hard. It was pretty much accepted that as long as you generally had your life together enough to work a full time job, you could save up and buy a home.

  • @LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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    559 months ago

    This will sound ridiculous to most people:

    I didn’t go to school after the 8th grade. I dropped out for several reasons, but even without lying, I talked my way into a very good career in IT. There was no database of schooling and I was hired on my personal merits, then I built a user experience department before that was actually a thing.

    Within a few years, I was responsible for hiring but couldn’t hire anyone like myself. I wasn’t allowed to even consider anyone without a college degree, so I would have had to reject myself.

    I’m not sure where I’m going with this. That was 2002, and now in 2024, we’re rejecting people who might be awesome at their job (not to toot my horn, but I was very good at what I did and won industry awards) because they can’t afford to get a degree, as I couldn’t.

    Most industries are pay to play now, and you can’t even break in by being exceptional nowadays. We’re trapping people out of what they’re great at and would love to do just because they were born into poverty.

    Imagine the gifts we’re suppressing and squandering.

    • @Eximius@lemmy.world
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      119 months ago

      Thank you for sharing :)

      I think many will agree the bureaucracy and corporate life is killing a lot of things, because of absolute assholes in management positions. But without written out experiences like yours, it is just unsubstantiated ideological hate.

    • @KevonLooney@lemm.ee
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      99 months ago

      It’s more than “you need a degree” now. Some jobs require a undergraduate “business” degree, as if that means anything. This by definition excludes people who get harder degrees.

      So you will see entry level financial roles going to people who have taken a few “leadership” (handshaking) courses and basic accounting. While someone with an English or Sociology degree (who might actually know how to write an email) is rejected.

      Don’t get me started on internships. Getting coffee every day, handing out mail, and doing a 2 week office furniture inventory are not indicators of a promising future.

      The main problem is, businesses literally don’t know how to hire. If you know what skills you need, you can find someone in a day. You can literally set up a folding table at the metro entrance and find 5 good interview candidates.

    • @KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      59 months ago

      Yeah, I’ve noticed a shift. Even 5 years ago I hardly ever saw the college degree requirement for software development, and if it ever came up my yea experience nipped the question in the bud. These days, with over a decade of experience, I am getting automated rejections because I don’t have a diploma. I have been contacted and actively turned down over the phone after clarifying that I do not have a degree (many AI systems read my resume as having a degree in “degree” for some reason.)

      I’ve put out hundreds of applications, and have had a handful of interviews.

      The degree means nothing. Someone going to school for development doesn’t make them a good developer, it means they test well. My decade+ in the industry with multiple completed projects however…

    • @FriendBesto@lemmy.ml
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      9 months ago

      We can’t. Unless you want another world war, kill tens of millions, and destroy most of Western Europe, have Nazis, and nuke a country. Not to mention billions less on the planet.

      This is what eventually pushed for the Marshall Plan that did help Europe and fuel the reconstruction that followed in the USA and elsewhere. Like the boomers lived through a period of time that was quite far, far from ‘normal.’ Only because it happened it does not mean that it was historically normal, nor does the remove the nuances of the time period, both the so-called good along with the horrible.

      Problem seems to be that the lady on OP’s post has the Historical knowledge and nuance of a toddler. Is that the average education system in the USA? Because if so, holy shit.

      • @buddascrayon@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Back then there was this thing called the marginal tax rate which taxed the extremely wealthy 90%.

        Current proposals for a marginal tax rate on anyone making over 10 million dollars is 70% and the billionaires of this country are using their wealth to convince the stupidest of the lower classes that such a thing will hurt them and not just the billionaires.

    • @JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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      -179 months ago

      Sure. We’ll just have to make sure that women and minorities can’t get good jobs, and we’ve gotta get most of Europe leveled by war. Then we also need a wildly progressive president

      But then it’s easy.

      • @Bloodyhog@lemmy.world
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        -19 months ago

        This time it has to be China also, not only Europe (and mostly not Europe, actually). Then, if the retaliatory nuke does not destroy everyone, you can again have the privilege of feeding off the rest of the world for a decade or 2 with no competition. I wonder if any kind of tech breakthrough can lead to the same advantage that could be shared by a nation and not only a few rich. Seems the answer is no. And the minorities issue is unlikely to fly again, as white people are no longer the overwhelming majority, the mix is way more diverse.

        • @Chetzemoka@lemmy.world
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          49 months ago

          Imagine hearing ad nauseum about the pending healthcare and manufacturing crisis that will be caused by the retirement of the boomers and thinking there won’t be anything for people to do for work in the future because some things are automated.

  • @nednobbins@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    We used to see these “good old days” posts from boomers. They mostly seem to have stopped since they mostly learned that this was a fantasy not shared by most people. It also ignores that most people today don’t actually want to live under the conditions above. In 1960 only about half of all households had washing machines. This idyllic fantasy ignores that some lucky ladies were making this possibly with hours of hard domestic labor per day. It also ignores that huge economic boost the US got after WWII for being the only country that still had intact industry.

    edit: typo

    • Liz
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      269 months ago

      And you’re ignoring that Regan et al went after the unions and undermined your ability to negotiate against your much more powerful employer.

      But I do agree, a lot of people forget that, while stress and uncertainty are up for a lot of people, material wealth is also way up. The thing is, it’s an unnecessary trade-off. We could have an abundance of security in all areas of our lives.

      • @nednobbins@lemm.ee
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        -59 months ago

        As much as I think “whataboutism” is an overused word, this is a perfect example of it. It’s not germane to anything in my post. I pointed out that the “good old days” claim in OP is a myth. A claim of, “so and so made things worse” has nothing to do with my statement.

        While Reagan was president, one of my grandparents was in a union. They still had to use a toilet in the hall that they shared with the neighbor. They couldn’t afford a car. They didn’t have a TV. None of those things were available because all the factories in their country got bombed. At the same time my other set of grandparents paid taxes but never got to vote. They lived in a colony of the democracy-loving British but since they were natives they were second class citizens.

        Pretending that the world was some paradise until Reagan and the neocons showed up is just willful ignorance.

        • Liz
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          49 months ago

          Maybe I didn’t acknowledge strongly enough that you’re 100% in saying that shit sucked back then. Shit sucks now, too. They just suck in different ways unique to each time.

          The killing the unions comment was in reference to the idyllic income OP is nostalgic for, since they are part of the reason such a situation was possible. Sorry if that felt like “whatsboutism,” it wasn’t intended to be that way.

          • @nednobbins@lemm.ee
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            29 months ago

            That makes sense.

            I get frustrated at frequent oversimplifications. Reagan and the neocons certainly made things worse but they were a few out of many factors.

            Even if we imagined a world where we have a bunch of Bernie Sanders all over government there are limits to what they can do. Strong unions in the US wouldn’t have done anything to stop Asia from industrializing, Europe from rebuilding its economy or the rest of the developing world from trying to move out of agrarian economies. When the US car companies were the only game in town there was a lot of excess that could be spread around to workers. Once a bunch of other countries started offering cars it put more and more pressure on the US companies to spend more money on quality and charge less for finished products. Over here we got used to a war induced monopoly and convinced ourselves that’s “normal” or that it’s simply the result of democracy or American ingenuity.

            If we actually want to improve the state of regular people we’ll have much better success if we’re honest with ourselves about both the present and history.

            • Liz
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              29 months ago

              Yup, totally agree, and I think the improved standards of living in those areas are absolutely a good thing, even if it’s changed the way the American economy works. It was never going to be static anyhow. China is starting to produce higher quality products and their standard of living is increasing, too. Their low-end labor has moved to Vietnam, among other places, and hopefully they develop their own mature economy in due time.

              I don’t think a highschool education is enough to have a high standard of living in the American economy, that fact was pretty much always going to be true with the way the economy has changed. Still, the bottom has fallen out and there’s little reason it should have outside of the union busting.

              I suppose, had the American unions stayed strong this whole time, this meme might still have been produced, with people still remembering a time when less education was enough to climb higher on the economic ladder.

    • @Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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      39 months ago

      In 1960 only about half of all households had washing machines. This idyllic fantasy ignores that some lucky ladies were making this possibly with hours of hard domestic labor per day.

      Being fair here, the absence of a washing machine in the home does not necessarily mean doing laundry by hand. Laundromats have been around since the 30s.

    • htrayl
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      9 months ago

      Also that the average house was like 1/3 the size of new homes today and a large portion of families had one car or fewer.

      • @michaelmrose@lemmy.world
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        69 months ago

        I would happily buy a below average size house instead of living in a below average sized apartment if that were an option.

      • @nednobbins@lemm.ee
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        19 months ago

        There were many many things that were worse about the “good old days”.

        Cars sucked, phones sucked, computers sucked, houses were smaller, appliances sucked (if you had them at all), clothes sucked (yes there were some cool outfits but they were expensive, uncomfortable and high maintenance).

        It’s not like work conditions were universally awesome either. Consider how many women were regularly getting raped as part of their job and we didn’t prosecute the Cosbys and Weinsteins of the world until recently. Today, if your boss sends you a harassing text, you go public with it. Back then, if you complained about your boss calling you “sugartits” and copped a feel, your options were basically STFU or GTFO (because you almost certainly can’t prove it).

        If we want to strive for a better future, we’re more likely to succeed if we avoid romanticizing the past.

        • HACKthePRISONS
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          -19 months ago

          cars, phones, computers, and appliances were serviceable. that’s something we can lament changing.

          • @nednobbins@lemm.ee
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            09 months ago

            Sort of.

            Some people could service cars, if they had the space, equipment and skills to do it.

            For much of that period the people who could afford phones were not the ones who knew how to fix them. Part of it is that phones do more now. If you get an old flip phone it’s basically bulletproof and you don’t need to worry about repairing it (although you can typically swap out broken pieces). The problem is that you’ll be rockin an ancient flip phone. Once you start adding a bunch of stuff (capacitive touch screen, wifi, camera, bluetooth, etc) it’s gonna be harder to fix.

            My desktop today is designed to be more serviceable than early computers were. I don’t need to solder anything, parts just fit together and there’s far better standards support. Did you ever have the joy of messing with autoexec.bat and config.sys just to get your mouse working? Do you remember what a PITA it was getting an old Soundblaster to work?

            I’ve had a guy come out to repair by boiler, my dishwasher and (twice) my washing machine. Appliances are still serviceable but (just like in the old days) it usually involves calling someone.

  • @merc@sh.itjust.works
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    319 months ago

    It was the norm for a brief period after World War 2, and only for the US, largely because it was the only country to get out of WWII without sustaining any real damage.

    Pre-WWII was the great depression, where a large fraction of people without a high-school education were out of work. Life was miserable. People who were kids during the great depression and are in their 80s / 90s now might still stash food around the house because they’re still afraid of going hungry. This eventually resulted in the New Deal which completely transformed the country.

    Pre Great Depression, jobs were dangerous, housing was crowded, widows moved in with their adult children, old people moved back in with their families, people paid 1/3 of their salaries just for food (and the food sucked). Women might have only rarely worked outside the house, but the housework they did was extensive: no washing machines, no dishwashers, no refrigerator, no running water, many homes didn’t even have a stove. Making or mending clothes was a near constant job. Clothing was also very expensive by modern standards, and was built for durability, not comfort. And that’s for the lucky “white” people. Non-white people had it much worse.

    A good life with only one breadwinner is not typical, and never has been. Maybe it should be, but don’t think that the post-WWII US experience is typical.

    • @michaelmrose@lemmy.world
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      149 months ago

      If you go back far enough the primary occupations become gathering edible plants and killing animals. The US didn’t get less productive per hour of labor between 1950 and 2024 the wealthy just started accruing a lot more of the benefits of our productivity.

      • @merc@sh.itjust.works
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        19 months ago

        The US didn’t get less productive per hour of labor between 1950 and 2024

        The point is that post-WWII is not the “normal” state of things. It was largely the result of a war that devastated every other major economy in the world, reducing competition from other countries. That gave the US a huge advantage. In addition there were strong government reforms from the pre-war depression-era time and reforms from during the war that curbed the excesses of the ultra-rich. The depression-era policies and the war-time policies also had the government playing a much more active role in the economy. Finally, this happened in a period where the world was much less “globalized” and relied on exploiting developing countries to a much greater extent than today.

        Unless there’s another devastating war that destroys every other major economy in the world, the US is never going to get the post-WWII advantage back. That was a big part of the reason a guy with a high-school education could support a family of 5 immediately after WWII. (Also, that mostly was the case for white guys, because the US post-WWII was a very racist country where the things like the GI Bill, which allowed veterans to get very cheap houses, was unavailable to non-whites.

        The post-war period was one when the United Fruit Company convinced US presidents to orchestrate a coup in Guatemala in 1954 to remove the democratically elected president and install one who was more friendly to US international businesses. This meant cheap bananas for the US, big profits to US companies, and political violence and instability for Guatemala. So, the high-school educated guy supporting a family of 5 on his own was partially made possible by the exploitation of other countries by US-based businesses. I don’t think anybody on the left wants that era to come back again.

        But, it’s possible to get the government to play a more active role in the economy again. For instance, in 1946 the top tax bracket was effectively 91%. Today it’s 37%. Then there’s enforcing anti-competitive statutes, going after all the monopolies, duopolies and cartels currently squeezing every American resident. Ideally, there would also be reforms to copyright laws that removed power from the entertainment cartel and handed it back to artists, or shortened copyright terms handing the fruits of copyright to the people.

        A (white) guy with a high school education supporting a family of 5 in reasonable comfort was a historical anomaly. It relied on some good things like the government acting in the interest of regular people, taxing the super rich, and regulating large businesses. It relied on some shitty things, like the government helping out US-based businesses by orchestrating coups in other countries and otherwise aiding in the exploitation of developing countries. And it relied on some historical quirks, like the US being the only major participant to escape from WWII unscathed.

        • @michaelmrose@lemmy.world
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          39 months ago

          Increasing productivity per labor hour invested is sufficient for everyone to have a 1950s life because we are in fact many times more productive per hour invested than 1950. This more than balances the unusual characteristics of the 50s

          • @merc@sh.itjust.works
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            09 months ago

            Increasing productivity per labor hour invested

            How are you measuring that?

            for everyone to have a 1950s life

            Does this mean no Internet, no computers, no TV, or maybe a small black and white TV with only 3 channels, no washing machine, probably no refrigerator, one telephone for the entire family to share, etc.?

      • @Bloodyhog@lemmy.world
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        -19 months ago

        That was probably a good period, though it could sustain only a few % of the current world population. Now that we have billions (due to tech development, though mostly of tech you would call very-very low tech, like plow), only mass production is capable of supporting the population. And that means all kinds of things, including the extreme wealth concentration, which is only getting worse with further tech advances. Inequality is quite likely to become the real reason of the new world war that would trim population to more sustainable levels, and a new “golden age” of recovering. For these who survived. Fucking cycles…

  • @BakerBagel@midwest.social
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    309 months ago

    To be clear, this was for white (Irish and Italians don’t count) men, and many black, hispanic, and native families could not afford to live the American dream.

    • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      639 months ago

      I think you don’t realize how recent OP is talking about…

      Fuck man, even the 1990s a single income household with 3 kids could be comfortable.

      You’re talking about Irish and Italian Americans like you think it was the 1890s…

      • The Picard ManeuverOP
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        269 months ago

        Exactly, I remember this from when I was a kid! We’re not talking about pre-industrial America, pre-civil rights movement America, or even pre cell phones America.

        This is relatively recent, and it’s a tragedy that it’s so normalized that younger gens would assume otherwise.

        • NegativeNull
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          179 months ago

          My father dropped out of high school, got a job a HP as a line worker (manufacturing oscilloscopes), got married, had 6 kids, 3-4 cars (depending on needs), and a house to fit all those kids. This was in the late 70s-90s (when the last kid graduated high school). Mother didn’t work. We lived comfortably (not wealthy by any means).

          My wife and I have 4 degrees between us, both work full time, have a single kid. We live about as well as my parents did.

          • The Picard ManeuverOP
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            89 months ago

            The middle class dream! It absolutely feels like the bar to clear to be able to achieve this is significantly higher now.

            Unless you’re already wealthy, you have to pick one or more from the following:

            • delay starting a family until more secure
            • both parents work
            • multi-generational household
            • living farther from major cities
            • having fewer kids than you might otherwise
            • NegativeNull
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              59 months ago

              add

              • College Degree/s (even when many/most jobs don’t really need it) with likely student loans
        • Bo7a
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          9 months ago

          I supported a family of 4 on a single income from being a grunt in an autobody shop in 1999. We didn’t live the high life, but we had a house, a paid off car, and took in-country vacations at least once a year.

      • @HowManyNimons@lemmy.world
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        49 months ago

        The Simpsons seemed realistic in the 90s, with one shlob working as a chair moistener able to maintain a family of 5 in a four-bedroom house.

      • @BakerBagel@midwest.social
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        -29 months ago

        The 90’s were choke full of their own issues and weren’t some ideallic past. You could still get fired from a job if they found out you were gay, violent crime was at an all time high, and the 90’s was the peak of outsourcing away all of the jobs that used to be able to support a family. Hell, a lot if country clubs only started allowing Jews in as members 20 years ago. The days of single income homes were more or less gone by the 70’s. Thats why we see a massive spike in women joining the workforce then, since they couldn’t afford to be stay at home moms anymore.

        Now women can’t afford to work because childcare costs as much as they would make at a job.

      • @yesman@lemmy.world
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        -99 months ago

        The 90s was just the declining slope from the 50s-70s post war economic boom. But even at the height of that boom, minorities and women were totally excluded. The subtext of “it was stolen from you”, the “you” is white men.

        Not only were the “good old days” oppressive for minorities, women, and LGBT, but also massive environmental degradation; Monroe Doctrine military adventurism; a government murderously hostile to left politics; all under the threat of nuclear extinction. Frankly this nostalgia is the lefty version of MAGA, and it’s frustrating to see progressives looking backward.

        • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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          159 months ago

          Mate…

          They were explicitly talking about economics, and nothing else.

          I think the reason you’re so upset, is you don’t understand what people are talking about about.

          Like, if I saw you on the beach and said “weather’s nice today isn’t it?”

          And you started screaming at me about how pandas are endangered.

          You’re not wrong, just not relevant to the conversation.

          At no point has anyone said that a single point of time was 100% perfect.

        • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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          199 months ago

          Naw.

          Institutional racism exists still.

          But in 2024 economically speaking it worse for all of us, regardless of race.

          Like, if you were just making a dumb joke. Fine, whatever.

          But if you honestly don’t understand this, I can spare some time to help you

            • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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              149 months ago

              They said Irish and Italians weren’t considered “white” at the time…

              That isn’t the 1990s which is the period referred to in OPs post.

              But whatever racial/ethnic group you’re talking about, they were better off economically in the 1990s than the 2020s.

              So whatever they were saying, was wrong. It’s just a matter of how they’re wrong depending on what they meant. We won’t know what they meant till they clarify.

              So I have no idea why you rushed to make an uninformed “joke” like you did.

              But the more you type, the less productive this looks like it’ll be.

      • @BakerBagel@midwest.social
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        -59 months ago

        And there were successful blackmen in the US from 1820- segregation. American history is full of social classes based on race and ethnicity with white protestant men on top. Irish, Italian, and Polish Catholics faced less discrimination than their black counter parts, but they still faced red lining, discrimination in jobs and getting loans and had a massive economic disadvantage. Obviously they managed to raise families, otherwise we wouldn’t have those ethnic groups in America today.

        America has always been built in inequality, its just that the WASP middle class used to have have an underclass to feel like they were better than. Now there isn’t even a middle class because the wealthy have taken everything.

        • @UsernameHere@lemmings.world
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          29 months ago

          So your original statement is wrong:

          To be clear, this was for white (Irish and Italians don’t count) men, and many black, hispanic, and native families could not afford to live the American dream.

          Because my Irish great grandfather very much lived the American dream. That is because this statement you made is also wrong:

          America has always been built in inequality

          The richest Americans had a tax rate of 91% in the 1960s. That number has plummeted since and income inequality has gotten to where it is today as a result.

          Source

    • @psud@aussie.zone
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      19 months ago

      My mother worked to avoid boredom when my sister and I were at school. Good thing too, since it put her in a good position when everything but wages and computers got enormously more expensive starting in the '90s

  • ivanafterall
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    289 months ago

    They supported a family of 5 and a whole additional secret family in the city, somehow!

    • @SarcasticMan@lemmy.world
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      149 months ago

      Wait…we are supposed to support our secret families? Shit, I thought you just got married had kids, and then moved to another state and changed your name when it got too hard lol.

  • @fidodo@lemmy.world
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    289 months ago

    When it really hit me was when I found out how much my girlfriend’s parents paid for their house a few miles from the beach in San Diego on blue collar salaries. It was 1/5th the cost adjusted for inflation that it is now. If houses were still that price I could easily afford 2 on my salary, but instead I can’t afford 1

      • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        I don’t get it how this post is behing downvoted: understating Offical Inflation mathematically yields bigger Official GDP numbers due to how the Offical Inflation is used to deflate Nominal GDP to produce the supposedly inflation-free Real GDP which is the official one.

        It doesn’t take much to find politicians boasting about growing GDP, so there is huge political pressure to make that number high in ways which aren’t obvious (and tweaking the basket of good and services used to calculate inflation is quite a subtle way to do it). It’s not by chance that some countries (for example the UK) some years ago - basically since the house price bubble in there started going - even started using and Inflation Index that doesn’t include house prices (I’m not quite sure if that’s the case in the US).

        It also fits the observeable effects: a salary in the 2020s that can barelly pay for a small appartment and food, which using the inflation indexes is inflation adjusted to produce a supposedly equivalent salary in the 60s, yields something that back then paid for a house, a car and all the expenses of family of 5, something that can only be explained by the inflation adjustment being wrong (if it was right, it would roughly buy the same now and back then) hence the inflation indexes are wrong and over the years have been much more wrong on the side of understating inflation than on the other side (and always erring in the same direction cannot be explained by the normal error in the method).

        Mind you, this is not massive rigging of inflation with 10%+ “adjustments”, it’s more 1% here, 0.5% there, which over decades adds up to a 100%+ cummulative error.

  • 100_kg_90_de_belin
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    269 months ago

    I would be content with not having the housing market cannibalized by AirBnB and real estate companies, a paycheck that isn’t eaten up by greedflation and a passable healthcare (I live in Europe, so we have public healthcare, at least nominally).

  • @inclementimmigrant@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    I worked the factories in the late eighties, most had spouses that worked, most rented or bought a single wide, we all barely scraped by and were just a disaster away from being broke broke.

    Sure you had a few, and I emphasize a few, guys who made decent bank, but they were specialists and most people were clamoring to be their right hand person to take over when they retired or quit.

    That wasn’t the bulk of us.

    We didn’t own that comparable sized house.

    We didn’t take vacations, we visited family in another state.

    We didn’t drive a nice or a lot of times even decent cars.

    We on the line didn’t support a family of five comfortably, we all fucking struggled to make ends meet but we could keep modest for on the table and a roof over our heads.

    That family of five on a high schoolers education was always a bit of a myth but I will say it was certainly better back then than today, at least there was abundant factory work that paid better than the minimum.

      • cheesepotatoes
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        159 months ago

        Ya, more like 50’s - 70’s. A huge amount of factory work in the US had already been offshored or started offshoring in the 80’s

          • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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            39 months ago

            I don’t think anyone promised 2500 square feet and 2 cars in the garage?

            That said my parents were both government employees their entire career. Made it up into the gs 11-13 area which isn’t too hard to do. 2,500 square foot house, 2 cars, 2 kids playing travel sports, and a deck that was probably another 200 square feet. That was the early 90’s in Maryland, where all the civil servants live. Not some remote area of Montana. They’ve also said there’s no way they could buy that house with the gs pay charts and housing prices from about 2005 on.

            So even your exaggerated example was not out of reach.

    • @stringere@leminal.space
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      129 months ago

      That’s because the meme references a time earlier than the 1980s. 1950-1970 or so would be the bubble of time where this was still possible. Union declines up to 1980 aided Reagonomics in thoroughly fucking everyone from middle incomes down.

    • @bitwaba@lemmy.world
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      Yeah, things have always been tough on the working class no matter how you slice it.

      It used to be when a man’s wife had a baby, all he got was a free beer after work with the boys before he went to see his wife in the hospital.

      We’ve come a long way, but we’ve got much farther to go. The 50s-70s aren’t some kind of magical economic utopia. Backwards is not forwards.

    • Neuromancer
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      19 months ago

      I would say a complete myth but they didn’t have cellphones, everyone didn’t have their own room, etc. it was a very different lifestyle.

      Grandpa had five kids, the girls had one room, the boys had the other. Three in one room. Two in the other.

      Everyone wore hand me downs and my grandpa worked a second job part time.

  • @SexWithDogs@infosec.pub
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    9 months ago

    Poverty in first world countries is a new phenomenon that has only emerged in the past 10 to 20 years.

    Sarcasm aside… yes, the working class is still being exploited. It didn’t take Twitter tier propaganda to say it.

    • @geissi@feddit.de
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      169 months ago

      Poverty in first world countries is a new phenomenon

      It’s not new, it just had been fought back considerably in the last century or so.

  • @Num10ck@lemmy.world
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    199 months ago

    and those families used to take long road trips together for weeks as a vacation. and their clothes lasted decades.