60’s/70’s for me.No thank you. I’ll start here. I wouldn’t mind living the 80s and 90s over again
60’s/70’s for me.No thank you. I’ll start here. I wouldn’t mind living the 80s and 90s over again
Have you noticed that the vast majority of deaths before about 1930 were in the winter months? I have also seen lots of old graves where a 16 to 20 year old mother and a newborn baby were buried side by side.Walking through the old cemeteries here, many kids died before they were one year old. The local cemetery has a listing of how everyone met their end, disease was a big factor.
One of my grandfathers was born in 1894 and died in 1993 at 99 years old. Farmed with horses, steam engine, and later a tractor. Did road grader work for the county in the 1950’s and 1960’s.Many of us had parents or grandparents who used horses, kerosene lamps, an outhouse and had friends and family who died in childhood. Childbirth was life threatening for mother and child, simple infections killed or crippled, and little medical things would plague you for life. I got those stories first hand. As great as the draw of simpler political and social times is I'll stay here with modern medicine, the grid. my 4x4 and live the past thru my 18th and 19th century arms. However knowing how to get by if the system goes down will be priceless. As the Scout's say "Be prepared"
I wouldn’t mind going back for a month or two, but that would be about it.Even with all the dangers to face, it would be hard to pass up on the true freedom of those times.
No building permits, hunting and fishing licenses, taxes-especially property tax (govt rent). Just to name a couple.
Seeing the amount of game and unspoiled and undeveloped nature. Herds of buffalo, salmon runs in damn near every stream. The American Chestnut trees still alive. Seeing indians in their traditional ways.
Id would go. I might die fast but id die in a real “Free Country”.
When I was a younger kid, we lived in a very small 4 room house with no running water. Had a outhouse, though. A two-holer, no less!One of my grandfathers was born in 1894 and died in 1993 at 99 years old. Farmed with horses, steam engine, and later a tractor. Did road grader work for the county in the 1950’s and 1960’s.
When he was in his mid-90’s I asked him what was the best invention to come along in his life. After about 3 seconds, he said that cars after about 1925 were good, penicillin, TV’s and telephones were good, “ But when we got that electricity, by God, THAT WAS ALL RIGHT ! Really changed things for the better “.
I think 1967 was the last good year - after that things started going to heck. I was 20 years old, the cars were fast, the girls were pretty, and there were no computers
Not to be smart but I had a good friend who was the same way. When he finally went for the pain in his back he found out he had advanced prostate cancer. If you're all alone in the world you can think like that but at 68 he left behind a widow. For me the big "C" wasn't about me, it was about the effect on my family. For years I got by with " you can pee a hole in the snow and you're not blind" company and FAA physicals but as you get older you need more. Getting slapped in the face with cancer is bad enough, finding out when it's too late to do something is even worse. YMMVLet's see....medical advantages..... well doctors giving pills rather than telling their patients they have to stop eating the junk they eat. No more house calls, or that exercise and diet will cure the majority of ailments Americans suffer from. Do you know, before 1914, very few of Americans suffered from heart disease, except congenital problems, as in the case of Robert E.Lee. I think I would do just fine 200 years ago, don't forget everyone were not trappers or mountain men. Just before the Civil War 80 percent of Americans lived on farms. They were eating home grown food, and Americans did not become a beef eating society until after the Civil War. They ate barn yard meat and vegetables from the kitchen garden. Or they hunted wild game on the Woodland areas by the farm. How do I know I wood do fine 200 years in the past ? Because I live like that now, I have not been to a doctor in over 20 years, and when I did go to a doctor, it was for a DOT physical required by my employer and the law. My blood pressure is great, my energy is great, I take no pills of any kind, and I still enjoy a sip of bourbon occasionally. I exercise several times a week, and I am stronger than many men half my age, and I am just shy of 70 years of age. Sorry for the rant, but I truly believe most people are selling their lives short by buy into all the manure the medical business tells them.
You need to get out more often, Festus.I think 1967 was the last good year - after that things started going to heck. I was 20 years old, the cars were fast, the girls were pretty, and there were no computers.
Not to mention no toilet paper.
The stench and general unsanitariness would be apalling when around most other people.
The prevailing state of feminine hygeine would keep me celibate.
There are forms of cancer that effect some people that you can not do anything about, but the vast majority of cancer patients are suffering from not taking care of their own health. If you don't smoke, there is a real good chance you will completely avoid, lung, mouth, and throat cancer. If you don't abuse alcohol, you can avoid liver cancer. Before the American diet reached Asia, prostate and breast cancer were unheard of. Now they are starting to have the same health problems the U.S. has. If you examine the parts of the world where people live the longest, you will find that people eat much differently than Americans, and the cancers that so many fear, is practically none existent, as well as heart disease. Unfortunately very few doctors tell their patients any of this, or don't know it themselves. And the medical business does not push it, because there is no money in it. It pays for them to keep people sick. That is why you should educate yourself about your body, and how to keep it healthy. One last thought, if I may, people do not trust the government, nor politicians, nor judges or even the police, but they will willingly, without any question give themselves over to medical business. Once again, I am sorry for the rant.Not to be smart but I had a good friend who was the same way. When he finally went for the pain in his back he found out he had advanced prostate cancer. If you're all alone in the world you can think like that but at 68 he left behind a widow. For me the big "C" wasn't about me, it was about the effect on my family. For years I got by with " you can pee a hole in the snow and you're not blind" company and FAA physicals but as you get older you need more. Getting slapped in the face with cancer is bad enough, finding out when it's too late to do something is even worse. YMMV
Not to be smart but I had a good friend who was the same way. When he finally went for the pain in his back he found out he had advanced prostate cancer. If you're all alone in the world you can think like that but at 68 he left behind a widow. For me the big "C" wasn't about me, it was about the effect on my family. For years I got by with " you can pee a hole in the snow and you're not blind" company and FAA physicals but as you get older you need more. Getting slapped in the face with cancer is bad enough, finding out when it's too late to do something is even worse. YMMV
Not to be smart but I had a good friend who was the same way. When he finally went for the pain in his back he found out he had advanced prostate cancer. If you're all alone in the world you can think like that but at 68 he left behind a widow. For me the big "C" wasn't about me, it was about the effect on my family. For years I got by with " you can pee a hole in the snow and you're not blind" company and FAA physicals but as you get older you need more. Getting slapped in the face with cancer is bad enough, finding out when it's too late to do something is even worse. YMMV
Anyone who honestly believes that any legitimate doctor in the US would want to keep a patient sick in order to make money from that patient is a fool. Name one, or post a link, please.There are forms of cancer that effect some people that you can not do anything about, but the vast majority of cancer patients are suffering from not taking care of their own health. If you don't smoke, there is a real good chance you will completely avoid, lung, mouth, and throat cancer. If you don't abuse alcohol, you can avoid liver cancer. Before the American diet reached Asia, prostate and breast cancer were unheard of. Now they are starting to have the same health problems the U.S. has. If you examine the parts of the world where people live the longest, you will find that people eat much differently than Americans, and the cancers that so many fear, is practically none existent, as well as heart disease. Unfortunately very few doctors tell their patients any of this, or don't know it themselves. And the medical business does not push it, because there is no money in it. It pays for them to keep people sick. That is why you should educate yourself about your body, and how to keep it healthy. One last thought, if I may, people do not trust the government, nor politicians, nor judges or even the police, but they will willingly, without any question give themselves over to medical business. Once again, I am sorry for the rant.
Not to mention no toilet paper.
The stench and general unsanitariness would be apalling when around most other people.
The prevailing state of feminine hygeine would keep me celibate.
Since you have resorted to name calling, I will not ingage in conversation with you. I suggest you do your own research, like I did.Anyone who honestly believes that any legitimate doctor in the US would want to keep a patient sick in order to make money from that patient is a fool. Name one, or post a link, please.
Works for me.Since you have resorted to name calling, I will not ingage in conversation with you. I suggest you do your own research, like I did.
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