La ResistanceZ
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My father worked through high school in the middle 50s and got a great job with Ma Bell (old AT&T before its breakup), as soon as he got out, with great pension plan, full healthcare coverage and a 20 year retirement plan. His base pay was $150 a week with 3 annual raises that average 8% a year. He bought an used car and rented a 2 big bedrooms, a large living room with a smaller dining room and a huge kitchen for $42 a month.
He married his high school sweetheart and bought a grand two family house for $22,000 and, with small loan from my grandfather, paid with cash. They had three kids and never paid a dime for their educations through colleges. My mother never worked one day outside the house, she didn't need to because my father's one salary was more than enough for the whole family.
My father retired, barely 40, in the mid 70s with a full pension and healthcare benefit for the whole family. He open a small secured business to kill time and sold out when the hard time came in the early 80s. He picked up golf since and still plays twice a week.
My father's generation lived in the American Dreams that will never come again.
who do you think responsible for this ?My father worked through high school in the middle 50s and got a great job with Ma Bell (old AT&T before its breakup), as soon as he got out, with great pension plan, full healthcare coverage and a 20 year retirement plan. His base pay was $150 a week with 3 annual raises that average 8% a year. He bought an used car and rented a 2 big bedrooms, a large living room with a smaller dining room and a huge kitchen for $42 a month.
He married his high school sweetheart and bought a grand two family house for $22,000 and, with small loan from my grandfather, paid with cash. They had three kids and never paid a dime for their educations through colleges. My mother never worked one day outside the house, she didn't need to because my father's one salary was more than enough for the whole family.
My father retired, barely 40, in the mid 70s with a full pension and healthcare benefit for the whole family. He open a small secured business to kill time and sold out when the hard time came in the early 80s. He picked up golf since and still plays twice a week.
My father's generation lived in the American Dreams that will never come again.
who do you think responsible for this ?
1 the big business men and bankers 2 your country forging policy 3 the middle class getting lazy 4 the economic system which allow people with limited budget get houses and cars they cant offered so this system was going to fail anytime
He who sacrifices freedom for security deserve neither.
Totally agree.That quote only has meaning if it doesn't come from a dictatorship...
Dude, perfectly put. That is exactly what happened in the UK and Western Europe in general.
Right now I see couples struggling with two salaries, and all are postgraduates, just to pay mortgage... sad times indeed for the masses!
My father worked through high school in the middle 50s and got a great job with Ma Bell (old AT&T before its breakup), as soon as he got out, with great pension plan, full healthcare coverage and a 20 year retirement plan. His base pay was $150 a week with 3 annual raises that average 8% a year. He bought an used car and rented a 2 big bedrooms, a large living room with a smaller dining room and a huge kitchen for $42 a month.
He married his high school sweetheart and bought a grand two family house for $22,000 and, with small loan from my grandfather, paid with cash. They had three kids and never paid a dime for their educations through colleges. My mother never worked one day outside the house, she didn't need to because my father's one salary was more than enough for the whole family.
My father retired, barely 40, in the mid 70s with a full pension and healthcare benefit for the whole family. He open a small secured business to kill time and sold out when the hard time came in the early 80s. He picked up golf since and still plays twice a week.
My father's generation lived in the American Dreams that will never come again.