Preview

What We Really Miss About the 1950's

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
497 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
What We Really Miss About the 1950's
Burberg 1
Rodrigo Burberg
Professor Theis
Composition & Rhetoric September 12, 2011
Remembering the “The Good Old Days”
People sometimes reminisce on the past with nostalgia, remembering the “Good Old Days” and how values and ethics have seemed to disappear. In the 1950’s, like in no other decade, people became homeowners; prosperity was plentiful and bad times were thought to be something of the past. Capitalism was working and it was working well, to have a better life than one’s parents was only matter of willingness. Clearly it is evident why “Americans chose the 1950’s than any other single decade as the best time for children to grow up.” (Pg32) In the essay “What We really Miss About the 1950’s” Stephanie Coontz has made several observations that “The Golden Age” was not brought by a thriving free-market competition but by large government spending to provide jobs and benefits to millions of Americans that which resembled a socialistic nation.
Coontz implies that Americans miss high taxes and large government spending, because of the prosperity they brought. “40 percent of young men were eligible for veterans benefits, and these benefits were far more extensive than those available to Vietnam-era vets.”(pg42) Apart from these benefits people began to have high paying jobs, many provided by government programs. The government also made it easier for Americans to finance a house by “creating two new national
Burberg 2 institutions to facilitate home loans, allowed veterans to put down payments as low as a dollar on a house, and offered tax breaks to people who bought homes.”(42,43)
WWII brought the highest level of taxation the United States has ever experienced; “top earning Americans paid 87 percent of their income while corporate taxes were 52 percent (pg42).” these rates were kept well thru the 1950’s. Coontz argues that this extra revenue made it possible for many veterans to go to college almost tuition-free, create the Interstate

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    * GI Bill of 1944 – Besides returning jobs and educational benefits to many servicemen, they also provided low mortgage housings.…

    • 3859 Words
    • 16 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Each veteran could receive a low interest loan to buy a home, a farm or start a business…

    • 1387 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In 1944, the Servicemen’s Readjustment act, also known as the G.I Bill, was passed by legislation to provide monetary and educational support to World War II Veterans. These programs included; low mortgages, reduced tuition at universities, and providing veterans with social services, such as unemployment benefits. The low mortgages led many Americans to move out of the overcrowded cities and into the suburbs where it was now affordable to buy a home. Because more Americans were buying homes, the wealth of American families increased greatly; wealth that would stay in the family for decades. Education also made a difference for World War II Veterans and their families. Veterans were able to receive low tuition, therefore, making it easier to…

    • 212 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Tax Structue

    • 1717 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Assignment 4: Tax Structure. Anti Essays. Retrieved December 2, 2012, from the World Wide Web: http://www.antiessays.com/free-essays/286438.html…

    • 1717 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    With WWII coming to an end, and a majority of veteran’s back home, the United States experienced a large scale population growth (an increase of 19 million), known as the baby boom, that shaped the country for…

    • 690 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Discussion topic #1: The 1960s represented an era of significant economic growth for Americans. Some economists argue that the early 1960s began the consumerism that defines American culture today. To what extent did American materialism -- that is, the beliefs in the accumulation of personal wealth -- make Americans afraid of communism?…

    • 403 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The period from the end of World War II to the early 1970s was a golden era of American capitalism. $200 billion in war bonds matured, and the G.I. Bill financed a well-educated work force. The US underwent its own golden age of economic growth. This growth was distributed fairly evenly across the economic classes. Much of the growth came from the movement of low income farm workers into better paying jobs in the towns and cities.…

    • 409 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Progressing through the 1800’s to the turn of the nineteenth century, there were dramatic social and societal changes marking a new path for the future of America. The population increased by millions as more and more immigrants sought new lifestyles to match the luxurious ones Americans were rumored to have, due to their industrial, democratic system. Through the eyes of both Americans, and those of foreign soils, America, particularly between the years 1870 to 1900, was a land of endless opportunities that seemed to constantly be growing both economically and socially. In this time, titled the Gilded Age, the population reached towering numbers as the U.S. transformed.…

    • 1069 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    One would say the American Dream is somewhat like the sun. On the outside, sometimes it is one of the most beautiful things in the world, but to really know it, and all of the dangers that come with it, one has to dig into the dangerous and corrupt insides. In The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald depicts the 1920’s as a time of decay of social and moral values; evidence of this is the greed and the pursuit of pleasure. Jay Gatsby’s constant parties epitomized the corruption of the American Dream as the desire for money and worldly pleasures overshadowed the true values of the American Dream. After WWI ended in 1918, veterans found that life was not as rosy as it had been before. The war led to an economic…

    • 788 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The first decade after the Civil War, also known as “the era of Reconstruction”, was a time of massive change in the USA. It was the time of the “Old West”, as we are used to seeing it in the movies – cowboys, buffalo hunters, and the construction of railroads; the symbol of prosperity in America. The North and the West grew richer and attracted millions of immigrants from Europe, who were looking for higher wages. Despite the fact that highly skilled workers were paid more than they would receive in their homeland, these were times of inequality, and poverty. These events blended together with those following the Civil War in the South, as the Era of Reconstruction unfolded.…

    • 2427 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Like the earthquake ripples, which can be felt hundreds of miles away, events in our American history can have lasting effecting that springs to life yet again a new generation. What one Era or generation leaves behind the next must clean up and attempt to rebuild. An example of this would be the Progressive Era leading into the Great Depression. The Progressive Era wasn’t all bad; however some key events unfortunately lead to what we know today as, The Great Depression. As you read further, I will discuss the key turning points in the Progressive Era, as well as explain its impact on American’s current society. I will also, describe some of the legislation in (Roosevelt-Taft-Wilson) progressive era years that have influenced the conduct of business to this day, as well as explain the role that the Spanish-American War played in America’s development of an empire, and to conclude I will explain the way in which the boom and bust of the “Roaring Twenties” followed by the Great Depression affected the federal government’s involvement in the national economy.…

    • 1529 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    A half century after it was written, Death of a Salesman remains a powerful drama. Its indictment of fundamental American values and the American Dream of material success may seem somewhat tame in today's age of constant national and individual self-analysis and criticism, but its challenge was quite radical for its time. After World War II, the United States faced profound and irreconcilable domestic tensions and contradictions. Although the war had ostensibly engendered an unprecedented sense of American confidence, prosperity, and security, the United States became increasingly embroiled in a tense cold war with the Soviet Union. The propagation of myths of a peaceful, homogenous, and nauseatingly gleeful American golden age was tempered by constant anxiety about Communism, bitter racial conflict, and largely ignored economic and social stratification. Many Americans could not subscribe to the degree of social conformity and the ideological and cultural orthodoxy that a prosperous, booming, conservative suburban middle-class championed.…

    • 711 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    My grandmother Jean Murphy was born at the end of the Roaring Twenties, just before the Stock Market Crash that left the country reeling for stability. Despite the economic depression settling in the nation with the thirties, Jean’s life was almost completely unaffected from financial burdens. Her father, Leo, was Chief Electrician…

    • 762 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Greatest Generation

    • 776 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Most often many would argue that the 1940’s generation is not the greatest for their generation was or is the greatest. This however would not be true either, the true Greatest Generation has yet to come about. An interesting point is brought up seeing as the current generation is the offsprings of the 1940’s generation. Therefore should we say that the 1940’s is better because of the values they were brought up on and practiced or should we penalize them for the values left for the generation produced. The Greatest Generation created a welfare-crazed and pompous generation after them. What they left behind makes both generations equal on the scale of greatness for they created and did horrible things and the current generation will most likely succeed in the same. These generations go by a shattered value system, where marriage has declined rapidly, sexually transmitted diseases along with drugs are at an all time high, and not leaving out the amount of children being born out of wedlock being called mistakes and left fatherless. The 1940’s generation led their children to this life and furthermore let them lead their children onto the same path. The other choice in greatest generation is often the generation of the Founding Fathers. Although they set out for…

    • 776 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Perfect Family

    • 394 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The publicity that is currently being developed provides recurring images of the perfect family, showing that the idealization of the perfect family and the aspirational sense that it represents remains as a constant in the advertising in time as an effort to associate products with the perfect family because it is an important driver of purchase.…

    • 394 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays

Related Topics