Yeah, I'm likely to think the closest thing we had to a time we were truly great was In the postwar years, when we won WW2 (even if a lot of the credit for actually defeating Hitler really deserves to go to the Soviets, in a battle campaign largely consisting of "who can run out of fresh-faced boys willing to die for their countries first") and, of course, the postwar prosperity and the explosion of new technology.
That said, it was imperfect, and just ask any woman or a member of a racial minority about that (although the aforementioned previous paragraph might have helped them raise their consciousness and fight) As far as they're concerned, as Carole King once sang, "these are the good old days." And yes, that can be really depressing.
And why do I get the feeling the people who want to "make America great again" don't care about ANY of that?
That said, it was imperfect, and just ask any woman or a member of a racial minority about that (although the aforementioned previous paragraph might have helped them raise their consciousness and fight) As far as they're concerned, as Carole King once sang, "these are the good old days." And yes, that can be really depressing.
And why do I get the feeling the people who want to "make America great again" don't care about ANY of that?
Comparing the Universal Oneness of All Life to Yo Mama since 2010.
I was born with the gift of laughter and a sense the world is mad.
I was born with the gift of laughter and a sense the world is mad.