"In these uncertain times" -- Has it ever been any different?

"In these uncertain times . . ."

This is an oft-used phrase one sees in:
. . . Every newspaper editorial page . . .
. . . Every church sermon . . .
. . . Every political campaign . . .
. . . Every financial presentation . . .
. . . Every speech and book tour . . .
. . . Every fireside chat . . .
. . . Every talking head on tv or radio . . .

They all use it:
“In these uncertain times”

You can find this phrase in so many political speeches, so many newspapers over the past 100 years. And I’m sure if you dig deeper you can find it going back 200 and even 300 years and more.

My question is this: Has there ever been “certain” times?

And what does “uncertain times” mean, anyway? Uncertain about what? Uncertain about the future? Sh*t we’ve been uncertain about the future for a million years. Like today’s any different?

I mean, using a phrase like “in these uncertain times” implies that there was recently “certain” times (only we’re no longer in them). But in my lifetime, I’ve never heard nor seen any pastor nor newspaper editorial writer say: “In these certain times.” I don’t ever remember my pastor saying something like “Well that was back then, when we were in uncertain times. Thank God we’re now in times of certainty, and that for the moment we have the power to exactly predict the future.”

As if.

So has there ever been “certain” times? Because according to those whom want to influence you, we’ve been in “uncertain” times for more than 500 years. Maybe a millenia or two. Seems to me “uncertain” times has been “certain” since the dawn of human history.

It leads me to think that the prase “uncertain times” has been so overused as to be meaningless.

Sure, times have always been uncertain, but now more than ever, they’re, um… uncertainer than ever, I guess?

“more than ever”??

Here we go again.

Are you saying “these times” (whatever that means) are more “uncertain” (whatever that means) than . . .

. . . How they must have felt in 1933 at the height of the Great Depression?
. . . How they must have felt in 1861 when states tried to actuall succeed from the Union?
. . . How they must have felt on December 8, 1941?
. . . How it must have felt after Kennedy or MLK were shot?
. . . How they must have felt on September 12, 2001?

I’m sure that Americans on December 8, 1941 probably said to themselves “these times are more uncertain than ever.” And they probably thought that they were at the pinnacle of uncertainty. Again, whatever that means.

Again I suspect those whom use the term “era of uncertainty” or “times of uncertainty” are really using a throwaway phrase and the phrase itself really is quite meaningless.

It was a joke, dear.

I dunno: from the fall of the Berlin Wall to September 11th, times felt pretty certain. Not perfect, but more or less predictable. I am not saying they really were, but they felt much more certain than before or after.

Of course there were certain times. The problem was that we weren’t certain about them at the time. We are now, though. Which makes now seem just that much more uncertain.

Of course there have been “certain times” – even in the very narrow sense of “good times which it seemed, at the time, were the natural order of things and would last forever.” E.g., 19th Century America in the decades before and after the Civil War. From George Orwell’s 1943 essay, “Mark Twain: The Licensed Jester”:

And his 1946 essay “Riding Down from Bangor”:

The 1950s in America were also characterized by a broadly shared (except by African-Americans) sense of certainty and security and optimism, a sense that “We’ve finally got it all worked out and that’s how it’s going to stay.” The only threats worth noticing were alien threats, like Communists and the Body-Snatchers (and, in the eyes of many, the Civil Rights movement).

My mother is very worried about our current uncertain times. Remembering her that she lived through WWII (and the cold war, etc…) that, surely, was a more uncertain time doesn’t change her opinion the slightest bit.
So, yes, I guess that for a number of people, the current times will always seem abnormally uncertain, regardless of their knowledge of the past.

1950s / 1960s U.K.: as Macmillan said, “You’ve never had it so good.”

And, if you were monied or landed, the period from about 1750 to 1914 in the U.K.

I was going to suggest the dot-com bubble period in the mid-to-late 90’s when the world was a virtual goldmine for anyone that hung a .com off anything they saw.

Venture capitalists were king, and anyone that could spell “http” was writing their own job descriptions and getting whatever salary they asked for. People who had never heard the term until six months ago were calling themselves webmasters and e-commerce specialists. Landlords were on the receiving end of many a bribe and bidding war for apartments. People otherwise uninterested in websites were quitting their regular jobs to take up day-trading as a full-time occupation. People were being “paid” with stock options by the truckload.

Then, somewhere in the late 90s, the public realized that perhaps buying groceries online and having them shipped to them maybe wasn’t the best thing in the world, then in early 2000, the whole thing went poof. People went from being multi-millionaires on paper to deeply under-water when the taxes on those stock options came due.

From the end of WW2 to 1963 were probably the most certain times in the US of A. Then Kennedy was assassinated and Vietnam happened and the world figuratively exploded, reaching a height of insanity in 1968.

If you went into a coma in 1962 and came out in 1969, you would not believe you were still on the same planet.