Was it really better "Back in the day?"

When my dad was in college, he worked at an iron foundry during the summer, because it paid a LOT of money by early 1950s standards. He later became a firefighter, and he was in greater danger from that foundry job than he ever faced putting out fires. Those job conditions must have been horrific.

That is not viral pneumonia, and there is a shot for Pneumonia to prevent it. back before antibiotics almost every one who got pneumonia dies, at least the one’s i knew!

It was not unusual for a couple to lose a child or even a woman years ago. My mother lost 2, and some of my relatives (and neighbors) also lost a child and many women died in Childbirth.

There was lots of factories (also coal mines which is hard work but always pays wells) around here 30-40 years ago. Coke works, glass plants, all kinds of jobs ready for when you graduated high school, all jobs that you could make a good living off of. All of those jobs are gone. I’m sure the landscape is not limited to just my town. It’s unfortunate that those oppurtunities aren’t available anymore. The importance of a college education has never been more important, even then it’s not always a guarantee that your going to find that job. And paying for college, that’s another story all together. It’s not impossible but I have to laugh when people can eaily say to others, “Why don’t you just get an education and better yourself and get a better job!” But that is a whole different story, another tangent all together.

I worked in a factory for a year and that was enough for me. Thankfully, I found my current job or I might still be there.

Yes, it was better. Except having to pay for drink refills.

You seem to be classing tv and films on demand as a"good thing" when everyone is far too dependent on machines now.
When I grew up there were no tvs and it was a far better life style than being constantly glued to the tv/ computer/ mobile phone. Yes I use the internet, but it is an addiction and I’m really glad I didn’t have to face that addiction as a child.

When I left school ( university was for a very small minority of people ) it wasn’t a case of “could I get a job, any job” but a choice of what job I wanted to do. Unemployment was virtually zero then, and no, it wasn’t in the US.