50 Years Ago

xoxoxoBruce • Nov 13, 2010 12:43 pm
I remember this well, as my High School Civics class hashed this election to no end. But more than the election, I remember the times, the country as it was then. Although there have been improvements such as civil rights, I don't like many of the changes we've gone through. Looking at the details of the picture, you can see a different country.
Griff • Nov 13, 2010 1:07 pm
That suicide in the front row would be a big deal today.
Gravdigr • Nov 13, 2010 1:24 pm
Private Pyle from Full Metal Jacket. I think I see Mary Jane Rottencrotch, too.
Gravdigr • Nov 13, 2010 1:26 pm
"A small crowd gathered in front of the local Moose Lodge to hear Mr. Kennedy stand on a high-chair on speak into a light bulb."
Lamplighter • Nov 13, 2010 2:14 pm
No one paid any real attention to Ike's "beware the military-industrial complex" or the John Birch Society,
but there was "Silent Spring" and the National Park Service's "Mission 66",
and some Pirates beat some Yankees, and the first "sit in" in Woolworths,
and almost as important, Bill married Edwina in Dallas Tx.
ZenGum • Nov 13, 2010 6:01 pm
Could you imagine what would happen if you stood six feet from Obama and pulled out a toy gun?

Well, no, 'cause you wouldn't get within 60 feet of Big O with so much as a slingshot in your pocket, but ...
Undertoad • Nov 13, 2010 9:51 pm
Well one change is, you can't just stand on a high chair to deliver your message. You have to be behind a backdrop with a message repeated over and over so that even the dumb people can take something from it. :D
HungLikeJesus • Nov 14, 2010 12:38 am
Maybe that kid was from Dallas.
ZenGum • Nov 14, 2010 6:19 am
Undertoad;694137 wrote:
Well one change is, you can't just stand on a high chair to deliver your message. You have to be behind a backdrop with a message repeated over and over so that even the dumb people can take something from it. :D



And Flags! Where are the enormous FLAGS! What is this Kennedy fella, some kind of commie traitor???
Katkeeper • Nov 14, 2010 11:52 am
I remember that time, and it looks like JFK was speaking in West Virginia where he was shocked to find the amount of poverty there. He reacted strongly to it which was obvious to the people who voted for him in the primary and election.
Gravdigr • Nov 14, 2010 2:55 pm
HungLikeJesus;694153 wrote:
Maybe that kid was from Dallas.


Timing is all wrong, but, I'm thinking the kid w/the gun went to University of Texas at Austin. Looks like a young Charles Whitman.
TheMercenary • Nov 15, 2010 8:50 pm
To bad it has all been such a total failure since....
fo0hzy • Nov 19, 2010 2:33 am
Griff;694089 wrote:
That suicide in the front row would be a big deal today.


Obama on a high chair would be news enough
xoxoxoBruce • Nov 19, 2010 2:39 am
:lol: Obama Steals Infant's Highchair, film at 11, on FOX.

Actually it's a step stool, common at the time for reaching high kitchen cabinets, buy fox wouldn't care.
fo0hzy • Nov 19, 2010 3:09 am
xoxoxoBruce;695072 wrote:
:lol: Obama Steals Infant's Highchair, film at 11, on FOX.


Wouldn't that be a great news item? :D

But then we'd need infant teleprompters... :3_eyes:
Clodfobble • Nov 19, 2010 11:55 am
When I was growing up we had this great kitchen chair that had a hinge in it so you could flip the back over and the whole thing would convert into a stepladder. I'm pretty sure it's still in my dad's house.
Griff • Nov 20, 2010 8:19 am
Clodfobble;695132 wrote:
When I was growing up we had this great kitchen chair that had a hinge in it so you could flip the back over and the whole thing would convert into a stepladder. I'm pretty sure it's still in my dad's house.


We had the same kind of chair, I'm not sure where it got to...
ZenGum • Nov 20, 2010 5:57 pm
Clod's dad has it.
casimendocina • Nov 21, 2010 8:00 am
Clodfobble;695132 wrote:
When I was growing up we had this great kitchen chair that had a hinge in it so you could flip the back over and the whole thing would convert into a stepladder. I'm pretty sure it's still in my dad's house.


Or you can buy one here: http://www.theparadenorwood.com/bp743/se-waite-son/
glatt • Nov 22, 2010 9:22 am
I imagine that most furniture manufacturers got out of the step stool business for liability reasons. You can argue that when a dumbass falls off a stool and breaks their neck, they shouldn't have been standing on the stool in the first place. But if you incorporate steps leading up to the top of the stool, you can't make that argument any longer. Then you are in the position of having to make sure your step stool is idiot proof. And idiots are pretty clever at finding new ways to be idiots.

Like by clambering over the exposed machinery of an out of service escalator.
classicman • Nov 22, 2010 11:27 am
glatt;695557 wrote:
idiots are pretty clever at finding new ways to be idiots.


...and, after the fact, very clever at finding someone else to be responsible for their behavior/stupidity.
TheMercenary • Nov 25, 2010 1:25 pm
xoxoxoBruce;694086 wrote:
I remember this well, as my High School Civics class hashed this election to no end. But more than the election, I remember the times, the country as it was then. Although there have been improvements such as civil rights, I don't like many of the changes we've gone through. Looking at the details of the picture, you can see a different country.

Yea, highchairs have come a long way since then. :D
xoxoxoBruce • Nov 25, 2010 8:42 pm
God damn whippersnappers, that ain't a high chair, it's a kitchen step stool... now get the hell off my lawn. :cuss:
classicman • Nov 25, 2010 10:15 pm
nice smiley bruce - thats a new one to me!
TheMercenary • Nov 27, 2010 1:34 pm
xoxoxoBruce;696227 wrote:
God damn whippersnappers, that ain't a high chair, it's a kitchen step stool... now get the hell off my lawn. :cuss:


Us po folk used it as a high chair. :D
xoxoxoBruce • Nov 27, 2010 7:38 pm
You probably drove to town on a tractor, but that don't make it a car.:p:
TheMercenary • Nov 28, 2010 6:17 pm
Naw, we had a station wagon with a rumble seat in the back. The big fight was who got to sit in the back. Oh, and seat belts were an option back then.

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_i_AovfzNXgQ/SrhDX7adPUI/AAAAAAAA6us/xzq95zLfRQ4/s1600-h/DSCN7440.jpg
xoxoxoBruce • Nov 28, 2010 6:26 pm
'69 Dodge? Rear seatbelts became standard in '68, '64 up front.
TheMercenary • Nov 28, 2010 6:27 pm
Hell, it was somewhere around there, but who remembers that stuff with they were 9, 8, or 4?
xoxoxoBruce • Nov 28, 2010 6:30 pm
I do. :p:



Now if I could remember what I had for breakfast...
TheMercenary • Nov 28, 2010 6:33 pm
I have great memories of the time, just not if "Rear seatbelts became standard in '68, '64 up front." :D Not something the average child thinks about or remembers in the 60's.
xoxoxoBruce • Nov 28, 2010 6:35 pm
It depends on the childs age and interests, but the seatbelt thing I had to look up 3 days ago. :lol:
TheMercenary • Nov 28, 2010 6:39 pm
Bastid. :)
Clodfobble • Nov 29, 2010 7:31 pm
They may have been standard installation, but I'm pretty sure it was still legal to drive without them, right? As late as about 1980, a car salesman was trying to convince my mother-in-law that a particular vehicle would be perfect for them, despite the fact that they were a family of 5 and it only had 4 seatbelts.

Actually, now that I think about it, children now have all sorts of seatbelt laws, but I think it's still legal today to be an unbelted adult in the back seat.
kerosene • Nov 29, 2010 11:52 pm
When I was a little kid, children only had to be belted in the back if they were 3 or under. I know this because my mom lied to a cop about my brother's age when she got pulled over after the cop saw my brother and I bouncing around in the backseat. That was in the early 80s, so not that long ago. Now, kids have to have carseats until they are 7 or something. And no front seaters at all.
HungLikeJesus • Dec 5, 2010 10:15 pm
That was like a quarter of a century ago!
Griff • Dec 6, 2010 7:36 am
Seat belts? I remember lying on the ledge under the back window of Dad's Malibu watching the tree-tops fly by... that was apparently before bad things could happen.