View Poll Results: which was the best time to be born

Voters
75. You may not vote on this poll
  • y generation

    5 6.67%
  • x generation

    18 24.00%
  • baby boomers

    43 57.33%
  • 1930-baby boomers

    6 8.00%
  • 1900-1930

    3 4.00%
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Results 41 to 47 of 47

Thread: who do you think grew up in the best generation

  1. #41
    olbod Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by richard4u2 View Post
    ahhhhh the late 50's and 60's those times will never come around , ever you could catch a feed of fish from the ocean anywhere camp on the side of the road no matter what journey you were on with out any fear or worries


    Add the late 40's and early 50's to that and you are spot on.
    At most about 7 million people, no toll's, no permits required.
    National service was great. We had 34 Fords and MG TC's, 56
    Triumph Thunderbirds and the Easter bike races at Bathurst,
    Bill Haley and Johny Ray and the big shows at the Stadium.
    Oh and Chief Little Wolf and Willy Fennel.

    Today is CRAP, believe me !!!

  2. #42
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    NSW far north coast
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    It's all moot if the Buddhists and Hindus are correct, we are all doomed to samsara, the cycle of birth, death and re-birth, so you get to experience successive generations, you just don't remember it

  3. #43
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Malanda FNQ
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    which is the best

    I am in my 50s' born in the 50s' voted ---Y and why? Lets all start again!!!!!!

  4. #44
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    laidley queensland
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    Cool pubs

    Quote Originally Posted by Mr Whippy View Post
    [/LIST]Pubs closing at 10pm was not such a bad thing. We coped ok and we did not have the violence we have today which I believe is caused a lot by all night bars and clubs.

    Hey, I lived in Moorabbin

    Dave.
    I remember when the pubs closed at 6.00pm......Ha Ha

  5. #45
    midal Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by cooper View Post
    It may be crap by comparison,but if you are lucky enough to have good friends and someone to love then it is still fabulous.Don't let the no-hopers and losers win.

    Top marks to that man

    Cheers
    Mick

  6. #46
    olbod Guest
    That's true Cooper.
    Friends and loved ones make it good to be alive in any age.
    Young people today, if they survive, will look back fondly and recall
    these times with pleasure.

    I watch the news and see the long traffic delays, the congestion. the dog
    eat dog mentality, the violence, the police brutality, the fact that you have to spend months planning and reserching permits and permission as to where I can lay my swag etc: just to take a simple trip across across the country.
    It's against the law to stay over night at a roadside truck stop, in your
    caravan, if you are within 50 k's of a caravan park. For heavens sake !!!

    I ask myself, is this as good as it gets ?

    I look forward to every new day and make the most of it and I am content with simple pleasures. Anything else is more trouble that it is worth.
    One of those simple pleasures, is this Forum.

    Cheers.

  7. #47
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Somerville
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    124
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    And no-one mentioned Sunday Sessions????

    Me? born in 1961 and enjoyed growing up in country Victoria and Seaside Brisvegas. Just missed out on cheap fuel, first car was an XP 2door before they were in vogue, who needed a 4wd with that much clearance!

    Compared to my kids and their playstations and satellite TV...I know...I got it for them...I never spent much time inside a house when I was growing up either bikes and flying...girls didn't even enter the picture to way after I started working...My bikes got motors and went faster and faster...and the crashes and the pain got bigger and bigger...I got a job looking for oil and they paid me so much that the future looked so bright I had to wear shades...the world would never end....hahahbloodyha... I bought a truck and that was the end of all that. no more bikes, no more flying and back to crap cars...I think my Disco is some sort of mid-life crisis...thank gawd!...A Girl a family and not much bucks to spare but...wouldn't swap it for quids....yet my Dad always worries for us because his life was simpler with more promise to get ahead. Hard life for him..left school in grade6 to work in his Dad's timber mill..he was running it at 13 with men working for him heaps older. He just missed out on Korea and too old for Viet-Nam and I was just too young for that by more than a few years. His childhood was in the bush of the pioneers. Gold mines and selections and land ballots. They literally cut a farm from the bush up the Rose River..still there today...although I get a kick every time Dad tells me about this steep grade out of the property that only Thornycroft tank transporters could ever make it out with a descent load of timber..When I see it as an adult I just laugh so hard. My Trucks would not even get into low gear on them, but that's progress.

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