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10-05-2015, 08:39 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ebacon
Saw a lot of that in the 1970s and early 1980s. The "field jacket" carried about the same coolness as a well-worn denim jacket.
In my mind I still see the Marlboro man as representative of American cultural dress. Yes, he is associated with cigarettes which is now bad. Similarly, female models are associated with dietary issues which are now bad. Both rightfully so.
But when visitors come to America what do they want to see? Do Mexicans want to see the Taco Bell uniform? Do Germans want to see Frankenmuth dirndls? Do Japanese want to see a steak house uniform?
To some degree the answer will be yes to all of those. Visitors are curious as to how America interprets their cultures. They will see it, giggle at the errors, and still want to see the "real" America.
My understanding is that visitors want a machine gun experience. They want to drive a V8 car to the Grand Canyon. They want the Marlboro man.
And don't we? Why do we move away from old subdivisions to the country? Only to repeat the subdivision cycle again? The vicious cycle has been going on for 70 years.
70 years of searching for culture? For the Marlboro man?
I dunno. This is just the stuff that occupies my thoughts as I wait for traffic lights to change.
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It's in the culture that if you're doing good you build a big new house. That's what gone on here since the Pilgrims. Factor in lots more people, economics, law, land use regulation, etc, etc, and we get what we've got. Lots of people can't build a big new house, but they want bigger and newer anyway....
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If you Love Liberty, you must Hate Trump!
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10-08-2015, 08:24 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 3,223
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Quote:
Originally Posted by donquixote99
It's in the culture that if you're doing good you build a big new house. That's what gone on here since the Pilgrims. Factor in lots more people, economics, law, land use regulation, etc, etc, and we get what we've got. Lots of people can't build a big new house, but they want bigger and newer anyway....
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Agreed.
I was guilty of thinking like that as my career progressed. Luckily I am predisposed to worry about maintenance. Whenever I had an opportunity to "grow" I worried that could not maintain it all. Of course I never earned enough to hire maintenance staff. If I were that wealthy in my younger years then I would have, I dunno, caved in on myself I guess.
Looking back on my experience, my desire for a bigger house and bigger boat would have quelled more quickly if I understood that the bigger house and bigger boat sounded more hollow when they were empty. People that have lived in big houses for generations probably have enough company to fill the halls with sounds. But to be a first generation in bigness and to listen to the silence of success? That's not in the marketing material for big homes and boats.
So, I guess, that's a long way to say that at this point in my life journey I would rather see cozy than see bigger. Cozy has people in it. Bigger is just bigger.
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10-08-2015, 08:34 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: NE Bamastan
Posts: 11,057
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ebacon
Agreed.
I was guilty of thinking like that as my career progressed. Luckily I am predisposed to worry about maintenance. Whenever I had an opportunity to "grow" I worried that could not maintain it all. Of course I never earned enough to hire maintenance staff. If I were that wealthy in my younger years then I would have, I dunno, caved in on myself I guess.
Looking back on my experience, my desire for a bigger house and bigger boat would have quelled more quickly if I understood that the bigger house and bigger boat sounded more hollow when they were empty. People that have lived in big houses for generations probably have enough company to fill the halls with sounds. But to be a first generation in bigness and to listen to the silence of success? That's not in the marketing material for big homes and boats.
So, I guess, that's a long way to say that at this point in my life journey I would rather see cozy than see bigger. Cozy has people in it. Bigger is just bigger.
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Very astute, too many folks don't know how much is really enough, and it's not really that much.
Sent from my SM-N900V using Tapatalk
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I'll believe corporations are people when Texas executes one.
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10-08-2015, 09:09 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Jan 2012
Posts: 5,172
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It's not having what you want
It's wanting what you've got
Sheryl Crow
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10-08-2015, 09:35 PM
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Ready
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Join Date: Oct 2013
Posts: 19,146
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ebacon
Agreed.
I was guilty of thinking like that as my career progressed. Luckily I am predisposed to worry about maintenance. Whenever I had an opportunity to "grow" I worried that could not maintain it all. Of course I never earned enough to hire maintenance staff. If I were that wealthy in my younger years then I would have, I dunno, caved in on myself I guess.
Looking back on my experience, my desire for a bigger house and bigger boat would have quelled more quickly if I understood that the bigger house and bigger boat sounded more hollow when they were empty. People that have lived in big houses for generations probably have enough company to fill the halls with sounds. But to be a first generation in bigness and to listen to the silence of success? That's not in the marketing material for big homes and boats.
So, I guess, that's a long way to say that at this point in my life journey I would rather see cozy than see bigger. Cozy has people in it. Bigger is just bigger.
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The house is just a place. It's the people that count.
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If you Love Liberty, you must Hate Trump!
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