User Panel
Quoted: That was a model. Nobody looked like twiggy. But twiggy is a vast improvement over what graces magazine covers today. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: women actually looked like women back then, not some pedophile's wet dream....... Actually, the Twiggy look of the early 70s contradicts your claim That was a model. Nobody looked like twiggy. But twiggy is a vast improvement over what graces magazine covers today. This. We celebrate obesity and laziness today. I have weight to lose and no excuses. I own my weight as I did it to myself and I am busting ass to lose it. I would give anything to go back to the 70's and 80's. |
|
Quoted: I thought they were pretty good, but I was a young'in with no real responsibilities. View Quote There were issues obviously but when you compare all the "terrorist" red flags now compared to the PLO, FALN and the "Carlos The Jackal" crap back then, we are lightyears worse now. |
|
You know what they say, "If you remember the '70's, you weren't there."
|
|
Quoted: Nice! Hope you're able to pick up the green R/T. Interesting that 30 sunroof R/T's were built. I was told 11 were built the way mine was configured. From what I was told, all the sunroof were installed by a contracted company in Phoenix. I knew a guy who owned an identical Charger to mine, also white, also a sunroof car. His car's serial # was 2-3 digits off from mine, both built at the LA plant. View Quote Pretty cool. 255 were built for the US across the entire Charger line in 1971. |
|
EVERYBODY smoked.
Ashtrays were everywhere. My dentist used to smoke while doing my teeth. Every office had a blue haze. Bars were absolutely choked with smoke. Less fatties, but then again, you can ignore fatties, you can’t ignore how nasty your hair and clothes would smell after a trip to the bank/office/everyfuckingwhere. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Quoted: Boston's first two albums were absolutely awesome! View Quote Saw Boston in concert during the tour after the 'Boston' album was released. Saw Bruce Springsteen after the release of the 'Born to Run' album and before he started to do early sell-outs. Got decent tickets the day of the concert. Saw Lynard Skinner before the plane crash. There was enough decent 70s music to allow you to avoid the trash. Concerts were a lot of fun. Indoor cigarette smoking in your seat. Joints lit and passed around. Lots of hot young ladies. Alas, I was faithfully married at the time. |
|
It was pretty nasty in start, but winding down into the 80's were the better half.
Nothing in the world better than an American 80's girl. |
|
Quoted: Something from the era that I bought much later but really liked during that era. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/123512/cherokee_desert-1923981.jpg View Quote Elizabeth Warren? Well it’s white and calls itself Cherokee… |
|
|
Quoted: Everyone wasn't morbidly obese so at least there was that. View Quote Skinny girls with bad complexions and giant bush. Seriously, that's what the 70's were. Watch some 70's porn. They didn't do oral, and when they did it looked half hearted like they were coked up and going to puke. That's 70's culture, for real. |
|
The '70s? Let's see,
Got married (still married - soon 50 years), Worked at a gas station to put us through college, We had our kids, Drove a '66 VW Beetle, Started my career at a hospital and worked there 40+ years. Yeah, the '70s were good. |
|
Not all the music sucked and a lot stood the test of time. My 17 y/o with the record she brought home the other night. Now I need to get a turntable.
Attached File |
|
Quoted: OP is thinking of the late 70's. The early part of the decade had excellent cars, excellent music and no bras. View Quote Very early, maybe. My first new muscle car was a 1973 Mustang Mach 1 with 351 Cleveland. The Cleveland was a solid performer but some crackpot said we were going to be in a new ice age in 10 years (or so) and everybody was going to die. So the retards in DC passed a law that cars had to have all this equipment to reduce emissions and therefore, my car had something like 12 horsepower and performed like crap. So, other than 1970-1972, inclusive, yeah, the cars sucked. |
|
Quoted: Pretty cool. 255 were built for the US across the entire Charger line in 1971. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Nice! Hope you're able to pick up the green R/T. Interesting that 30 sunroof R/T's were built. I was told 11 were built the way mine was configured. From what I was told, all the sunroof were installed by a contracted company in Phoenix. I knew a guy who owned an identical Charger to mine, also white, also a sunroof car. His car's serial # was 2-3 digits off from mine, both built at the LA plant. Pretty cool. 255 were built for the US across the entire Charger line in 1971. Wow, 255 is way more than I would've guessed. I've only seen two! lol |
|
Quoted: Not sure if serious. I'd argue the pinnacle was sometime in the mid-90s. People still had morals, a sense of national pride, and a good amount of tech (but no social media). People knew their neighbors and let their kids play outside until the street lights came on. I went to college in the 90s when there were varying view points, but not the division or hate that you see today. That all went away with the 2000s, 9/11, etc. We've been on the downhill slide from the pinnacle for 20-25 years at least. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Nothing is as good as it is now. We're at the pinnacle. Not sure if serious. I'd argue the pinnacle was sometime in the mid-90s. People still had morals, a sense of national pride, and a good amount of tech (but no social media). People knew their neighbors and let their kids play outside until the street lights came on. I went to college in the 90s when there were varying view points, but not the division or hate that you see today. That all went away with the 2000s, 9/11, etc. We've been on the downhill slide from the pinnacle for 20-25 years at least. I'm sure the fact that I was about 19 had nothing to do with it, and it's purely a coincidence. |
|
I remember when my parents bought a calculator. That’s how advanced home technology was. The 70s was the last laid back decade. US cars were generally crappy but definitely Good times
|
|
What we considered an average person weight wise today was considered a fat disgusting slob to be ridiculed back then. New cars in the late 70's sucked but there were a ton of cheap early 70's muscle cars that a highschool kid working a minimum wage job could buy. Disco was an abomination but there was some awesome rock out there. I'd rank the 80's #1 one by far, the 70's #2 and the 90's, which sucked far worse than the 70's and was a shitty depressing time, a distant #3.
|
|
Quoted: I'm struggling to think of a car made from 1974 to 1984 that wasn't a complete pile of shit. The early 80s absolutely own bad cars too. Pretty much everyone thinks the era when they started getting laid was pretty good. View Quote The Datsun Z cars were fine. Reliable and sporty but not very powerful. Still fun to drive. @p3590 |
|
The thing that this thread reveals is how much 1984 is a prophecy. There are people that actually think we are in the best times.
We have a president with dementia who apparently poops his pants and there is little to no outage in the media, it's forbidden in fact. We give drivers licenses and voting right to illegal aliens who, unlike citizens, are not required to have insurance on their vehicles. This is all normal and accepted in these "better" times. CRT is taught in schools. Not much else is taught. People don't even know how many stars are on the flag or how many states there are. I guess people forgot how awesome California was. There was muscle beach and silicone valley. Now there are illegals and poop. And rolling blackouts. And fires destroying trees hundreds of years old because managing forests is politically incorrect. We had industry in the country. There was a textile mill or some other industry in every small southern town. Now there are methbillies. The fiasco in Afghanistan makes the Carter bugaboo a non issue. There's not room or time to list it all but again, it's accepted, it's treated as normal, and the only people that have suffered any consequences are the ones that spoke out. The ones that caused it are still raking in the dough. Diversity. We didn't have it, not by today's definition. It wasn't even in the language. Our neighbors had the same values we did. We knew our neighbors. Kids played in the streets together. They rode bikes all over hells half acre. After watching cartoons of course. They have been deemed politically incorrect and removed. There weren't food stamps there was commodity food. You got staples and had to cook it yourself. Teens had jobs. We all had jobs. We had checking accounts and learned to manage our money because when we graduated HS we moved out. It didn't matter that it was a shitty apartment or house because we were on our own. It was ok to be poor for a few years because we knew we had a future. And this is another important distinction: there were good poor people and bad poor people. It was possible to be poor, yet live in a safe neighborhood. Being poor wasn't an excuse to be a criminal. Speaking of criminals, they were locked up. There was a thing called vagrancy laws which is why there weren't tent cities. I notice that all the posters claiming today is the apex and the 70's and 80's were bad can't really give any reasons besides ugly furniture and cars, as if that's the only thing that matters. Of all the many things that piss me off the revisionist past pisses me off the most. It's a movement straight out of 1984 because if we can't remember what and how things were better, we accept the current shit show we live in now as normal and we don't do anything to change it. It's also why I laugh at the preppers and people that think we are going to rise up with our gUnZ and take the country back. The time for that came and went. Our guns are toys we fondle while we fantasize on our couch watching red dawn reruns. Whatever is happening isn't something that can be fought with guns and we've already lost the ability to recognize that and we are too lazy to get involved, that's why we are in the shape we are now. No, things weren't perfect, they never are. But they were a hell of a lot better than the nightmare we live today. Oh, and your stupid open floor plan house looks stupid. It looks like one big room with wasted space of a high ceiling. Someday people are going to laugh and throw up a few walls. |
|
Quoted: Not sure if serious. I'd argue the pinnacle was sometime in the mid-90s. People still had morals, a sense of national pride, and a good amount of tech (but no social media). People knew their neighbors and let their kids play outside until the street lights came on. I went to college in the 90s when there were varying view points, but not the division or hate that you see today. That all went away with the 2000s, 9/11, etc. We've been on the downhill slide from the pinnacle for 20-25 years at least. View Quote So you think the best time was when the Assault Weapons Ban was passed? |
|
Quoted: Horrible cars. Horrible music. Brown everywhere. https://www.collectorsweekly.com/uploads/2018/08/22113752/grandma_70ssofa_heractualcouch.jpg https://media.ford.com/content/fordmedia/fna/us/en/features/mustang-ii-forty-years-later.img.png/1500004288531.jpg https://i.ytimg.com/vi/hcy3-NXoxuU/hqdefault.jpg View Quote You have fire marshal Bill avatar and you’re making fun of old stuff? LMAO |
|
Absolutely THIS. Nobody's house looked like the top pic, in real life. You might see it in a magazine or something. Honestly, that looks more like a modern interior decor tribute/museum to the 80's, than anything I ever actually saw. It's too on the nose. The bottom pic is more what it actually looked like - a house that somebody built/remodeled in the 70s, that was still going untouched well into the next decade (probably because they're still paying it all off, and/or couldn't afford to update it every 5-10 years). Honestly, it's the same thing with these "Super 70s" exaggerated examples of interior decoration and fashion. Real, average people didn't dress like that and they didn't live in houses like that. |
|
Getting busted with alcohol or weed in the car usually resulted in a stern talking to and a long walk home.
|
|
Quoted: No they were the best of times. Hot chicks everywhere, the best live concerts and music and we all had 60's muscle cars that we'd cruise out at the lakefront and even disco wasn't that bad if you could dance. There was a place in Metairie called Fat City and it was a 5 block square of clubs everywhere and you could walk literally club to club all night and get a banging BBQ sandwich and a beer to end the night. A target rich environment of fun. I'd definitely go back. Good Times View Quote You're speaking of it like a teenager with no responsibilities is visiting the 70's. Wanna talk about it like a 45 year old guy with a job and responsibilities? Entirely different decade then. |
|
Quoted: Speaking as someone who was six years old in 1976, the only color I remember from the ‘70s is RedWhiteandBlue! Truly, we always had great Independence Day celebrations with a fair and fireworks and 1976 was even better. We painted all the fire hydrants on the street to look like Uncle Sam and the kids decorated their bikes with red, white, and blue streamers and we had a parade. View Quote The 70's was a time when the United States was still America. |
|
I wish a buck was still silver
It was back when the country was strong Back before Elvis Before the Vietnam war came along Before The Beatles and 'Yesterday' When a man could still work, still would The best of the free life behind us now And are the good times really over for good? Are we rolling down hill Like a snowball headed for Hell? With no kind of chance For the Flag or the Liberty Bell Wish a Ford and a Chevy Could still last ten years, like they should Is the best of the free life behind us now? Are the good times really over for good? I wish Coke was still Cola And a joint was a bad place to be It was back before Nixon lied to us all on TV Before microwave ovens When a girl could still cook and still would The best of the free life behind us now Are the good times really over for good? Are we rolling down hill Like a snowball headed for Hell? With no kind of chance For the Flag or the Liberty Bell Wish a Ford and a Chevy Could still last ten years, like they should Is the best of the free life behind us now? Are the good times really over for good? Stop rolling down hill Like a snowball headed for Hell Stand up for the Flag And let's all ring the Liberty Bell Let's make a Ford and a Chevy Still last ten years like they should The best of the free life is still yet to come The good times ain't over for good |
|
View Quote Damn, my father had that same exact GTO. It was fun to ride in it as a kid. He even let me drive it... |
|
Quoted: The 70's was a time when the United States was still America. View Quote A dismal, dirty, crime infested, malaisey, incompetent and shitty America that elected Jimmy Carter, lost the Vietnam war, had a crap economy, couldn't build anything worth a good shit, and had the aesthetics of a drunken trailer park manager....but you are right, that it was America through and through and the commies hadn't captured all our institutions. |
|
Quoted: Absolutely THIS. Nobody's house looked like the top pic, in real life. You might see it in a magazine or something. Honestly, that looks more like a modern interior decor tribute/museum to the 80's, than anything I ever actually saw. It's too on the nose. The bottom pic is more what it actually looked like - a house that somebody built/remodeled in the 70s, that was still going untouched well into the next decade (probably because they're still paying it all off, and/or couldn't afford to update it every 5-10 years). Honestly, it's the same thing with these "Super 70s" exaggerated examples of interior decoration and fashion. Real, average people didn't dress like that and they didn't live in houses like that. View Quote Totally agree. Want to see 70’s decor in a house? Go to Graceland. Perfect example, and it looks like piled on shit. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Quoted: I'm not a huge 70's fan, but the 70's was the height of stereo receivers. They put some fantastically beautiful looking and sounding units. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/341657/MARANTZ-2325-1-2103116.jpg View Quote My dad had that unit but it was all metal, no wood. That was the best sounding system I've ever heard. |
|
|
|
|
Quoted: I'm not a huge 70's fan, but the 70's was the height of stereo receivers. They put some fantastically beautiful looking and sounding units. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/341657/MARANTZ-2325-1-2103116.jpg View Quote I still have one of those.....still works pretty good. |
|
Quoted: Absolutely THIS. Nobody's house looked like the top pic, in real life. You might see it in a magazine or something. Honestly, that looks more like a modern interior decor tribute/museum to the 80's, than anything I ever actually saw. It's too on the nose. The bottom pic is more what it actually looked like - a house that somebody built/remodeled in the 70s, that was still going untouched well into the next decade (probably because they're still paying it all off, and/or couldn't afford to update it every 5-10 years). Honestly, it's the same thing with these "Super 70s" exaggerated examples of interior decoration and fashion. Real, average people didn't dress like that and they didn't live in houses like that. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: We're the 80's actually different? https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/82036/1B19A2EC-98F7-43EF-8BAA-6CF6B7CA8259-2102368.jpg Absolutely THIS. Nobody's house looked like the top pic, in real life. You might see it in a magazine or something. Honestly, that looks more like a modern interior decor tribute/museum to the 80's, than anything I ever actually saw. It's too on the nose. The bottom pic is more what it actually looked like - a house that somebody built/remodeled in the 70s, that was still going untouched well into the next decade (probably because they're still paying it all off, and/or couldn't afford to update it every 5-10 years). Honestly, it's the same thing with these "Super 70s" exaggerated examples of interior decoration and fashion. Real, average people didn't dress like that and they didn't live in houses like that. Yup. The brown was from the 70s. It just hung around into the 80s. Heck, when I was in college in the 90s, one of the apartments I moved into had brown shag carpet in one room and orange in another (with that faux wood paneling everywhere). Probably why the rent was cheap |
|
Quoted: the drugs where quaaludes, booze and coke. 60s drugs were more interesting. 70s was a sucky decade. rolled out of rock into disco (one drummer for all tracks), polyester, heavy smog downed cars, herpes. 70s was the most boring, stupid decade of my life. only the covid-trump-craziness is worse and i dont expect it to last more than 2 or 3 years. View Quote Sorry you weren't getting laid. |
|
|
|
Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!
You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.
AR15.COM is the world's largest firearm community and is a gathering place for firearm enthusiasts of all types.
From hunters and military members, to competition shooters and general firearm enthusiasts, we welcome anyone who values and respects the way of the firearm.
Subscribe to our monthly Newsletter to receive firearm news, product discounts from your favorite Industry Partners, and more.
Copyright © 1996-2024 AR15.COM LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Any use of this content without express written consent is prohibited.
AR15.Com reserves the right to overwrite or replace any affiliate, commercial, or monetizable links, posted by users, with our own.