Occupy Wall Street
Posted: Tue Nov 01, 2011 1:46 pm
Take five minutes to watch this video and tell me what you think. Frankly, I am very worried about what America is turning into. Most of us are well healed and we will be fine. I worry about our children and especially our grandchildren.
http://forums.bowsite.com/TF/bgforums/t ... MT#3288935
I grew up in a blue collar family. My father was in a union and voted Democrat no matter who the candidate was.
When I was in high school I never dreamed of my father buying me a car or that I would not have to work to support myself. In fact, my father made it perfectly clear that when I graduated from high school I would be on my own. He told my two sisters the same thing. We accepted this because we knew my father had been working three jobs to pay our ways through high school. He grew up in even tougher times, post depression. At age 16 my father worked as a welder on a truck assembly line and lived on his own in a small appartment above an old garage in St. Louis. The family farm went broke and he was totally on his own to survive at age 16. He joined the navy at age 18. Many of his friends were killed in World War II and the Korean War. He is now 84 and lives in a small two bedroon dupex in South St. Louis county. He is a Cardinal fan so he is happy and proud of his redbirds.
We all wanted better for our own children. We wanted a world with less stress and more comforts. As a result many of us have failed as parents. Today's 20 somethings feel they are "entitled" to the good life without working for it. Not everyone of course, but a high enough percentage that we face a crossroads. Entitlements will bankrupt the country. Actually, they already have.
If western civilization does not rekindle the work ethic soon, our way of life is at risk.
http://forums.bowsite.com/TF/bgforums/t ... MT#3288935
I grew up in a blue collar family. My father was in a union and voted Democrat no matter who the candidate was.
When I was in high school I never dreamed of my father buying me a car or that I would not have to work to support myself. In fact, my father made it perfectly clear that when I graduated from high school I would be on my own. He told my two sisters the same thing. We accepted this because we knew my father had been working three jobs to pay our ways through high school. He grew up in even tougher times, post depression. At age 16 my father worked as a welder on a truck assembly line and lived on his own in a small appartment above an old garage in St. Louis. The family farm went broke and he was totally on his own to survive at age 16. He joined the navy at age 18. Many of his friends were killed in World War II and the Korean War. He is now 84 and lives in a small two bedroon dupex in South St. Louis county. He is a Cardinal fan so he is happy and proud of his redbirds.
We all wanted better for our own children. We wanted a world with less stress and more comforts. As a result many of us have failed as parents. Today's 20 somethings feel they are "entitled" to the good life without working for it. Not everyone of course, but a high enough percentage that we face a crossroads. Entitlements will bankrupt the country. Actually, they already have.
If western civilization does not rekindle the work ethic soon, our way of life is at risk.