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Pup7
Guest
Isn’t that the truth.
Ah, mustard gas…
Ah, mustard gas…
I do know something about history, which is why I am bringing the historical comparison up.goout:![]()
If you know anything about history, you’d know that all of those issues were very much present in 1918. Some to a greater extent than today.It’s not a good thing that women are beaten the crap out of, raped, objectified through pornography, and murdered by abortion in the millions. So much for progress.
There are advantages to living in the current era, for sure. But spiritually I don’t think it makes a difference whether it 1918, AD or BC.Do you think it is possible to say that we are actually better off in 2018 compared to 1918?
Do we really live happier lives than they did? Or vice versa?
Or basically the same essentially?
That’s exactly what you’re doing, but in the opposite direction.Confused…as to what your point is. Hardships in every age yes. We are asking about the current state of life in comparison. Let’s compare.
Don’t even need to look that far back: just take a gander at any the “Christian” courts of Europe within the last millennium.Around 1918 BC , we had cities like Sodom as well as Gomorrah, even though they didn’t have the internet or modern communication.
Nowadays women consume about 90% of Valium and Librium.Hysteria: covering everything from PMS to schizophrenia.
Putting words in my mouth. Also, you haven’t said how you measure happiness.It seems you want to measure happiness by availability of health care for women. Health care is a good thing. But it doesn’t address the question that is asked.
If you know anything about history, you’d know that all of those issues were very much present in 1918. Some to a greater extent than today.
Yes, let’s compare.Let’s compare.
No, Grace isn’t confining the comparison to that in the least. But it’s not wrong to do so, either.It seems you want to measure happiness by availability of health care for women. Health care is a good thing. But it doesn’t address the question that is asked.
Valium is so rarely prescribed these days it’s ridiculous, so I have no idea where you’re getting that stat from. Librium has been around for decades, and I doubt women hold the rights to that stat either. I’m about to go find out.Nowadays women consume about 90% of Valium and Librium.
Compared to 1918? I dunno: you tell me.What’s the rate of suicide?
Murder?
Addiction?
Right. Not to mention that many suicides were probably passed off as “accidents” so that the family could avoid stigma and the departed could receive a proper burialAdd to that they didn’t keep suicide stats back then and it gets harder…
Well, I think I do.The fact is: we do not even know what happiness is in this age.
I don’t know that you can measure happiness. I’m primarily concerned with freedom and opportunity, which at least allows for the pursuit of happiness.How do you want to measure happiness?
How do you know that? Most people I meet, know, and work with are not wallowing in misery.The fact is: we do not even know what happiness is in this age.
In some ways it was almost worse.I worked with stats from the early 1900s regarding child pornography and sex traffic. Really, it was as weird back then as today.
as weird as…goout:![]()
Well, I think I do.The fact is: we do not even know what happiness is in this age.
I worked with stats from the early 1900s regarding child pornography and sex traffic. Really, it was as weird back then as today.
Valium is still the #4 benzodiazepine out there, although the whole class of drugs is in disfavor nowadays and not used as much as back in the day.Valium is so rarely prescribed these days it’s ridiculous, so I have no idea where you’re getting that stat from. Librium has been around for decades, and I doubt women hold the rights to that stat either. I’m about to go find out.
No, it doesn’t.Are you proposing that pornography was as rampant in 1918 as today? I’m sorry , that assertion just fails badly.