M
Maxwell03
Guest
Are we? (now i’m going to be awake until 3 am because of this question)
Are you kidding me?Great.
Doesn’t answer the comparison.
You are not reading what I am writing.goout:![]()
Are you kidding me?Great.
Doesn’t answer the comparison.
You started to compare 1918 and 2018 regarding porn and crime to prove that 1918 was better because there was less porn and sex crimes and never gave stats. I gave advice and answered the question, not with the result you like, and now you say it´s off topic. This is not a proper discussion culture.
Yes, you mentioned porn use and availability as well as sex crimes and abortions as a mark for unhapiness, and that this issues were less grave in 1918. I said it wasn´t. I never said money or health is the only measure of happiness, I say that 1918 is worse in almost every way you could measure happiness.I am simply pointing the various things that might be barometers of true happiness.
That’s going to affect a lot of the perception of sex trafficking as well - a lot of women who were dismissed as just prostitutes would now be considered trafficking victims.As you can see from 19th century literature, the assumption was that any young woman who left her family’s protection was going to wind up a prostitute. The fact that women have far more respectable ways to make a living today is part of the explanation why prostitution is less of an industry than it used to be in Western countries.
Oh yes…this is something rarely noticed among this discussions. Since I life in a former socialist region and attend a mainly russian parish, I got sensibilized more than before for this huge crush of respect and love for the christian culture.Another point–Russia’s involvement in WWI led fairly directly to the rise of the Bolsheviks and to the near destruction of Russian Orthodox life in Russia. (A lot of Orthodox monasteries were turned into prisons during the Soviet years.)
I’m not Vladimir Putin’s biggest fan, but if you’re in Russia, 2018 is definitely a better year than 1918, which was during the Russian Civil War.
But were they drinking a lot to ease the tensions and pain of their lives, or was it a hail-fellow-well-met cultural thing, or was it because beer was cleaner and safer than water?I’d argue that Americans used to do a lot of self-medicating with alcohol that we don’t anymore.
Not just in the United States, Vin Mariani was a cocaine based patent medicine that was used by folks in Europe including Popes Leo XIII and Pius X.I haven’t caught up with the thread, but at the end of the 19th century/very early 20th century, some very hard drugs were readily available to the public.
No, actually, the reason there are few statistics is it wasn’t tracked. They had no reason to track it.Some of these, the statistics don’t even exist because the problem was barely existent.
Others, there are some statistics. The WHO has studies attempting to compare opiate addiction rates across decades.
Or you can simply ask your police and prosecutors for comparison of today with even 40 years ago, let alone 100.
Abortion was nowhere near as prevalent, as it was illegal.
There’s a reason Coca-Cola has its name.Not just in the United States, Vin Mariani was a cocaine based patent medicine that was used by folks in Europe including Popes Leo XIII and Pius X.
It was likely due to all of that, and a lack of availability of actual psychotropics in many cases as well.But were they drinking a lot to ease the tensions and pain of their lives, or was it a hail-fellow-well-met cultural thing, or was it because beer was cleaner and safer than water?
that … and tastier.because beer was cleaner and safer than water?
Right. You’re not going to see them in the illegal drugs statistics because you could go buy these things perfectly legally.It’s amazing how it’s not acknowledged that you could buy opiates and actual drug paraphernalia in the Sears and Roebuck catalogs of that era. The first Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act wasn’t passed until 1938!
As I’ve been keeping my ears open lately, it’s been striking how much hard drug use there used to be. I believe I mentioned Louisa May Alcott, but Elizabeth Barrett Browning (!) also came up as an opium user.Not just in the United States, Vin Mariani was a cocaine based patent medicine that was used by folks in Europe including Popes Leo XIII and Pius X.
To this day, we talk about people “self-medicating” with alcohol, tobacco and drugs for psychological problems.It was likely due to all of that, and a lack of availability of actual psychotropics in many cases as well.