How did it feel, seeing the dictatorships collapse and look at the newspaper and see good news?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francisco_Franco 1975
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnation_Revolution 1974
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_dictatorship_in_Brazil 1985
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_South_Korea#Sixth_Republic_(1987–present) 1988
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Reorganization_Process 1983
Plane hijackings, gas lines/limits, mortgage interest rates over 10%, school bomb threats, …
We had movies and songs about nuclear war, Russians, bombing Iran, etc. because these were daily concerns.
Rivers on fire, gay bashing, satanic panic, abortion clinic bombings, acid rain…
Shit was wild, and often not in a good way. 70s fashion was groovy, though.
Rivers on fire, gay bashing, satanic panic, abortion clinic bombings, acid rain…
Okay, but we have all of that now, too. What was different?
No - literally rivers were on fire.
And gay bashing was mainstream, fully tolerated, very common. Lakes were turning clear like swimming pools due to acid rain - kinda pretty, but totally dead.No - literally rivers were on fire.
BP lit the Gulf on fire a while back. Nevermind the drought induced wildfires all through the Mountain West.
And gay bashing was mainstream, fully tolerated, very common.
Texas Senate Bill 12 is bringing it back.
Lakes were turning clear like swimming pools due to acid rain - kinda pretty, but totally dead.
We had a climate-related disaster every four days last year.
Think of that but continuous. Sure there seems to be to be more environmental disasters than ever but each is a one off.
- Dead lakes and crumbling masonry from acid rain were continuous. For years
- BP having an oil spill eventually goes away, but rivers were toxic for decades, repeatedly starting on fire
The rivers of fire was one major thing that contributed to the formation of the EPA, actually. In the preceding decades, if was totally normal for industry to just dump whatever waste into rivers and nobody cared.
We still have far too much pollution going on, but I feel many people have forgotten just how egregious it was before government regulations were put in place to stop shit like that.
It’s pretty bad now, but more to the point, we’re still paying for the wanton destruction wrought decades ago. And now ‘conservatives’ (air quotes because in this case, it’s the opposite) want to roll back regulations because freedom.
I’ve been through river cleanups everywhere I ve lived. There’s always something toxic that corps got away with dumping for so many years and then just left it. Government on the hook for so many billions of dollars cleaning up the mess. Where’s that sense of personal/corporate responsibility we hear so much about?




