Anonymous wrote:Miss those days so much - I was an optimist then!
Anonymous wrote:

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And there wasn't an Ann Taylor, Potbelly, and Starbucks on every goddamn corner in the world.
Speaking of Ann Taylor, their clothes were actually well made in the 90s
That's another thing missing. Quality has gone to hell in most things.
Oh, come on people, quality had already gone to hell by the 90s!
Maybe compared to some earlier time period, bit relative to now it was the golden ages. My college towels from Kmart were made in the USA - and they're still in great shape 14 years later. Knit shirts weren't all "tissue tees," which meant that they'd last a lot longer than what I can find now. I still have the rare Banana Republic shirts that fit and wear amazingly from 1993. Something has changed with regards to quality and it is not to the consumer's benefit.
Anonymous wrote:I was in my 20s and early 30s in the 1990s. I know a lot of people that age now. I do think things seem different now, they experience the world differently, so I don't know that it was just that time of life for me. I will also say that unless you were an adult living and working here before 9/11, you can have no earthly idea how much life has changed in DC since then.
Anonymous wrote:I was in my 20s and early 30s in the 1990s. I know a lot of people that age now. I do think things seem different now, they experience the world differently, so I don't know that it was just that time of life for me. I will also say that unless you were an adult living and working here before 9/11, you can have no earthly idea how much life has changed in DC since then.
Anonymous wrote:![]()
That's what I love about these high school girls, man. I get older, they stay the same age....Yes, they do.