Anonymous wrote:I'm in my early 40s and finished HS in 2000. IMO yes the 90s were peak in so many ways. All the conveniences of modern life, relative peace and feeling like things were improving globally (countries coming up), economy doing great. Yes I recognize not everyone was benefitting but I'm not white and my parents were immigrants so there was a wide swath of people "doing well" in that era.
We had enough technology but our attention spans, social lives, family life had not been destroyed by phones. I watched primetime sitcoms like Seinfeld and TGIF with my parents.
Anonymous wrote:Being in college in a late 90s was pretty amazing, it was before social media so if you act stupid it wasn’t put on blast and companies were hiring like crazy. Every single person I knew in 99/2000 had a job before leaving college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I immigrated to the US in the late 90s from....Bosnia![]()
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(I know why you mentioned it, of course) and always felt like I couldn't believe how good things were before 9/11 happened. It's like something shifted after that day and we have never been able to get back on track.
I was in NYC on that day, so it was up close and in my face, but I’ve felt like that was the death of so much collective optimism, and the void was replaced by so much cynicism and paranoia.
Then came smartphones and social media, which at first felt like progress, but it eventually only served to make us far more cynical and disconnected.
Then came Covid, and that was really the final blow to any feeling of “we’re in this life thing together.” What a sorry state we’re in now.