If you didn't live your prime through the 80's and 90's you lost @ life.
America in the 80's and 90's wasn't just peak America.
Is was peak the globe.
And that time can never be replicated. Ever.
Think about that.
Enjoy living your future with all the gender confused people, mutilated women and rest of the losers going forward lmao.
|
Thread: Another black pill (Americucks)
-
12-04-2022, 02:29 PM #1
Another black pill (Americucks)
"I am a rational animal who occupies the intermediary position between angel and beast"
"The upper class is afforded their position by the collective burden the underclass must carry for them"
**Summer Walker Crew**
-
12-04-2022, 02:37 PM #2
Had so much fun in the 90s it's insane. brb leave the house, no phone, no ID, nothing. Just adventure.
*Look at reflection in car window and flex every time crew*
*Use half the roll to wipe after a poo crew*
*Fart in the gym and blame rotten smell on faulty ventilation crew*
*Fart at home and blame it on the dog crew*
*Watch neutron-star density poop mock me as water flushes around it and it stays put crew*
*Drive 2 minutes in the summer and back of shirt gets completely wet crew*
*Coffee black as midnight on a moonless night crew*
*Fat shame my cat on a daily basis crew*
-
12-04-2022, 02:38 PM #3
I remember it the culture was a lot more positive and wholesome idk where this nihilistic culture came from
PC specs
i9 9900k/AMD RX 6800 16 GB/16 GB RAM/LG BX 65'' OLED/Gigabyte GS27QC 27''
OLED Master Race crew
1440p 120+ fps only crew
6'2 master race crew
Audiophile crew
Metal crew
Introvert/INTJ crew
German crew
If you aren't getting stronger you aren't getting bigger crew
-
12-04-2022, 02:38 PM #4
-
-
12-04-2022, 02:39 PM #5
-
12-04-2022, 02:41 PM #6
Your time line is broken.
This country died on 9/11 with the introduction of the surveillance state and the US government beginning its terrorist operation against the domestic population.
The middle class died in 08'.
Obama finished the rest off with the Supreme Court ruling in favor or homos, and the introduction of groomer culture."I am a rational animal who occupies the intermediary position between angel and beast"
"The upper class is afforded their position by the collective burden the underclass must carry for them"
**Summer Walker Crew**
-
12-04-2022, 02:44 PM #7
-
12-04-2022, 02:44 PM #8
-
-
12-04-2022, 02:46 PM #9
-
12-04-2022, 02:46 PM #10
-
12-04-2022, 02:48 PM #11
-
12-04-2022, 02:48 PM #12
-
-
12-04-2022, 02:48 PM #13
-
12-04-2022, 02:48 PM #14
-
12-04-2022, 02:50 PM #15
-
12-04-2022, 02:56 PM #16
-
-
12-04-2022, 03:02 PM #17
-
12-04-2022, 03:02 PM #18
-
12-04-2022, 03:04 PM #19
- Join Date: Jul 2006
- Location: Houston, Texas, United States
- Posts: 35,859
- Rep Power: 398061
Every once in a while i see one of our motivational celebrity public figures say "Now is the best time to be alive" and i think to myself, you are a fuking idiot.
"Even through the darkest days, this fire burns, always."
The pessimist complains about the wind
The optimist expects it to change direction
The realist adjusts the sails
-
12-04-2022, 03:05 PM #20
-
-
12-04-2022, 03:08 PM #21
-
12-04-2022, 03:08 PM #22
Pretty much.
You can make all the money you want and fuk the endless amount of yeast infected western women you want.
It's all cope.
The energy/feelings this time of existence gives off is negative.
This country is running on fumes, with its global military conquest to impose gender ideology on the east.
It's debt, poverty, nihilism, slavery, invasive technology, broken families.
It's re-colonization by those from the South.
This is your life now, and it hasn't even hit rock bottom yet."I am a rational animal who occupies the intermediary position between angel and beast"
"The upper class is afforded their position by the collective burden the underclass must carry for them"
**Summer Walker Crew**
-
12-04-2022, 03:15 PM #23
You're blissfully unaware of the changes social media/dating apps and smart phones have done to the culture but ok
David Haidt has been talking about it for years how it's destroying mental health in America
The 2000s was not much different than the 90s the culture was almost the same lmao unless you are talking early early 90s which was more similar to the mid-late 80sPC specs
i9 9900k/AMD RX 6800 16 GB/16 GB RAM/LG BX 65'' OLED/Gigabyte GS27QC 27''
OLED Master Race crew
1440p 120+ fps only crew
6'2 master race crew
Audiophile crew
Metal crew
Introvert/INTJ crew
German crew
If you aren't getting stronger you aren't getting bigger crew
-
12-04-2022, 05:17 PM #24
-
-
12-04-2022, 05:28 PM #25
-
12-04-2022, 05:36 PM #26
brb 90s saturday morning cartoons
brb stepping into a Blockbuster for the first time as a kid and seeing all those videogames
brb running home from school to watch OG Power Rangers
brb POGs craze at middle school
brb whole day at school is ruined cus you lost your golden slammer
brb was 12 but still walked around exploring the city after school with your boys like it was a fkn adventure
brb playing soccer with a tennis ball using hockey nets as goal posts
brb cycling with your boys into downtown district with your boys on weekend
brb discovering VHS porn for the first time
brb beef pattie for lunch every day for 75cents
brb lootbag with toys was 1 dollar
brb 25cents as a kid meant you could actually afford 5 5cent candies FUUUUUUUUUUUU
brb pokemon red and blue hnnng
brb Beast Wars, Gargoyles, Batman the Animated Series were your afterschool TV lineup
brb David Letterman, Married With Children, Conan was your late night TV lineup
brb your dad surprises you with an SNES machine for your bday
fuuuuuuuuark, 90s was truly magical.
-
12-04-2022, 05:55 PM #27
I play 80s and 90s hits on the weekends while I work on projects around the house. Turn on 90s sitcom marathons and let them play in the background.
When I hit that flowstate I'm no longer in clown world circa '22. Feels good meng.
Then I leave my house and reality hits. Fuark.The closer we approach the uncertainty of life's ending the more we wish to trade all of the things we have acquired in exchange for all of the things we have lost: wealth for youth, knowledge for fresh curiosity, resignation for hope. We'd trade our wisdom for new experiences, but it is wisdom that will teach us that at the end of the road the only new experience is death.
-
12-05-2022, 02:36 AM #28
I wrote this years ago in a thread someone made here about just this - the magic of growing up in the 90s. I feel a copy/paste is warranted here to supplement your list:
The year is 1997. The month is July. The long hazy, lazy days of summer are officially in full swing. It seems like an eternity ago that you were sitting in that classroom in mid-June, gazing longingly out that window at the summer landscapes beyond, and dreaming of your impending summer vacation.
You wake up on the later side of the morning. No more need for mom to wake you up, no need for alarm clocks now. As you slowly open your eyes, still heavy with sleep, you can hear the sound of birds chirping outside your window, as rays of sunlight gently filter through the cracks in your blinds. Outside your closed bedroom door, you hear the distance rumbling of the old air conditioner in your parents’ bedroom window. If it’s on this early, that definitely means she’ll be a hot one out today.
You stumble to the kitchen still wearing your PJ’s from your favorite cartoon, which happens to be Rugrats at this point in time. The TV is on in the den and your mom is standing in the kitchen. She smiles at you and says good morning. She tells you she’s making your favorite breakfast and to go watch TV until it’s ready. You grab the glass of milk your mom offers you and sit in front of the TV in your favorite sofa chair. You flip the channels until something catches your eye. Great, re-runs of Power Rangers. You haven’t seen that show “in years.” You were such a little kid when that show premiered. It might be fun to revel in the nostalgia a bit.
Later in the morning you venture out on the back porch with your swim trunks and towel. Time to hit the pool for a bit. You feel the refreshing coolness of the water as you cannonball in it without even testing its temperature. You’re young and fearless, you don’t need to check. The world is simple, you’re innocent, nothing bad will ever happen. No consequences. Your mom calls you in for lunch. Looks like she’s made hotdogs on the BBQ again – definitely one of your favorite summer lunches.
In the early afternoon, you throw on your shorts and a T-shirt. You tell your mom you’re going to bike over to the video store to rent some games. She approaches you with the sunscreen. You groan but you let her apply it to your cheeks and nose. She hands you the bottle and tells you to not forget your arms, legs, and neck. The sun is really hot out today. You do as she says.
You throw on your baseball cap and grab your bike from the shed. As you bike down your quiet suburban street, you see a couple of kids playing in a front yard, a couple loading a car for what looks like a camping trip, a father mowing the lawn. The sounds of summer and smell of freshly cut grass overtake your senses. You feel happiness. You arrive at the video store and you leave your bike on the curb. No need to lock it up, nobody would ever think of stealing it. Plus, you can keep an eye on it from inside the store at all times. You say hi to the clerk and head over to the video game section immediately. Just this year your parents finally caved and got you an N64 for Christmas. You don’t own many games, but you have just as much fun renting them. You notice that the deal of ‘3 games, 3 days, 3 dollars” is still on. You stand in the air- conditioned store, the smell of stale popcorn and the newest release blaring in the background TV overcoming your senses once again. You finally make a decision and bring the 3 games you selected to the counter. The lanky teenager looks at one of them, rated M for Mature. 17+. He looks you up and down, cracks a small smile, and asks if your parents are ok with you renting this. You say, "absolutely!" He asks for your 3 bucks. You add a bag of candy to your order and pay.
You’re biking home now, the plastic bag containing your prized new possessions dangling from the handlebars of your bike. You’re already thinking of how great it will be to shut the blinds in your living room and play these new exciting games in the comfort of your cool air-conditioned house all afternoon. Even better, your mom told you that she’s making your favorite dinner as soon as your dad comes home from work later. This seems like it’ll be another perfect summer day. You wonder what tomorrow will hold.
The end.
Mind you, my life now is really good. I worked and sacrificed my ass off for nearly 2 decades to build something noteworthy for myself. However, there's always going to be something magical about reminiscing about my childhood and the 90s as a decade specifically + all it entailed. In my opinion, it was the last decade of blissful innocence and ignorance.*Look at reflection in car window and flex every time crew*
*Use half the roll to wipe after a poo crew*
*Fart in the gym and blame rotten smell on faulty ventilation crew*
*Fart at home and blame it on the dog crew*
*Watch neutron-star density poop mock me as water flushes around it and it stays put crew*
*Drive 2 minutes in the summer and back of shirt gets completely wet crew*
*Coffee black as midnight on a moonless night crew*
*Fat shame my cat on a daily basis crew*
-
-
12-05-2022, 02:50 AM #29
This thread is mistaken
You had so much fun in that time because you were a kid.
Kids today will look back at the 2020s "fondly" because much like us, it was a simpler time for them when they didn't have to worry about bills and they had very little obligations, and even if they grew up poor, they still managed to have fun with the little they had.
and much like we had fun with games like Goldeneye or Halo they'll look back at games like Fortnite and Minecraft the same way.
-
12-05-2022, 02:53 AM #30
Bookmarks