#1990s-history

[ follow ]
Digital life
fromBuzzFeed
1 week ago

People Over 50 Are Sharing What Was "Normal" In The '70s, And Gen Z Would Lose Their Minds

The 1970s featured unique cultural norms and practices that seem unbelievable today, from social behaviors to household items.
fromThe Atlantic
2 weeks ago

Today's Atlantic Trivia: 1990s Tech

Over the years, there have been Populists, Progressives, Farmer-Laborers, Unionists, Constitutional Unionists, Unconditional Unionists, Know-Nothings, Nullifiers, Readjusters, and more. My favorite party with a presence in the chamber is the Silver Party, founded to support a platform of bimetallism, or backing the country's money with silver as well as gold.
History
World politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

European resistance to US foreign policy over the decades

Prime Minister Wilson declined President Johnson's request to send British forces to Vietnam by demonstrating Britain's comparable military commitment to Malaysia's defense.
fromFast Company
2 weeks ago

A record number of Americans want out-now the government is making it easier

Starting next month, the cost of renouncing your U.S. citizenship will go down dramatically - a boon for people already shouldering the burden of paying for a major overseas move. Anyone wishing to formally shed their American citizenship is required to obtain a form called a Certificate of Loss of Nationality, and right now it comes with a whopping $2,350 fee. In April, that fee will drop by 80% to $450.
US Elections
Digital life
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Young people are longing for the low-tech 90s and so would I, if I could only remember them

Embracing 90s nostalgia encourages disconnecting from technology to experience life more fully and invites serendipity.
Digital life
fromBuzzFeed
2 weeks ago

Older People Are Sharing The Everyday Experiences From The Past That Are Suuuuuper Rare Now

Older adults describe everyday experiences from the 1950s-1980s that no longer exist today, including shared phone lines, elevator attendants, accessible firearms in public spaces, and inexpensive concert tickets.
Miscellaneous
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

I'm 66 and my grandson asked me what we did before the internet and I started to answer and then stopped - because the honest answer is we were bored in ways that forced us to become interesting, and I don't know how to explain that without sounding like I'm criticizing his entire world - Silicon Canals

Pre-internet boredom forced people to develop practical skills, storytelling abilities, and genuine expertise that shaped their personalities and social value in ways constant digital entertainment prevents today.
US politics
fromFortune
1 month ago

'90s nostalgia seizes the Fed and White House as Warsh and Trump see AI as an internet-style productivity boom | Fortune

Trump administration believes AI can replicate 1990s economic growth by appointing a Fed chair willing to cut interest rates aggressively, though economists question this strategy and the historical narrative underlying it.
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

What's a Gen X to Do?

Beleaguered Louvre president Laurence des Cars quits after a historic heist under her watch. The next morning, a new leader is announced. It's Christophe Leribault from the Palace of Versailles, a true museum animal who ran a few during his career.
Arts
fromwww.aljazeera.com
1 month ago

Why do we miss 2016?

The past decade has seen a surge of new ways of self-expression online, but somehow, netizens reminisce about the grainy selfies with dog ear filters, old movies, and less AI-generated content.
Social media marketing
History
fromBuzzFeed
1 month ago

Can You Ace This '80s Current Events Quiz That Only Gen X Seems To Remember?

The 1980s featured dramatic, world-changing political and cultural events that defined a generation and remain widely referenced today.
Higher education
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

10 things Boomers remember being free that now cost an absurd amount of money - Silicon Canals

Essential services and opportunities once affordable—such as higher education and basic banking—have become increasingly expensive, imposing heavy financial burdens on younger generations.
fromemptywheel
2 months ago

Time to Unplug the American Century and Restart the Machine - emptywheel

Three of the four things that gave Trump a foothold, in my opinion, were failures in this century (the fourth is the legacy of slavery and the organized political violence that replaced it). The other three, though, are the War on Terror, the financial crisis, and social media. (COVID was the final catalyst, I think; having moved during the height of COVID, I can't express how much worse the US dealt with it than much of the EU.)
World news
#2016-nostalgia
Music
fromFast Company
1 month ago

This classic MTV website goes where Netflix dare not venture

MTV's last music-only stations closed December 31, 2025, but online services like MTV Rewind recreate the vintage music-video TV experience.
Education
fromBuzzFeed
2 months ago

Older Adults Are Sharing The Unique Experiences From The Past That Have Young People Confused

Smoking, lax school discipline, student smoking areas, and outhouses were common everyday practices decades ago.
Social justice
fromAxios
2 months ago

The Civil Rights era is losing its grip on young Americans

Younger Americans lack knowledge of Civil Rights history as weaker K-12 teaching and social-media consumption replace classroom learning, and activism occurs online instead of organizing.
Philosophy
fromThe Nation
2 months ago

How Has the Idea of Revolution Changed?

Revolution originally meant a return to political origins rather than novelty; the Enlightenment recast revolution as progressive break from the past.
fromThe Globe and Mail
2 months ago

Business Brief: Heralding the age of Western decline

U.S. President Donald Trump, with his lust for Greenland and hectoring of Europe, thinks the world is at his mercy,and thatthe U.S. is invincible. He's right on the first point. But he discovered this week that he's wrong about the second one. In Davos at the World Economic Forum, Trump climbed down on his Greenland threats after his actions caused chaos in the markets.
World news
fromwww.dw.com
1 month ago

'Threat to world peace': How Germans see the US now

After the tensions of the George W. Bush era, the new US president's approval ratings among Germans skyrocketed. According to a Pew Research Center survey, 93% of Germans believed Obama would "do the right thing regarding world affairs." That remains a record to this day. Even in 2016, at the end of his second term, an extraordinary 86% of Germans still trusted Obama.
US politics
World news
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

How Extremism Takes Hold

Assassinations and executions of prominent ideologues in the 1960s radicalized young activists across divergent movements, catalyzing decades of violent insurgency and extremist organizing.
Digital life
fromBuzzFeed
2 months ago

People Are Pointing Out The Parts Of American Culture That Are Changing Before Our Eyes

Widespread convenience technologies let people avoid leaving home, reducing everyday face-to-face interaction and increasing social isolation, division, and hostility.
fromBuzzFeed
1 month ago

49 Photos of Forgotten '70s Things That Will Make Any Boomer Feel Instantly Nostalgic

1. Soda and beer cans that came with pull tabs:
History
fromMashable
2 months ago

Was 2016 the last good year?

There was something undeniably weird about 2016. Not weird in the charming, "remember Vine?" sense, but weird in the way history feels right before it tips over. It marked a slow descent into collective unease, beginning with the surreal recapture of El Chapo, winding through celebrity deaths and the mainstreaming of one particular cartoon frog, and finally cratering with the presidential election of reality TV star Donald Trump. At the time, many outlets openly wondered whether 2016 was the worst year ever.
Digital life
Digital life
fromBuzzFeed
2 months ago

23 Things That Were So Common During The '90s That Are Basically Extinct Today

Everyday 1990s practices like meeting at airport gates, calling Moviefone, and leaving doors unlocked have largely disappeared due to security and technological change.
[ Load more ]