Saturday, March 12, 2011

Battle of the Decades – Fourth Round

As expected, the battle between the 1990s and the 1940s was a rough one. The 90s took the early lead but quickly lost that lead to the 40s, who looked like they were going to run away with it. But right near the end the 90s pulled back to … I hate to say this … I mean, it stinks when this happens … tie.

You can check my numbers if you’re really bored, but that was the end result. Well, not the END result. You can’t END a battle with a tie. So that means I was unfortunately forced to vote, which I only do in an “emergency”. Anyway, they were both great, nay, incredible decades, but what eventually tipped the scales for me was the invention of the World Wide Web. It is arguably as great of an invention as the printing press—bringing information to the masses. Plus, without it we wouldn’t have The Non-Review, and who can imagine a world without that. So the win goes to the 90s by one little vote (mine), but we have another battle upon us, and it won’t wait for me to shut up, so here it is:


1950s
Your proudest achievements:
I had lots of fun with things like opening Disneyland, inventing Legos, and throwing the first satellite into space. And, of course, I was also very busy medically, you know like with that DNA discovery thing, and beating the stuffings out of Polio with that vaccine of mine, plus, hey, no one had ever done an organ transplant before.
Things you don’t like to talk about:
Yes, yes, the Korean War was kind of my fault, but I didn’t necessarily ask Joseph McCarthy to start his stupid communist witch hunt, we just kind of did. Oh, yeah, and I made Castro the dictator of Cuba. Sue me.


1900s
Your proudest achievements:
Dude, I flew for the first time with those Wright bros! Then I sent the first radio signal across the Atlantic, you know, just to say “Hey.” And after I helped Einstein come up with his Theory of Relativity, I went and invented myself some plastic.
Things you don’t like to talk about:
Well, Queen Victoria died because of me, and President McKinley was assassinated because of me, and a whole lot of people died in the San Francisco Earthquake because of me, so I’ve got some skeletons in my closet. Literally. But I also unleashed Sigmund Freud’s crazy theories on the world. Sorry.



So which of these two is the greater decade? You tell us by casting your vote, for one or the other, in the comments section. On Tuesday we’ll announce the winner (so vote before then), and then throw two other decades up against each other, for round five.

Written by Reputation@Stake
from A Link And A Smile

16 comments:

  1. This is a tough one. There's a lot to be said about both decades. But as I'm in a steampunk kick right now, and I am amazed at the significant technological innovations that went on to change the world, I choose the 1900s.

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  2. I am so torn on this one, I mean the 1900's were such a cool time, everything was brand new and anything was possible.

    BUT, the 50's saw the rise of Thorazine. I don't know about you, but a chemical lobotomy is so much less intrusive than the alternatives at the time, like a real lobotomy, insulin shock therapy and my favorite electroconvulsive therapy.

    Why get a shock, when you can just take a pill to quiet the evil voices in your head?

    Starting the Panama Canal? No drilling holes in my head? Such a hard choice. I will go with the 1900's, they dressed better.

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  3. Fifties for sure...it's when I was borned! How could anything else be greater than that!

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  4. I've always said I'd love to have lived in the 1950's! Take me back!!

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  5. I am going with the 1950's! Betty has spoken!

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  6. As much as I love Teddy Roosevelt (who was a member of an earlier Cave of Cool Inc) I have to go with the fifties. Atomic terror at them movies, mutated creatures, communist threats and some of the best years for toy creations ever. Sure it still was only good for whites and not minorities but there time was coming. Plus there was the beginning of TVs golden age and comic books cost a dime. 50s all the way.

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  7. So the 1930's lost on a technicality, and now the decade I was pulling for lost on a tie?! *Sigh*

    1950's has to pull through here. Good movies, music, and everything else Kal said.

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  8. You are one fun and funny blogger, so glad you found my blog and I found yours through "no rules linky" party.

    I HAVE to vote for the 50's - - - you left out the MOST important thing: KEETHA WAS BORN!!!!! Woooot! ;-)

    Seriously, so many fun stories in the 50's - - - like Rosiland Franklin discovering the structure of DNA and then those sneaky two GUYS - - - Watson and Crick, who really only made the first working model of it STOLE her thunder. So 50's that.

    And Jonas Salk and the MIRACLE that is the polio vaccine. I have friends just a year or two older than me who bear the major wreckage of Polio on their frames, but I was able to escape safely thanks to Salk and that pink liquid on a sugar cube - - - which is how we used to get that particular vaccine.

    And who could forget Poodle Skirts? Saddle shoes and bobby socks???

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  9. 1950s fashion. You can't beat it!

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  10. I love this post idea! I totally agree with you on the internet and the printing press analogy. Hmmm....but does the printing press trump the internet? I'll be thinking about this one for a little while longer...

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  11. since 50's seems to be an outright winner...going for the underdog this time...the Wright bros need a pat or vote on their graves...so there...

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  12. The 1950's had Joe McCarthy, the hula hoop, tuna casserole and the Cold War. I'll go with the 1900's when people got to glide with Orville and Wilbur over a new world...

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  13. 50's...
    yes, there was a lot of good things at the turn of the century, but things were all jacked up also...

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