eliza61
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jun 2, 2003
- Messages
- 21,023
I graduated HS in '87. Kids didn't get a car for graduation, because they *already had cars* from their 16th birthdays. I grew up in a really wealthy area (though I was one of the poor kids) and was surrounded by things like that. I got to drive the Pinto while learning to drive. ooooh. Then, when my mom needed it b/c she worked further away, I went back and forth to school in her bought-dirt-cheap (and restored at home by my then-stepdad) '55 Chevy. This did NOT compare to the Camaros and IROCs and Fieros and all the other insane vehicles in the school parking lot (though I actually thought it was cooler).
This is NOTHING new. Except that now parents are making kids delay getting that new car, since, as I mentioned, at my HS in '87 they already had them.
That line says it all, you grew up in a wealthy area. What is new today is that people on the POVERTY line or low middle class areas are now expected to buy cars. When you don't have a 1000 bucks in the bank yet you are trying to buy a car for a kid simply for graduating that's an issue. It also points to what the op said about screwed up priorities. Now I'm a bit older than you. In my day, you were expected to do your best and graduate without a ticker tape parade It wasn't a national day of celebration. we did not make holidays out of doing the bare minumun. Luckily we did not celebrate mediocracy in the 60's. A kid did not get a medal for coming in the 49th place out of 49 contestants. we called that last place. A team did not come in last and still get trophies. A kid did not graduate with barely a 2.0 and get a car just for finishing.