My favorite experiences were parking lots, automobile show rooms, sitting in our automobile driving on the highway, trust me we all loved every automobile and they never got tired. Think about this, each year a different look, over 35 companies on the road at a time, all different forms from coupé to large Sedanette, and better yet any year from 1920 to 1960 in 1960. but not just that ohh no, think about all the colors, both pastel based glossy, and poly iridescent metallics. all white walls, different rims all glorious and elegant in each automobile, different everything yet every brand elegant and poised.
I love how they added like frightening like music when the rush out started and it showed nothing but traffic, trains and a lot of people! I stay in Chicago and rush hour is ass and it starts at 3 pm here. if I’m on the road or highway i start to panic and hurry home and that music tune is basically that fear I feel
I'm always surprised by how much (relatively) european cars were riding in America in this period. Lot of Beetles of course, but also Porsche, Karmann Ghia, and I even saw a Morris Mini Woody... Very interesting anyhow.
This is one of those videos where it’s not talking about what the future could be but what it will be. I would never give a train ticket or card a second thought.with those card readers created in the 60s it’s very interesting
What's really crazy is that the very idea if interconnected computers was in the experimental stages across universities in the US. The internet has come a long way since the 60s.
The more things change the more things stay the same. I realized that looking at this video. The only difference between today and then is that we did not have iPhones and Alexa to do our work or us.
2 people in the video were wearing masonic rings , one of them a 32nd degree mason ring at the beginning and the other a blue lodge ruby ring with the square and compass about half way through when the guy was at the counter
@@timmensch3601 yeah , theres nothing wrong with freemasonry , its the secret soceities that recruit from masonry into inner circle groups that wish to disassemble our constitutional republic , thats cool , you should wear it too , be careful when you are shoveling or doing construction though not to scratch it or break the diamond
@Mr Right all you gotta do is look at their hands lol , im not saying masons are interested in it , i just thought it was interesting to see 2 people wearing masonic rings in one video , its very common to see people with masonic rings but typically people dont notice , there isnt a conspiracy with freemasonry , the conspiracy is with other subversive orders that handpick members of the 32nd degree to go "beyond the veil" , many of these groups take oaths to the knights of malta which is the army of the vatican and the order of the garter which is the european royal aristocracies , the real conspiracy is the demonization of freemasonry however in the legal systems when the members see eachother they give eachother the case , if you were to go to civil claims court and the judge is a mason and the other guy your sueing is a mason then you are going to lose the case , thats where it becomes unlawful , or if for instance they were to not speak of a criminal act that one of their "fellow brethren" committed , because their oaths specifically say that they are to protect their fellow brothers even from crimes of any nature when you get into the high degrees , the problem is with voting , the masons will all vote for their fellow masons and it kinda reminds me of scientology because in scientology old L ron hubtard had his books at the highest sales and stuff because each member of scientology would buy 40 books at a time just to boost the numbers , these types of statistical manipulations are common in all areas of life especially medical studies , because those scientists want their grant money and will keep working on something thats flawed endlessly never giving up and trying new types of medicine , for example the use of premature yucca plant can heal horrible burns without scarring , the use of chanca piedra can cure kidney stones , the use of cats claw plant can cure arthrtis , the use of graviola plant can cure cancer , these are documented by doctor leslie taylor on her raintree website and its very well documented with labrat studies and so on , my own mom had lung cancer and i made her take graviola plant and cats claw plant and it cured her cancer in a month and when they performed surgery on her and opened her lung up there was no tumor and she only had taken the plant medicines for a month , also the guinnae henn tea probably saved my life 2 years ago when i was very sick and couldnt breath
Actually, the first space walk occurred on Gemini 4, on June 3, 1965. This video was most likely 1966, as that was the year of the newest cars that I seen - a few Chevys, a Plymouth Fury, and a Plymouth Valiant or Barracuda. The POTUS giving the speech toward the end was Lyndon B. Johnson, who was POTUS from 11/22/1963-1/20/1969.
This movie is a mixture of space age optimism and the pessimism that would take over around 1970. Earlier, we had all thought that technology was going to save us from anything bad, and we’d all live like the Jetsons. By the early ‘70s we all thought that technology and industry were going to poison us all to death through pollution as society collapsed from running out of petroleum and running out of food.
California could have had a fully automated 24/7 electric monorail system paid for by Disney, with only the first year ticket revenue being asked as payment, but the government shot it down for a horribly inefficient and expensive light rail system that stops at stop lights.
@@TheSuperappelflap Google and duckduckgo are great for sources, it might be helpful to know how to use a search engine in this day and age to find said sources. Here is just one of the links to the proposed Alweg monorail www.monorails.org/tMspages/LA1963.html and another samlanddisney.blogspot.com/2013/06/monorails-and-los-angeles.html
Come see the network in Europe, especially the Netherlands, our train system transports millions of people to work every day. Well, when its not 2020, that is.
@@TheSuperappelflap Same in much of the US. It depends on where you live. But places where many people live do usually have at least some train service, although its extent depends on the location. NYC is much better than LA, although LA is expanding.
Need some loose diamonds and a time travel machine. The diamonds are an easy way to transport a decent sum of cash flow so I could live without trying to find a job with no background in 1967… Then I’d find a small unassuming house and a 67 442 to drive.
All right, fantastic! At this particular time, where was this advanced fare system on the NYC Subway or busses? They were definitely still on single fares and tokens! The Metrocard and its system wasn't adapted until well into the 80s!
It's not purely mass transit. Look up induced demand. The only solutions would involve rationing, via regulations or through charging fees. Neither is politically popular, so it has taken this long to even get to a point where we are even having this conversation.
Note that by your logic, declining car usage and ownership since the 1980's to 1990's depending on the metric would indicate that automobile usage is on its way out.
@@unconventionalideas5683 You need a better source for your BS. "In 1970, Americans owned 89,243,557 passenger cars or almost one car for every two people. In 1980, Americans owned 121,600,843 passenger cars or a little more than one car for every two people. In 1990, Americans owned 133,700,496 passenger cars or a little more than one car for every two people." And as of last year, "There are 276 million vehicles registered in the U.S. according to US Department of Transportation." Does that look like automobile usage is "on it's way out"? And I looked up induced demand like you asked. You realize you just proved my point for me don't you?! Mass transit DOES NOT relieve congestion!
@@Hypercube9 Notice I said depending on the metric. I meant per capita. Note that the miles driven per person by car/motorcycle peaked in 1995 & has declined or flatlined ever since, and that the proportion of legally elligible persons who chose to have a valid driver's license peaked in 1983 and has declined every year since. Induced demand, known since the 1960s, means that expansion of roads wastes taxpayer money through inefficacy. Furthermore, this precipitous decline in car usage has been accompanied by rising bicycle and public transportation usage relative to the automobile, and the rise of services like Instacart and Uber, which reduce the need for people to own their own cars. Based on this, cars are not where the money should be going.
Sir i have modifyed the bike engine so now its work much better .. Its work in 1 ltr. Into 220 k.m. or more then 220k.m. Plz help me i want to sell that to automobile company.