Oh, So This Dem Rep Was Likely Looking for This Confrontation in the...
Democrats Really Don’t Have Any Idea What a Man Is
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 328: Biblical Principles in Lincoln’s Second Inaugural
It Is So Plain What Is Wrong With America Today
Choose Life
Time to Hold 'Nonprofit' Hospitals Accountable to the Taxpayers Who Fund Them
Personal Safety When You Take That Wrong Turn
Sen. Lindsey Graham Dead After 'Sudden Illness'
Is There a 'Spectre' Haunting America?
Equal Protection Wasn't Supposed to Be Negotiable
Chicago Man Gets Four Years for $2 Million COVID Loan Fraud Scheme
Iran Closes Strait of Hormuz, Fires on Commercial Ship
Carbondale Store Owner Gets 46 Months for SNAP Fraud, Money Laundering Scheme
Permanent Residency, Permanent Grift: Dominican National Admits ID Theft Scheme
Former Epoch Times CFO Pleads Guilty to Laundering $67 Million
OPINION

Too Much Junk

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Too Much Junk

Have we gone too far?

Between 1998 and 2012, the number of self-storage facilities doubled to 15,000, and there seems to be no end in sight. In some cases, people lost their homes and had to store their stuff, but this growth is a direct reflection of our insatiable appetite to own stuff.

Advertisement

Some historians point to the Chicago World’s fair in 1893 as the launching pad for mass consumerism in America, and it took off after WWII.

1945-1949 Americans purchased:

  • 20 Million Refrigerators
  • 21 Million Cars
  • 5.5 Million Stoves

There was tremendous demand after the Great Depression and the war to end all wars where jobs were plentiful, wages grew, and there were massive family formations… all were considered practical purchases.

These days, we call it conspicuous consumption:

  • 809 Cars for every 1,000 people
  • 327 Million Cell phones for a population of 317 million people
  • 54% of all Households with at least three televisions

Every year around this time, there is a movement to cut back on consumerism. Some from religious groups and some from those who do not like capitalism, but the fact is we walk a delicate line… how do you handle this with your children?

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement