What kids don't do anymore

I wouldn't read too much into it - using the word "queer" to describe a homosexual is actually a fairly recent thing (in the grand scheme of kids trying to tackle the guy with the ball).

I always took it to mean "Different" as in "We have the ball, he doesn't," which is the actual meaning of the word - "Strange or Different"
I am having South Park flash backs.

Did anyone see the episode where the kids call obnoxious, loud Harley riders fags? It got into a whole interesting discussion about the use of the word, fag.
 
I am having South Park flash backs.

Did anyone see the episode where the kids call obnoxious, loud Harley riders fags? It got into a whole interesting discussion about the use of the word, fag.

Yes and no. To the best of my knowledge, in the United States at least, Fag and Faggot have never been used as anything other than epithets towards homosexuals, right?

Contrasted to the ability for me to describe a sight as being "queer" and not mean anything offensive by it.

For example: Wow - that was a queer phone call....telemarketer wanted to give me money.
 
Yes and no. To the best of my knowledge, in the United States at least, Fag and Faggot have never been used as anything other than epithets towards homosexuals, right?

Contrasted to the ability for me to describe a sight as being "queer" and not mean anything offensive by it.

For example: Wow - that was a queer phone call....telemarketer wanted to give me money.

To do what?

I'd say more information is needed in order to fully understand the full implications of the referenced adjective
 
To do what?

I'd say more information is needed in order to fully understand the full implications of the referenced adjective

Certainly not to have gay anal intercourse with him....but rather because I had indeed won some contest without any strings attached.
 
I wouldn't read too much into it - using the word "queer" to describe a homosexual is actually a fairly recent thing (in the grand scheme of kids trying to tackle the guy with the ball).

I always took it to mean "Different" as in "We have the ball, he doesn't," which is the actual meaning of the word - "Strange or Different"
When I lived in England, the landlady met me when I came home from school one day with the news that my mother was "queer". She was intending to tell me that my mother was very ill.
 
They don't make phoney or crank phone calls. Caller ID has killed that.

Excuse me do you have Sir Walter Raliegh in a can? Yes? Well then Let him out! Click.

Ahh the good old days

Teach them to dial * 67 then the number. It will block caller ID.
 
Meanwhile I was raised in Manhattan. ...and rode the subway... everywhere.

Yeah, but you grew up in Disney NYC. Clean, safe, less grafitti. I bet you wouldn't have done that if you had been born in 1966!!!!:D





(I know, I know, it's still the Big Apple, just couldn't resist the dig!!)
 
Yeah, but you grew up in Disney NYC. Clean, safe, less grafitti. I bet you wouldn't have done that if you had been born in 1966!!!!:D





(I know, I know, it's still the Big Apple, just couldn't resist the dig!!)
About that time...South Bronx..mom had me go to the local store by myself for errands. No problems.
 
Yeah, but you grew up in Disney NYC. Clean, safe, less grafitti. I bet you wouldn't have done that if you had been born in 1966!!!!:D





(I know, I know, it's still the Big Apple, just couldn't resist the dig!!)

You have my age confused for your kids. I remember the days of all the porn shops near Penn Station before Giuliani cleaned things up. And lest we forget, I went to high school in Brooklyn. It was one of the magnet schools, but still no shortage of kids carrying around tazers, knives, guns... the principal a few times slammed kids up against the lockers, and we had a couple of rapes and other things. Lots of drugs. My best friend lived in Corona, Queens. Also not the worst neighborhood, but not the best.

Sure, it's cleaner than it used to be, but it's "New York City" horrors! I survived it just fine. And people are afraid of things happening to their kids in suburbia?
 
But you will admit that the NYC of today, and 10 yrs ago, is not the NYC of 20 or 30 yrs ago.

We tend to forget. It was a definite shiphole in the 70s and early 80s.

Ladies and Gentlemen, the Bronx is burning.....
 
But you will admit that the NYC of today, and 10 yrs ago, is not the NYC of 20 or 30 yrs ago.

We tend to forget. It was a definite shiphole in the 70s and early 80s.
True. I remember NYC from those days (late 1960s-mid 1970s). Then I moved away and didn't see it again until about 2000. I was amazed how nice it had become from what I remembered.
 
But you will admit that the NYC of today, and 10 yrs ago, is not the NYC of 20 or 30 yrs ago.

We tend to forget. It was a definite shiphole in the 70s and early 80s.

Ladies and Gentlemen, the Bronx is burning.....

Certainly true, but to say that it doesn't still present youth (or anyone) with more... say... "challenges" than suburbia is incorrect. In New York it's hard to shelter kids even if you try (although I've seen it done). In suburbia it's a way of life.
 
I'm a teenager right now and trust me, we still do prank calls. theres a number (*67) that you can prefix before dialing that will block caller ID. Personally, my friends and i have ceased prank calling due to a nasty harassment that one of my friends got. he got it all cleared out in court though.

we still do kid stuff too. 21st century traditions include: Invisible rope, baking soda and vinegar, ding-dong ditching,..

we do have to be careful not to break the line between vandalism and pranking though..
 
we do have to be careful not to break the line between vandalism and pranking though..

Funny thing is, kids like to prank and raise a little hell for as long as there have been kids. I think the adults these days are less creative about finding ways to channel the desire.... Story of my grandfathers:

On holloween night when he was a kid, it was suggested that a good prank would be to go out and soap the windows of the general store, and his dad handed them a bar of soap... later in life he found out that the general store owner was suppling the soap to his dad. The kids got the need to prank out of thier system and the store owner got washed windows, all he had to do was rinse them off in the morning. Win-Win.
 
heh - I've finally gotten to the age where I am expected to stand in the front yard, wearing black socks and sandals, with my shorts pulled way up to my armpits and shake my fist at "You kids!!!"
 
heh - I've finally gotten to the age where I am expected to stand in the front yard, wearing black socks and sandals, with my shorts pulled way up to my armpits and shake my fist at "You kids!!!"

I like Mr. Kowalski's method better.

gran-torino-eastwood_l.jpg


Get off my lawn.
 
On holloween night when he was a kid, it was suggested that a good prank would be to go out and soap the windows of the general store, and his dad handed them a bar of soap... later in life he found out that the general store owner was suppling the soap to his dad. The kids got the need to prank out of thier system and the store owner got washed windows, all he had to do was rinse them off in the morning. Win-Win.

That's too funny!!! :rofl:
 
Late summer was apple time in our neighborhood. Every house seemed to have an apple tree. And no one minded if you picked them for some reason, probably because they were not ideal eating apples. For a few years, all the neighbor kids would have Apple Wars. It was all-out insanity, and quite organized, with rules of combat which escape me now...but I recall there were. Dozens of us, maybe even 50 of us would maraud the streets in one of two groups, collecting apples in bags, bushels, pails, our pockets - tuck in your shirt and you could put a bunch down the neck. These were small green apples...and hard. When the collecting was done we would form front-lines and the onslaught began, with great whoops and hollering.
Suddenly the air was a battle scene from Braveheart.....except instead of arrows or spears...it was these damn apples! For hours we would go through these cycles of collect/gather together on the front/bombard each other with hundreds of apples then repeat. Occasionally one of use would get a good bruising or whack on the noggin but never a serious injury. And no one went after cars, somehow we knew to respect houses/windows. Adults were around but they just watched to make sure we stayed within our limits. We knew not to get carried away because we knew we could never get away with anything...some parent was always within eye/earshot and if one parent pegged us with an infraction, then our own parents would too. (thats the old code of parenting). The Apple Wars of.....about 1972. We would arrive home at dinner time, out of breath, sweaty, exhausted, green fingers but after dinner we were out there for more!
Yeah ! Those were the days, My Dad would have us pickup all the black walnuts that fell on the ground in our yard, then my buddies and I would ride in the back of the pickup,my Dad driving, and we throw them at every sign from Ann Arbor to East Tawas (165 mi.) and my Dad laughed all the way ,as we went to our cottage. Cop's never stopped us. I should go back and see how many walnut trees are along that route.:rolleyes:
 
I remember riding in the back of the F-150 when it was safe. Too bad it's not safe anymore, that was a blast.
 
Our Neighbor -- "Ronny da cop" -- used to take us kids for rides on Saturday.

More than once we shared the back seat with some perp who just got the everlasting ----- beat out of him (place phone book on perp, strike phone book -- hurts, yet less bruises)

We also went to several football games -- Malcom X Shabazz v. Weequehic.

Good times...:yesnod:
 
We also went to several football games -- Malcom X Shabazz v. Weequehic.

Good times...:yesnod:

Yup that is in fact a real High School in Newark NJ. I recall passing Malcom X Shabazz Stadium and thinking What the ..... and that by the way is not to far from the Roberto Clemente Shalom Apartments
 
Yup that is in fact a real High School in Newark NJ. I recall passing Malcom X Shabazz Stadium and thinking What the ..... and that by the way is not to far from the Roberto Clemente Shalom Apartments

Yes it is -- and we were the only white kids there and never were messed with.
 
I'm not sure I can speak for the current generation of kids since I'm 26, but I did grow up in the golden age of video games (if there is such a thing), so I could say I bridge the gap across the generational disconnect described in this thread.
I remember spending most of my days outside with friends from the neighborhood either riding bikes, playing street hockey with rolls of electrical tape for pucks (some kids even froze them. we never used the plastic pucks or balls sold in sporting stores), or street football. Near my house, there were several parallel dead end streets, the ends of which would get piled with 15-foot snow mounds from snow plows which would span the width of the street. We would dig out a 3-foot trench on top towards the back to make a fort to defend against the kids from the other dead end street when they would come around to start a snowball fight. At night, when we would play a massive game of manhunt, the snow mound was usually high enough where you could reach some of the big tree limbs and climb in. Of course we played manhunt all year round, too.
I did, however, spend quite a bit of time playing video games. Kids my age romanticize games from our childhood, touting their superiority to many gmaes today, so I guess the cycle continues.
 
We used to ride to high school summer league soccer games in the back of Buddy Keithley's International pickup truck. A 17yr old driving a beat-up pickup full of kids at highway speeds. Madness!!!
 
Funny thing is, kids like to prank and raise a little hell for as long as there have been kids. I think the adults these days are less creative about finding ways to channel the desire.... Story of my grandfathers:

On holloween night when he was a kid, it was suggested that a good prank would be to go out and soap the windows of the general store, and his dad handed them a bar of soap... later in life he found out that the general store owner was suppling the soap to his dad. The kids got the need to prank out of thier system and the store owner got washed windows, all he had to do was rinse them off in the morning. Win-Win.

Old age and treachery will overcome youth and skill. :D
 
Yes it is -- and we were the only white kids there and never were messed with.

At my high school I was the only blonde white boy who was born in this country. There was one other blonde white boy, but he was a Polish immigrant.

Early on Freshman year, one of the Asian punks decided he was going to mess with me (unwarranted, I never even talked to the guys). Punched me in the face, then got suspended for a week.

When he came back, my friend Tony went and had a chat with them. Tony explained to them that I was his friend, and therefore under his protection. Tony was a large guy from Siberia who NOBODY in the school messed with, at least nobody with half a brain.

Remaining 4 years, nobody so much as lifted a finger at me. Then again I pretty much kept to myself and didn't seek out to bother anyone, so following the rule of the jungle, no lions should try to eat me unless they were very hungry.
 
Funny thing is, kids like to prank and raise a little hell for as long as there have been kids. I think the adults these days are less creative about finding ways to channel the desire.... Story of my grandfathers:

On holloween night when he was a kid, it was suggested that a good prank would be to go out and soap the windows of the general store, and his dad handed them a bar of soap... later in life he found out that the general store owner was suppling the soap to his dad. The kids got the need to prank out of thier system and the store owner got washed windows, all he had to do was rinse them off in the morning. Win-Win.


We had Mischief Night in the Philly area the night before Halloween. Soaping windows, ringing doorbells, blowing up mailboxes with M-80's, TP the yard, smashing pumpkins and general mayhem was the norm. Doubt kids can do that anymore, but it was good, clean, destructive fun. :D
 
For a couple of years in college, my roomate and I rented a house. One night some of his girlfriends TP'd us. We were both out doing something, got home, and saw the TP in the trees. We pulled it down, and went back out, probably for more beer. The girls that did it must have driven away just seconds before we got home and then driven around the block so they could find a good place to watch what we'd do when we saw it. Too bad for them that by the time they got back to watch, we were already gone again and so was the TP. No, they did NOT do a very good job!

That was a wierd night.
 
We had Mischief Night in the Philly area the night before Halloween. Soaping windows, ringing doorbells, blowing up mailboxes with M-80's, TP the yard, smashing pumpkins and general mayhem was the norm. Doubt kids can do that anymore, but it was good, clean, destructive fun. :D

Mischief night seems to have gone away. Haven't seen any indications since I've been back in-state.
 
me and a couple friends were out on new years (about 1:25 AM) this year and we decided it would be fun to pull down peoples christmas lights off of their trees and decorate the streets with them, so thats what we did. a few minutes later the street was glowing in green and red...very cool sight if you ask me. well anyway, i guess a neighbor saw us and called the cops. we almost got misdemeanors for the lights thing, but all 6 of us went home in the cop car with curfew tickets. none of us knew that the law required us to be inside our residence at 11:00 PM.... (on newyears!?)

ridicules if you ask me
 
When I was 12-14 I would shoe horses to make a few bucks to buy gas for my J-3, and once painted my girl friends horse hooves red to match the riders. I caught hell for that. she did some to me I had never had done before. (got my A$$ kicked by a girl.)

My hobby growing up was beating up all the boys...ahhh, the good ole days!!!
 
WTF? That is un-American, well at least un-Philadelphian.

Yeah. Sad but true. No TP, no eggs, no soap, no nothing. Kids are probably busy playing video games. That, and local law enforcement leans towards throwing kids in the slammer instead of giving them a friendly talking-to and a dropping them off at home.

These days, I bet a kid would be suspended from school for TP'ing an intersection on Mischief Night. Zero tolerance, doncha know....:frown2:
 
Mischief night seems to have gone away. Haven't seen any indications since I've been back in-state.

WTF? That is un-American, well at least un-Philadelphian.

Yeah. Sad but true. No TP, no eggs, no soap, no nothing. Kids are probably busy playing video games. That, and local law enforcement leans towards throwing kids in the slammer instead of giving them a friendly talking-to and a dropping them off at home.

These days, I bet a kid would be suspended from school for TP'ing an intersection on Mischief Night. Zero tolerance, doncha know....:frown2:

I hear you guys...but a few idiots ruined it for everyone else. Setting stuff (like boats, storage sheds containing equipment, etc) on fire isn't mischief...
 
I hear you guys...but a few idiots ruined it for everyone else. Setting stuff (like boats, storage sheds containing equipment, etc) on fire isn't mischief...

True. Very true. I know other areas, I think Florida, had something called Devil's Night which devolved into that sort of nonsense.
 
Ooh, I just learned about this one:

Kids can't have house parties when the parents are away anymore.

When I was in High School, that's what was done....parents are gone, fill the keg, we're getting snookered. Cops showed up, poured out the beer (sometimes, other times they didn't), everyone ran, and things were just honkey dorey.

Now, apparently, the police officers set up a perimeter around the house before storming in, arresting all involved and press charges on everyone present.

Sigh.
 
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