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The 1990s is a long time ago

124

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,420 ✭✭✭✭dxhound2005


    No housing crisis in 1999? Nobody told Alan Dukes.

    I move:

    That Dáil Éireann condemns the failure of the current Government to respond effectively to the crisis in the Irish housing market; notes that:

    there has been a 60 per cent increase in the number of applications for local authority housing since the last housing assessment in 1996; couples on average incomes can no longer afford to purchase a typical starter home as house prices have increased dramatically; rents in the private rented sector have spiralled; the number of homeless persons continues to increase; and calls on the Government to:

    abolish stamp duty on second-hand houses for first time buyers; increase the first-time buyer's grant; establish a national housing commission; establish a cabinet sub-committee on housing, chaired by the Taoiseach and consisting of the Ministers for the Environment and Local Government, Health and Children, Finance and Social, Community and Family Affairs; transfer the administration of the rental subsidy scheme and the mortgage supplement scheme to local authorities; dramatically increase the provision of capital assistance to local authorities to allow 10,000 housing starts each year for the next four years and to substantially increase the capital assistance scheme for the voluntary housing sector; bring forward a comprehensive national strategy to deal with the issue of homelessness with the Department of the Environment and Local Government taking overall control for the direction of policy in this area; review the 1992 Housing Act so as to increase the rights of tenants and to provide incentives for the private rented sector to develop longer term leases; increase housing density, particularly in areas close to transport corridors, and to ensure a mechanism of enforcement by the Department of the Environment and Local Government on appropriate local authorities; introduce legislation ring-fencing development levies for the use of community projects in new developments; complete as a matter of priority an audit of all State-owned lands so as to increase the availability of such lands for social housing; introduce legislation to ban the practice of gazumping.



  • Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators Posts: 12,901 Mod ✭✭✭✭JupiterKid


    The seeds of the current crisis in our housing system were actually sown back in the late 1980s and early 1990s, with the slashing of social/local authority housing construction, a major change in the way social housing was funded and an abrupt change in general social housing policy in 1991.

    The three Bacon Reports of 1998, 1999 and 2000 all recognised a growing problem of housing affordability in Dublin and to a lesser extent, the regional cities and made a series of important policy recommendations, some of which were implemented but some of which were not - largely for political reasons. It’s a very complex issue that is way beyond the scope of this thread.

    Post edited by JupiterKid on


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,184 ✭✭✭riclad


    We were a more fair society less materialist in the 80s, maybe people were poor, but if you had a big TV, and a VHS player you were happy. Now people spend 1000s of euros on phones, working class people can't buy a house, in the 80s 1000s of social housing houses were built . Cost of living and rents were lower in the 90s. Vulture funds are buying up houses making the situation worse for people who want to buy a house and have children. Of course we are now a multicultural secular country the Catholic Church has little influence on anyone under the age of 50 apart from the church being a place to get married . Young people are all using dating apps social media and smartphones in the 90s tech was a minority hobby apart from pc gaming



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,269 ✭✭✭✭Sleepy


    I turned 18 in 1998. My entire teenage years marked an era where Ireland was rapidly becoming a much better place to my eyes. I think it's actually really begun to affect me as I've reached my 40's. The optimism of my formative years has been replaced with a deep cynicism. I grew up thinking that the utopian ideals we watched in the Star Trek serials of the era (The Next Generation, Deep Space Nice and Voyager) might actually be achievable if not in my lifetime but surely by my that of my own offspring...

    Ireland transformed from a backwater that exported it's youth en masse whilst allowing the Catholic Church to dominate our culture and legal system to a place where an 18 year old could get a university degree with no help from their parents (topping the grant up with a part-time job and having to live frugally alright but my friends in that situation could all still afford a night out or two a week). Things weren't perfect: if that 18 year old happened to be gay they likely still feared coming out to their parents, would have had to be careful about kissing or holding their partners hand in public and certainly still faced plenty of discrimination from some quarters but the vast majority of their peers in college would have been accepting and supportive.

    During that decade we decriminalised homosexuality, legalised divorce, abandoned Catholic teachings about contraception and "living in sin" etc. The emergence of the internet was hugely exciting. Life just seemed to be getting better and better. My parents stories of the 60's and 70's and what the 80's had really been like (my views of it being a child being limited to how great the cartoons and shows like The A Team / Knightrider were) just reinforced that view: both had come from poor backgrounds and working hard in school had landed them good pensionable careers (which my Mother was able to give up to raise us) throughout the 90's the second hand cars my Dad bought were newer and better (and we even got a second car by the late 90s!), summer holidays became an annual thing and increasingly involved getting to go abroad.

    It set certain expectations of life: that working hard in school would get you a job, getting a degree would get you a better one and once you put in the hours, the 5 bed semi in the suburbs with a decent car in the drive and a fortnight on the continent every summer would follow and by the time you hit 65 you'd retire with a decent pension you could spoil any future grandchildren with between frequent holidays.

    Then the new century hit us like a freight train: 9/11, a global recession, the near total erosion of the "job for life" and emergence of the gig economy, the toxic nature of social media, the revelation of the scale of corruption and incompetence of Fianna Fail and the emergence of world leaders that make them look like children caught with their hands in the sweetie jar. The political left disappearing up it's own arse and becoming more concerned with gender identity politics and virtue signalling than rapidly escalating inequality leading to a global resurgence of nationalism, populist morons like Trump and Johnson holding high office and ultimately as we're seeing at the moment war in Europe and the planet once again on the brink of a World War.

    No wonder we're all so nostalgic for the 80s and 90s! A dystopian future was something exciting in a Ridley Scott movie, not the boring version of it we're living through now.



  • Registered Users Posts: 2,899 ✭✭✭Girly Gal


    People now are spending way more on leisure activities and on luxuries like the latest smartphone, TVs, etc, going on holidays 2 or 3 times a year, all fine if you can afford it, but, a lot of people who can't still do and they are the very people who complain about the cost of living, it is high but a lot of people seem to have lost the concept of living by your means, back in the 90's people by and large only spent what they could afford and borrowed only what they knew they could pay back.



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  • Registered Users Posts: 162 ✭✭Whatdoesitmatter


    The 90's were great for me. Reacharounds left right and centre



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,464 ✭✭✭silliussoddius




  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    For me that was 2000. There was a lot of dire boyband / sugary pop music dominating the charts. Westlife, S Club 7 etc.


    However on the plus side there was also the renaissance of Dr. Dre and the rise of the greatest ever rapper Eminem which made that year special. But it most certainly was not 1969 or 1977 as years go.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I was thinking about our 4 bedroom house in 80's and 90's. At one stage there was 7 of us living in it and it honestly never felt crowded.


    When I go back now to visit my parents the house feels tiny with just 3 of us in the house! Perception is a strange thing.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    It's old-fashioned but timeless - don't spend what you don't have.


    I do think the structure of the economy is different nowadays however. Now it's normal to spend up to half of your salary on accommodation (rent/mortgage only), I don't think that was the case years ago. It seems like everyone is squeezed financially, and because of the mass consumer culture there seems to be more pressure to keep up with the Joneses. So what little disposable income people have will get sucked away very easily by the amount of temptations available. I learned a simple rule from the Dad of Ross/Monica in Friends - save 10% of your income for a rainy day. It's never steered me wrong.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,186 ✭✭✭✭Ash.J.Williams


    gerry ryan was becoming an irish howard stern



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,709 ✭✭✭Badly Drunk Boy


    Same here, the parents and 5 kids. I live in the house I grew up in because I bought it when the family moved, but even alone in the house, it seems a lot smaller than back then. Even individual rooms. (A declutter of all the material things that capitalism and disposable income have foisted upon me might help.) 😉



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,290 ✭✭✭monseiur


    The 1990's were indeed a golden age especially if you were a solicitor, barrister etc. involved in the many tribunals e.g. the Moriarty Tribunal, Mahon Tribunal, Morris Tribunal etc. etc. The state squandered millons, probably close to a billion of our money....it became a runaway gravy train for all the legal eagles and their associates. If you're reading this and lucky enough to be too young to remember just Google it - you'll be flabbergasted.



  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators Posts: 10,443 Mod ✭✭✭✭Jim2007


    So you would have been happier if it was not investigated, issues highlighted, changes made, people called out on their behaviour etc..... Given what came afterwards and the opportunities it would have presented to these people and their like minded friends I'm glad it was done. Like every other democracy, ours is based not the assumption that power corrupts and is designed to catch it. The only time you should be worried is when you are hearing nothing. It does not mean that there is no corruption, it just means we are not catching it.



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,444 ✭✭✭dalyboy


    1990s had the best music and best pub craic . I got my 1st mobile phone in 1996. The Motorola startac. Still remember people looking at me like I was an alien using a phone on the Dart such was the emerging novelty.



  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators Posts: 10,443 Mod ✭✭✭✭Jim2007


    It also helps if everyone else is in the same boat, it makes it seem normal. I went to college in Dublin in the 80s and like everyone I knew I was on a grant and there were very few casual jobs to be had. So eight of us shared a four bedroom house, spent most of our time in the house in sleeping bags because we could not afford the heating and eat a diet of beans, tuna, toast and spaghetti. Some evenings we'd go to moor st. and buy some cheap veg and make a stew. It was a veg stew with double the number of OXO cubes to convenient us we had meat....



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,269 ✭✭✭✭Sleepy


    At least ye had the odd bit of veg, no word of a lie a friend of a friend of mine spent an entire year of college living almost entirely on koka noodles and Dutch Gold: he was apparently the first case of scurvy seen in Beaumount for years!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,290 ✭✭✭monseiur


    I was all in favour of the investigations, it was the deliberate manner in which the lawyers elongated, stretched, extended, prolonged the whole thing that is sickening....they were been paid by the day, some senior barristers were paid up to €5,000 per day and they ensured that the days turned into weeks and weeks into years....one tribunal took 15 years !



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,464 ✭✭✭silliussoddius


    Are you sure he didn't circumnavigate the globe on an old clipper in between?



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,184 ✭✭✭riclad


    The 90s were the peak time for rock bands rock music as a genre and electronic music became more popular with advances in technology digital recording. In the 90s the music industry decided rock music was old fashioned and switched over to promoting rap hop hop . Rock music hardly exists anymore apart from old bands like the rolling stones U2 who can still earn big money touring



  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators Posts: 10,443 Mod ✭✭✭✭Jim2007


    So limited justice…. It is not up to the lawyers nor the judiciary to decide how much justice you should get. Do you really think a system in which you are told you have three days to prove you are innocent otherwise you are guilty or vice versa would have credibility? Or that telling people, we’ll give you the rookie because he has no experience he really cheap will be acceptable.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,246 ✭✭✭✭Hurrache


    My first broken bone happened around 1991, went to A&E that evening, didn't get home until about 4 the next morning. Hospitals weren't any better then.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,464 ✭✭✭silliussoddius


    I seem to remember it taking ages to get a phone line set up in your house, is it much better these days?



  • Moderators, Music Moderators Posts: 12,558 Mod ✭✭✭✭iamstop


    Ah the 90s. I was a born in 1980 so was 10 to 20 for the 90s.

    The 90s brought some great music advancements. The 80s was mostly pretty sterile musically. The 90s brought back the soul of the 60s and 70s. I still have a special place in my heart for 90s underground dance, rave and even some of the poppier hits from then.

    The Prodigy, Chemical Brothers, Daft Punk, Air to name some of the bigger names that lived on. About 94-96 is considered the golden age of Hip Hop.

    Teenage discos - Bective and Wesley's rugby club. First drinks. Was a cider drinker then. 6 Scrumpy Jack for a 5er

    There was scumbags around but they seemed to stick to designated areas and were not all over town causing trouble.

    Went on my first trips abroad with the lads. Tenerife and Crete.

    Here is a 90s mix:




  • Registered Users Posts: 391 ✭✭animalinside


    Remember Donal Skehan, that cooking lad that used to be on de telly?

    This is him now:

    Feel old yet?!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,270 ✭✭✭jj880


    I will concede this. You ever watched that Roxy Music scene from Flashbacks Of A Fool? One of the few times I felt nostalgic for a time I wasn't alive. Hypnotic.


    Post edited by jj880 on


  • Registered Users Posts: 22 Me2U2


    I remember many parents going through long phone bills line by line in the mid 90s! When I was in college around 1996 there were only two people I knew with mobile phones. I seem to remember people being suspicious as if it was only drug dealers that had mobile phones, legit business people had carphones.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,202 ✭✭✭✭ILoveYourVibes


    that is fantastic ...and no you are not a dinosaur!



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,691 ✭✭✭✭silverharp


    nice scene

    If I had a time travel machine and could pick one or two concerts to go back in time to, this would be a strong contender, Lynyrd Skynyrd




    A belief in gender identity involves a level of faith as there is nothing tangible to prove its existence which, as something divorced from the physical body, is similar to the idea of a soul. - Colette Colfer



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,813 ✭✭✭PommieBast


    Most of the cartoons made in the 1980s were blatant advertising. For instance in the 1986 Transformers movie Megatron changing to Galvatron was all about selling the updated toy..

    Do remember being at uni in the early 2000s and talking about all the innuendo on some TV showed we saw as kids 😆



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,912 ✭✭✭✭gormdubhgorm


    The bit that gets me even looking at 1990’s - in the title. My mind still thinks modern, forward thinking, hopeful.

    I think it stems from the fact when I used to laugh at my parents for being old fashioned. I used to say ‘It’s the 90’s’.

    But now the fact that I think of the 90’s as ‘modern’ in my mind still makes me old fashioned!

    It is funny how the mind works all based on a certain reference point in time when your opinions/formation as an adult occurred.

    Some things of the 90’s I don’t miss- the haircuts, shell suit tracksuits are definitely two.

    Post edited by gormdubhgorm on

    Guff about stuff, and stuff about guff.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,184 ✭✭✭riclad


    Yes if you ordered a land-line it could take 6 to 9 months for it to be installed many homes had one pc in one room connected to the Web using a 56k modem eircom. Net plugged into the main phone socket terminal box.

    Websites were mainly forums or blogs, personal journals with very basic graphics compared to modern websites eg a website would load with logo designed for ie 6, Internet explorer or this site is under construction limewire or Napster were popular for downloading the new file format Mp3 audio if you wanted to get music free. I think every drug dealer had a pager at one time. When mobile phones were very expensive, only business people could afford mobile phones,



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,813 ✭✭✭PommieBast


    Most of that stuff was early-2000s rather than 1990s (e.g IE6 was released August 2001).

    But yes the web was much more of a wild west back then. People were still figuring all the UX stuff out so there was the sort of experimentation you don't get these days.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,260 ✭✭✭Ubbquittious


    Usenet groups were so wild west. Like boards but with no mods / censorship or anyone worrying about "illegal" content. I think though all that stuff serves a purpose. Not a fan of the modern censorship & suppression of information or the official government narrative of "everything is rosy, keep spending to help the economy".



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,358 ✭✭✭Dreamweapon


    Not wishing to step on anyone's toes as a newbie around here but the idea that there were no gigs here in the 90s is nonsense. Even at an extremely conservative 10 gigs year i would have seen 100 international acts during the 90s and i can assure you it was a lot more than that.

    As for there only been Whelans and The Point? Again, not true. I saw international acts in the SFX, McGonagles, Top Hat, Tivoli, National Stadium, Red Box, Temple Bar Music Centre, The Olympia, Mean Fiddler, Rock Garden, Columbia Mills, Baggot Inn, City Arts Centre and The Furnace.

    Big on the all mouth and trousers scene



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,612 ✭✭✭✭cj maxx


    God , the sexual innuendo is Playschool, (kids programme) was unbelievable looking at it with adult eyes.



  • Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators Posts: 12,901 Mod ✭✭✭✭JupiterKid


    Just listen to the great dance music of the 90s - this one takes me right back to my first year in college. 💕👍👍🕺🕺🕺




  • Registered Users Posts: 73 ✭✭Horn_of_Africa


    Stop allowing yourself to be brainwashed and focus on enjoying life. Why are you worrying about climate change, who gives a ****, what will happen will happen. Wasting your life worrying is a bigger tragedy than climate change.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,260 ✭✭✭Ubbquittious


    I manage to resist it fairly well myself but its hard going when so many other phukkers to buy into it



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  • Registered Users Posts: 225 ✭✭babyducklings1


    It was such a different time compared to now. Thing is my parents would say the 90s were so different to what times were like when they were growing up.

    Seems every generation moves further somewhere. Computers and internet, electric cars, equality rights, green movement, and probably loads more.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,506 ✭✭✭✭castletownman


    Jeez two things just dawned on me.

    There is now a larger gap between Wexford's last All-Ireland and the present day than there is between the start of WW1 and the start of WW2. Or, the period between JFK's assassination and the year of my birth (1988) is a shorter time frame than Wexford's 1996 triumph and today.

    And United's treble in 1999 is a longer period of time than the inter-war years.

    I pick those two milestones as they were the clear-cut sporting moments of my formative years, and my christ they seem an age ago when looked back on that way.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,452 ✭✭✭BrianD3


    28 years have passed since the 1994 World Cup. Same amount of time as passed from the 1966 WC to 1994.

    Another one, I hear the actor Fred Ward has died. Him and Kevin Bacon played the main characters in Tremors (1990). Ward died aged 79, I was initially shocked that he was that old but then when I thought about it, 1990 is 32 years ago and he does look in his 40s in the film.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,453 ✭✭✭sam t smith


    RIP Fred Ward, hadn’t heard.

    I watched a film from the early 80’s called ‘Uncommon Valor’ last week that he, Patrick Swayze and Gene Hackman were in.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 991 ✭✭✭erlichbachman


    "I dont remember having any existential worries in the 90's"


    Yea, you were 30 years younger pal 🤣🤣🤣



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,813 ✭✭✭PommieBast


    It did swing both ways. Geopolitically it was that relatively calm gap between the end of the cold war and 9/11, but leaded petrol and the ozone layer were big issues.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,833 ✭✭✭✭Strumms


    You might be a newbie but it doesn’t take a lot of internet or life experience to know not to go around misquoting people.. and then to claim they are talking ‘ nonsense ‘

    i never in fact said there were ‘NO’ gigs here in the ‘90’s… I said ‘feck all’ meaning not too many.

    on numerous occasions at the end of that decade and later I’d trudged over to England to see bands and artists that for whatever reason be it venue availability or whatever just didn’t bring their tour to these parts… it was even common in later years…

    not now as we are appropriately furnished with various suitable venues of differing sizes.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 35,265 ✭✭✭✭o1s1n
    Master of the Universe


    On the subject of 'more times since X has passed than time since Y'

    We've had a pretty active community in the Arcade and Retro gaming forum since about 2006. Can go back and read posts from then discussing us playing 'retro' games from the mid to late 90s.

    Those posts are now 16 years old. The 'retro' games we were discussing back then were hardly even ten years old at the time.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,912 ✭✭✭✭gormdubhgorm


    9/11 and the cold war? That is just American centric thinking. in Ireland 90's was all about the peace process and resulting change. The resulting economic boom. And so on.

    Guff about stuff, and stuff about guff.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,025 ✭✭✭Hyperbollix


    Saw that they are doing a rehash of That 70's show and setting it in the 90's. Crazy to think that a show set in the 90's is going to be as much a kitch retro thing for kids these days as the 70's setting was for us old people back in the day.



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