Past their use-by date? There's nothing wrong with most of them, they're still perfectly functional usually. I don't undestand the fascination anyone has with modern ones, they just scream dull, impersonal soulessness. I've seen precious little built in the last century that isn't utterly uninspiring.clearspira wrote: ↑Sat May 12, 2018 7:12 pmI don't understand the fascination people have with old buildings and I never will. Give me something modern, bright, clean and multi-functional over a run-down dirty old bookshop in a dirty run-down street any day. And BTW i'm not talking about landmarks or truly historic buildings here, i'm talking about this strange attachment people have to things past their use-by date just because they're old.Riedquat wrote: ↑Sat May 12, 2018 6:41 pm Yay, build a totally out of place, out of character, oversized bit of bland, souless modern mall. No wonder I've completely gone off progress, my sympathies were entirely with the old guy. Those who accuse people of viewing the past through rose-tinted spectacles usually appear to be looking at the present and future with them.
Depends on exactly when you're talking about, but there's a hell of a lot of babies that have been thrown out with the bathwater. There's a lot of stuff that I'm glad has been left behind, but precious little that's been added that I particularly care about, and too much change has involved pissing on the bits that were worth keeping. At least once you've reached roughly the mid 20th century (changes in social attitudes and medical advances being about it since then, most of the rest being luxuries I could take or leave at best). Depression and suicide rates are telling.And on the topic of rose-tinted spectacles, 99% of the past was, for the most part, absolutely God-awful for anyone that wasn't rich and powerful. If you were poor, it didn't matter what race or sex you were despite what people seem to think today; you were living in freezing cramped buildings, with mouldy food on the table that could not be refrigerated, horrible medical conditions because painkillers and antibiotics had yet to be invented, little to no education, and almost no prospects for getting out of your situation. These people would have traded their left arms to live inside a modern mall. So, yeah; the present and future is better in every way that counts to the past and the sooner we leave it all behind the better.
I certainly wouldn't want to go live in Victorian times, but to pretend 100% of everything is preferable now is as misplaced as pretending it was all great then. I'm glad I live in a 19th century building with enough modern additions like electricity, that's an example of keeping the good bits and removing the downsides (the outside toilet is a storeroom these days).