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19 Things Becoming Extinct In America
by suzydoll at 9/20/2010 6:22:25 AM




19 THINGS ABOUT TO BECOME EXTINCT IN AMERICA



1. U.S. Post Office

They are pricing themselves out of existence. With e-mail, and on-line services they are a relic of the past ~ (refer to #9) Packages are also sent faster and cheaper with UPS.



2. Yellow Pages

This year will be pivotal for the global Yellow Pages industry.


3. Classified Ads

The Internet has made so many things obsolete that newspaper classified ads might sound like just another trivial item on a long list. But this is one of those harbingers of the future that could signal the end of civilization as we know it. The argument is that if newspaper classifies are replaced by free on-line listings at sites like Craigslist.org and Google Base, then newspapers are not far behind them.



4. Movie Rental Stores

While Netflix is looking up at the moment, Blockbuster keeps closing store locations by the hundreds.

5. Dial-up Internet Access

Dial-up connections have fallen from 40% in 2001 to 10% in 2008. The combination of an infrastructure to accommodate affordable high speed Internet connections and the disappearing home phone have all but pounded the final nail in the coffin of dial-up Internet access.



6. Phone Land Lines

According to a survey from the National Center for Health Statistics, at the end of 2007, nearly one in six homes was cell-only and, of those homes that had land lines, one in eight only received calls on their cells.

7. VCRs

For the better part of three decades, the VCR was a best-seller and staple in every American household until being completely decimated by the DVD, and now the Digital Video Recorder (DVR).


8. Answering Machines

The increasing disappearance of answering machines is directly tied to No 20 our list -- the decline of landlines. According to USA Today, the number of homes that only use cell phones jumped 159% between 2004 and 2007 It has been particularly bad in New York ; since 2000, landline usage has dropped 55%. It's logical that as cell phones rise, many of them replacing traditional landlines, that there will be fewer answering machines.



9. Cameras That Use Film

It doesn't require a statistician to prove the rapid disappearance of the film camera in America . Just look to companies like Nikon, the professional's choice for quality camera equipment. In 2006, it announced that it would stop making film cameras, pointing to the shrinking market -- only 3% of its sales in 2005, compared to 75% of sales from digital cameras and equipment.



10. Incandescent Light Bulbs

Before a few years ago, the standard 60-watt (or, yikes, 100-watt) bulb was the mainstay of every U.S. home. With the green movement and all-things-sustainable-energy crowd, the Compact Fluorescent Light bulb (CFL) is largely replacing the older, Edison-era incandescent bulb. The EPA reports that 2007 sales for Energy Star CFLs nearly doubled from 2006, and these sales accounted for approximately 20 percent of the U.S. light bulb market.. And according to USA Today, a new energy bill plans to phase out incandescent bulbs in the next four to 12 years.

11. The Milkman

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, in 1950, over half of the milk delivered was to the home in quart bottles, by 1963, it was about a third and by 2001, it represented only 0.4% percent. Nowadays most milk is sold through supermarkets in gallon jugs. The steady decline in home-delivered milk is blamed, of course, on the rise of the supermarket, better home refrigeration and longer-lasting milk. Although some milkmen still make the rounds in pockets of the U.S. , they are certainly a dying breed.



12. Hand-Written Letters

In 2006, the Radicati Group estimated that, worldwide, 183 billion e-mails were sent each day. Two million each second. By November of 2007, an estimated 3.3 billion Earthlings owned cell phones, and 80% of the world's population had access to cell phone coverage. In 2004, half-a-trillion text messages were sent, and the number has no doubt increased exponentially since then. So where amongst this gorge of gabble is there room for the elegant, polite hand-written letter?


13. Wild Horses

It is estimated that 100 years ago, as many as two million horses were roaming free within the United States . In 2001, National Geographic News estimated that the wild horse population has decreased to about 50,000 head. Currently, the National Wild Horse and Burro Advisory board states that there are 32,000 free roaming horses in ten Western states, with half of them residing in Nevada . The Bureau of Land Management is seeking to reduce the total number of free range horses to 27,000, possibly by selective euthanasia.



14. Personal Checks

According to an American Bankers Assoc. report, a net 23% of consumers plan to decrease their use of checks over the next two years, while a net 14% plan to increase their use of PIN debit. Bill payment remains the last stronghold of paper-based payments -- for the time being. Checks continue to be the most commonly used bill payment method, with 71% of consumers paying at least one recurring bill per month by writing a check. However, a bill-by-bill basis, checks account for only 49% of consumers' recurring bill payments (down from 72% in 2001 and 60% in 2003).



15. Drive-in Theaters

During the peak in 1958, there were more than 4,000 drive-in theaters in this country, but in 2007 only 405 drive-ins were still operating. Exactly zero new drive-ins have been built since 2005. Only one reopened in 2005 and five reopened in 2006, so there isn't much of a movement toward reviving the closed ones.


16. Honey Bees

Perhaps nothing on our list of disappearing America is so dire; plummeting so enormously; and so necessary to the survival of our food supply as the honey bee. Very scary. 'Colony Collapse Disorder,' or CCD, has spread throughout the U.S. and Europe over the past few years, wiping out 50% to 90% of the colonies of many beekeepers -- and along with it, their livelihood.



17. News Magazines and TV News

While the TV evening newscasts haven't gone anywhere over the last several decades, their audiences have. In 1984, in a story about the diminishing returns of the evening news, the New York Times reported that all three network evening -news programs combined had only 40.9 million viewers. Fast forward to 2008, and what they have today is half that.



18. Analog TV

According to the Consumer Electronics Association, 85% of homes in the U.S. get their television programming through cable or satellite providers. For the remaining 15% -- or 13 million individuals -- who are using rabbit ears or a large outdoor antenna to get their local stations, change is in the air. If you are one of these people you'll need to get a new TV or a converter box in order to get the new stations which will only be broadcast in = 0 A digital.



19. The Family Farm

Since the 1930's, the number of family farms has been declining rapidly. According to the USDA, 5.3 million farms dotted the nation in 1950, but this number had declined to 2.1 million by the 2003 farm census (data from the 2007 census hasn't yet been published). Ninety-one percent of the U.S. FARMS are small Family Farms.



Interesting and saddening, isn't it?


Comments

luckylouie42
online now!
9/20/2010 6:33:52 AM

16 a very important one, the disappearing of the honey bees, the pollination of plants by bees in very important, i am afraid our crops will dwindle thru the years because of loss of the honey bees. and even now in my area, a pint jar of honey is $5.00.

maggy63
9/20/2010 6:47:40 AM

Very good blog Suzy.....Louie your right..

snowbunny777
9/20/2010 6:48:21 AM

Having all of those changes is very scary,but very interesting..ty for sharing-------bunny

serenity815
9/20/2010 6:53:03 AM

Well some of that information is wrong. UPS is by no means cheaper than the post office. I ship packages almost week. The milk man is making a come back in some states. You need a landline phone because cell phones are unreliable for 911 calls. I have one and I use it when I give out personal information and don't want anyone listening in on my conversations. HD TV is old..let alone analog- Internet classifieds don't work as well as newspaper classifieds do. Your ad disappears within minutes of you posting it online because so many people post there. Who has time to look through 10 pages of online classifieds. Checks yes because they not only want to stop us from using checks..paper currency is also on its way out. Family farms because we don't support them. look how much food we get from other countries that we should not be eating because they are out of season here. If we ate in season food our family farms could survive. Things because exstinct because WE allow them. You forgot one more thing. OUR FREEDOM.

10snut
9/20/2010 6:57:05 AM

Many things seem to becoming extinct - Like Respect and honesty for just a couple of things.

my phone works on 911 so no landline for me...some of the things that are going by the wayside like magazines, newspapers, checks etc can all be put down to progress but the sad thing is that it does eliminate so many jobs.


miki49
9/20/2010 6:57:28 AM

I like innovations and improvements.

Dial-up always did suck, even DHL sucks, and so does AOL, though the separateness of AOL should have been copied by other agendas.

Phone Land Lines are a hazard in many ways, both from the occasional pole and the small wattage that runs through them even when they are not activated by a customer. Homeless people can haul a lamp into a empty building and wire the lamp to the phone jack and have a free light, which can then be forgotten and start a fire if cloth touches it, such as a lampshade when it falls over.

Old style phones designed to be used with landlines can still be hooked up to cable and internet phones. That is how I have an answering machine. Answering machines have also taken over jobs such as I used to get paid for in offices where they don't use Receptionists anymore, but instead just make customers choose between limited options offered by an answering machine that drives people nuts with frustration.

Incandescent Light Bulbs will be gladly gotten rid of since they so add to the heat and danger problems. I'm looking forward to the LED bulbs being more available. The LEDs cost less to run all the time and are less dangerous unless some smart aleck replaces LEDs with similar bulbs which can be used in devious ways.

Milk? I'm lactose intolerant and use Soy Milk and Almond Milk or Rice Milk.

Handwritten Letters provide signatures, which some ill intentioned people have used for crimes.

Ditto Personal Checks. How many people have stood at the grocery store check out and had the cashier scream "What's your address, phone number and social security number?" while there's a crowd of strangers standing there to hear it?

Drive-in Theaters turned into porn flicks where people could have sex in their cars in public.

Newspapers, Magazines are both mostly advertisements and a cycled redundant theme repeated season after season, year after year for bored people to buy and fill the trash can. Why watch evening news when there is a TV Channel running news 24/7?

Analog is just an electrical radio verson of real time recordings.

Family Farming is not something I have any experience of. I think it would be great if people would learn to put some seeds in dirt and grow some food instead of b*tching about grocery prices.


ted10579
9/20/2010 7:05:28 AM

The lack of bees for pollination is very scarry, but, also scarry, is #11 the lack of milk men, that could drastically reduce the birth rate in many rural areas of the country... Had to do it, sorry. I know that there are some really serious environmental issues going on right now, and some things whose time has come and gone.

nickiegirl
online now!
9/20/2010 8:24:42 AM

Very good blog all these thing we take forgranted or slowly going there way out the door. The bees we need as they do make the world be live in stay alive. as we have so many people that are hunger and with out them the plants can not pollinat.

shoohornoplenty
9/20/2010 9:36:58 AM

I stopped reading at number one.

For the average consumer, shipping most things is cheaper with USPS.


1942t67
9/20/2010 10:56:02 AM

sad, but true, just think the things that replaced them cost a lot more.

newlady2
9/20/2010 11:25:41 AM

I deliberaytly make use of the post office with cards to family members- not jus ton bdays ,,,jus because,, I have used many old cards and sent to St Judes Kids hospital where they make use of them.. Double duty I call it ..

sewgood
9/20/2010 3:42:04 PM

thanks for all the info,,,good job suzydoll

chuckcat
9/20/2010 4:07:57 PM

Another one on the list should be bats! Without them the insect population will be out of control.....and that is scary. Good post Suzy.......Want to buy my VCR?

sassy_lassy
9/20/2010 4:16:04 PM

great info, from both suzy and miki,do we call this progress??? in some ,we can..thinking back on the things enjoyed today, that we no longer have from when we were still kids living with our parents.. maybe our kids will look back on all of this and it will be obsolete in their futures..some one is always coming up witha better mousetrap...yep, this is progress... some ways it is good..