The time doesn't matter, the conditions do. I would want to live when and where there is a frontier. A time and place where the best ID is a word and a handshake. Where a person stands on their own legs and survival is not automatic. Where technology isn't used to abuse.
I'm taking a graduate math course now (somehow my latest goal is to be the oldest math PhD in the country) and the two things I've noted among my 20 something contemporizes is the universality of cell phones and I/earpods. I have no problem with either of them, but I've learned two things about their abuse---when driving yielding to the right doesn't matter anymore, yield to the cell phone. With Ipods I've determined I prefer boom boxed to ear phones—when it’s a choice between being annoyed or ignored, I prefer annoyed.
I guess I'm a little too libertarian for the present conditions--I don't recognize that terrorism as the greatest threat---it's the fear fomented by the threat of terrorism that is the greatest threat. Somehow this country has become a nation of fear mongers. Something that our present leaders encourage. So if I were to pick a time in particular, it would be a time where I was being lead by people with cahones, who recognized that fear is the greatest threat.
Words to live by---one is from Robert Heinlein’s character in his future history series, a
Lazarus Long. Lazarus like his namesake lived a long time more than 2000 years as a man, and then was cloned as a woman, twins in particular. His/her quotes are legend---I particularly like “Secrecy is the beginning of tyranny”, but the others are equally as poignant. Additional quotes can be found
Here.
Then there are additonal words of wisdome, particularly from Ambrose Bierce, a short story writer and journalist of the post civil war west. A contempary of Twain, but not a congenial one, but in MHO a great short story writer, warrior and editorialist. Some of his most pertinent themes were compiled and published between 1890 and 1910 as the
Devil's Dictionary.
Rap
Kentucky Pool Made a Fool out of me.
Instead of Tennessee River it looks like I'm headed to the deep blue sea.
JHartford