Editorial on the Millennial Generation.
Posted: Thu Jul 11, 2013 7:27 am
http://www.cnn.com/2013/07/09/opinion/b ... ?hpt=hp_c4" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
It's pretty good.
It's pretty good.
FCS Football | Message Board | News
https://www.championshipsubdivision.com/forums/
https://www.championshipsubdivision.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=36183
I could use a nap. I'm so tired.ASUG8 wrote:What do you want? A trophy?
Go for it.Ibanez wrote:I could use a nap. I'm so tired.ASUG8 wrote:What do you want? A trophy?
I'm glad he used pictures and graphics. As a borderline millenia, I don't think I had the attention span to read and entire article.
What is "tl;dr?"DSUrocks07 wrote:I'm glad he used pictures and graphics. As a borderline millenia, I don't think I had the attention span to read and entire article.
tl;dr OMG picturs!!!1!!1![]()
![]()
too long; didn't read.Ibanez wrote:What is "tl;dr?"DSUrocks07 wrote:
I'm glad he used pictures and graphics. As a borderline millenia, I don't think I had the attention span to read and entire article.
tl;dr OMG picturs!!!1!!1![]()
![]()
There is a lot of truth. Every generation has it's undesirables. Every generation inherits some sort of mess.Ivytalk wrote:I read it. Cute. Trite, but cute.
The problem also lies in the fact that older people THINK they know more and better simply because they are older. Therefore, they discount anything that a younger person says or suggests. The generation gap.JohnStOnge wrote:What's true at any given time is that young people think they know a whole lot more than they actually do and also think that they're going through things nobody has ever gone through before. In superficial sense they are but not in a substantial sense. And when a person gets to be older they realize that. They realize that when it comes to the really important stuff older people are generally wiser. And they know that all the stuff they thought older people didn't understand when they were young was stuff the older people had already been through and understood a lot better than they did.
Anybody who is relatively old knows that if you could take your 50 or 60 year old brain with all its experience back in time and put it in your 18, 20, or 30 year old body you would do a whole lot better and make a lot better decisions.
But there's no convincing young people of that. They have to go ahead and go through the process of getting older to realize it.
Dude is 30 years old. Time to grow up and join the real world.Ibanez wrote:There is a lot of truth. Every generation has it's undesirables. Every generation inherits some sort of mess.Ivytalk wrote:I read it. Cute. Trite, but cute.
No, no, no. THIS generation is different. It's SPECIAL. It's problems are WAY worse than any other generation before it...oh, and none of it is THEIR fault. We can thank our politicians and lawyers for that. In our society, our shortcomings are NEVER our OWN fault...LeadBolt wrote:Older people know more than they did when they were younger due to their life experiences, however that doesn't mean that they know more or less than anyone else.
The article points out some of the general experiential differences and attitudes of this generation, which apply to some and not to others of the generation.
The article is trite, but contains both general information and prejudice, by its nature.
I would be a better person if I could combine my 60 year old brain with my 20 year old body, but that isn't happening. I have what I have and they have what they have.
I do appreciate the old saw that if you aren't liberal in your youth, you don't have much of a heart and if you aren't conservative in your older years, you don't have much of a brain.
As for creating your own bs, we all do it and we all have to cope with what came before, it has happened from the beginning of time and will continue to the end.
AZGrizFan wrote:No, no, no. THIS generation is different. It's SPECIAL. It's problems are WAY worse than any other generation before it...oh, and none of it is THEIR fault. We can thank our politicians and lawyers for that. In our society, our shortcomings are NEVER our OWN fault...LeadBolt wrote:Older people know more than they did when they were younger due to their life experiences, however that doesn't mean that they know more or less than anyone else.
The article points out some of the general experiential differences and attitudes of this generation, which apply to some and not to others of the generation.
The article is trite, but contains both general information and prejudice, by its nature.
I would be a better person if I could combine my 60 year old brain with my 20 year old body, but that isn't happening. I have what I have and they have what they have.
I do appreciate the old saw that if you aren't liberal in your youth, you don't have much of a heart and if you aren't conservative in your older years, you don't have much of a brain.
As for creating your own bs, we all do it and we all have to cope with what came before, it has happened from the beginning of time and will continue to the end.
Yes it is. You're in denial.Ibanez wrote:AZGrizFan wrote:
No, no, no. THIS generation is different. It's SPECIAL. It's problems are WAY worse than any other generation before it...oh, and none of it is THEIR fault. We can thank our politicians and lawyers for that. In our society, our shortcomings are NEVER our OWN fault...
That isn't what the author is saying.
I read it as someone that was 24 years old when his job at Countrywide was lost due to Wall Street. It wasn't my fault. The author is not saying that the generation isn't blameless. The author is stating that times are tough, don't put all the blame on them. Most of us are trying to make it. Most of us are like the 20 somethings of the early 1990s. There's no denial here. I understand that every generation has its winners and losers. Some generations had to put life on hold due to world conflict (WW2) and others have had to put them on hold due to financial troubles in the world. I'm not saying my generation is identical to the challenges of those of the G.I. Generation. I'm saying that we've all been dealt a different set of circumstances. Some survive, some don't.AZGrizFan wrote:Yes it is. You're in denial.Ibanez wrote:
That isn't what the author is saying.
I don't have a fight in the generation v. generation spat, but hearing this point from older people (including my father) is kinda annoying. Most students I knew, including myself, had a job throughout college and it's damn near impossible to pay your way through it nowadays. It's nice that my dad was able to work his way through a master's degree, but it also cost him something like $25,000 for 6 years of college (at GWU nonetheless). It cost me a little over $80,000 for 5 years for a bachelor's at a public school. How am I supposed to realistically work through that? Now I agree that it's stupid to accumulate $300,000 in debt for a photography degree or something, but let's be realistic here regarding the cost of an education today.AZGrizFan wrote:God forfucking bid they have to work through college (like THEY are the ones having to pay off the trillion dollars in student loan debt--that will all just get defaulted on)
Ibanez wrote:I did some reading on Generations yesterday and I find it intriguing that some leaders in Generational studies predict that Generation Y will be similar to the Greatest Generation due to the strong sense of local and global community.
Generation Y didn't fold in Iraq or Afghanistan.GrizFanStuckInUtah wrote:Ibanez wrote:I did some reading on Generations yesterday and I find it intriguing that some leaders in Generational studies predict that Generation Y will be similar to the Greatest Generation due to the strong sense of local and global community.
They must be smoking crack, generation Y would fold like the French did (Pick a war).