• theneverfox@pawb.social
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      1 year ago

      I feel like your generation really got poisoned by the boomer lies…“trust the system, put in your time, and you’ll get your turn on top if you work hard”

      Most of your cohorts just seem to be wandering around confused, struggling to reconcile their worldview with the reality that everything sucks (and is rapidly getting worse)

      • inverted_deflector@startrek.website
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        1 year ago

        Not to dump on gen Xers but lets not give them too much woe(Note this is going to be more a US perspective). Yeah they grew up during(and were) the crime boom of the mid century that plagued American cities. Yeah they had the oil crisis and the dot com bubble. Yeah they were old enough to buy houses during the housing bubble bursting.

        Lets not also forget they were born 1965-1980. They were the tail end of being able to work up a company, they were a gen that still came into an office to still turn in applications in person and all that dated cliche stuff an older family member tells you to do if your unemployed. Theyre the ones who got alright enough paying jobs doing things like data entry while complaining about it. Theyre the ones who were the right age during emerging tech industry to do things like take a quick community college network certification course and now are making six figures as head of IT department. Theyre the ones who picked up those high paying independent reporter jobs before print media started dying off when the getting was still good. They were the ones who were at prime earning and home buying age before the market became nationwide screwed. Yes the interest rate was higher, but that meant it wasnt as attractive of an investment or business opportunity which meant prices were lower.

        But again it all depends who you are. The US went through some insane times in the mid century with urban decline thanks to sprawl and white flight, factories shutting down and de-industrialization, consolidation of banks and regional franchises and other businesses(leading to layoffs and in some cases the death of said merged company all together), and multiple collapses, the crack epidemic, aids and etc. And of course its not like gen xers or even boomers died once the elder millennials turned 18, they also experience covid, and the housing bubble crashing.

        • Greggo@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Perhaps some gen-x’s, much like any other generation, got lucky, but the majority of us are still trudging through the shit trying to make ends meet as well. It all falls to greed. Specifically corporate greed that has created this huge gulf of disparity. It’s the same thing the farther you look back into history as well. Limited wealth and scarcity of resources will ensure that this sort of thing continues well past we are dead and gone. Cheers lol

          • inverted_deflector@startrek.website
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            1 year ago

            Generations cutoffs are a messy thing and the cutoffs are vague(like its already been a few years and the cutoff for gen z is still ambiguous) but generally yeah the cutoff is generally around 1980 or 1979.

            • Mongostein@lemmy.ca
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              1 year ago

              Yeah I’m ‘84 - I’m either young gen x or old millennial. I dunno, does it really matter?

              I’ve heard the best way to split it is if the person remembers the Berlin Wall coming down. I only remember it as being a semi-recent historical event when I was a kid, which would make me a millennial.

              However, my brother is ‘80 and he says he remembers it coming down so that would make him Gen X using this method.

              Either way, I like this method better than trying to draw a line at a specific date.

              I think the split between boomers and gen x is watergate.

              The split between millennials and gen Z would be if a person remembers 9/11.

              Covid is probably where I’d put the split between Zoomers and whatever.

    • Redredme@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, feel ya. We seem to have failed and most of us embraced the system we so fiercely opposed against.

      If you can’t beat them…

    • XTornado@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      The 2008 one yes. The new one…we haven’t had a recession yet… So not even started it.

    • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      You’re typing on a device, on a recreational website. You made it, this is as good as it gets now

  • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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    1 year ago

    Who doesn’t love a good old “stock market correction”, where rich people lose money that never existed, and claw back real money from the poor.

  • hdnsmbt@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Don’t we already have like three “millennials after facing 3 major crises in their lifetime” memes? Why did we need a will smith one? They’re all the same joke with different pictures.

    • Redredme@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The right response to this meme would be that other meme: first time?

      :)

      What I mean to say is : this bullshit is of all times.

      Just look back in recent history. A long string of wars and economic downturns. GEN Xers have everything you have and the wonderful 70s, 80s & 90s added to the mix. You know, the never ending Vietnam war, Afghanistan, iran, gulf wars, yugoslavia, kaukasus, latin america in flames and a lot of other bullshit.

      Economics? Ad to present day woes the oil crisis, housing crisis of the 80s where 15% mortgage rates meant that yes, housing was cheap and no, nobody could pay the mortgage and that bullshit in the 90s which I cant remember by name. And the dot.com burst of the 00’s.

      We all want it to stop. Like forever. But you know the line :

      Money talks , bullshit walks.

      The money is talking. We’re just sitting here bullshitting. And, to end with that other meme, apparently: this is fine.

      Because we in Europe are all voting hard right and across the pond people seem hell bend on the return of the orange faced demented warrior. And can we really blame 'em? Because what choice do they really have? Grandpa1 vs grandpa2? A competition about whose dementia is the worst? What’s this? The soviet polit bureau of the 80s? ?

      So. Yes, you reap what you sow.

  • Kraivo@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    How about

    • pandemic

    • multiple different catastrophes

    • war

    • multiple economic crises, including inflation so big, it actually goes into changing money

    • world turning into cyberpunk

    • tyrans staying alive while there are news about cure for cancer

    And many fucking more

    • XTornado@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      including inflation so big, it actually goes into changing money

      I didn’t quite get what are your talking about here, could you explain?

      • dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Re-basing currency. Basically the mint makes “old money” worthless overnight, and “new money” is printed that has value that is more realistic. You get a window to buy new money with old money, and then that’s it. I have no idea how that happens with digital accounting, but would obviously need to be a thing too. Point being: it’s possible for inflation to be so horribly mismanaged that you have to declare a do-over to fix it.

        Zimbabwe is the current poster child for this, where trillion-dollar notes were exchanged for single-dollar amounts on their third attempt of re-basing. But other countries like Iceland have done this in the not too distant past.

        I’ll add that with the US dollar being a de-facto reserve currency just about everywhere, the %1 is in the same boat with the rest of us. So I wouldn’t expect things to get that dire. It might get re-based eventually, but probably more of a “let’s move the decimal point over because this looks stupid” kind of a thing.

  • Kidplayer_666@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    I mean, technically boomers saw Korea, Vietnam, Cuban missile crisis, Yom Kippur, (sorry if it’s misspelled), and the 70s oil crisis. I think the world has really just been interesting all this time

      • Azzu@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Or you could look at the progress of science, morality and general kindness.

        Your view is also valid. There are good and bad things to turn your focus on.

        I’d personally rather live in 2023 than 1923, so for me, the total change seems generally interesting/good.

            • Stamets@startrek.websiteOP
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              1 year ago

              Yes. Granted not due to being a white educated man so much as a human who doesn’t have loads of money or influence. At least in 1923 you didn’t have every corporation trying to micromanage your life and life was affordable.

              • Azzu@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                Maybe not 1923 exactly, but you can look at Europe in that time… That was right around the time Mussolini got to power, and why? Because of white males (and more) facing a cost of living crisis. America at that time had the “golden 20s”, true, but then you go a few years later and the fucking great depression starts, probably the biggest cost of living crisis there was.

                And then also compare the standard of living from that time with now, even though we are struggling, our standard of living in general is much better than it was at that time due to technology and other factors.

                Right in the middle between two world wars you’re going to experience and probably die in.

                I’m not saying you are wrong in the sense that all is good now, and that it doesn’t suck majorly for a lot of people, all I’m saying is that I think you overestimate how good the past was.

        • DefederateLemmyMl@feddit.nl
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          1 year ago

          And affordable education

          Depends on where you where born I guess? Living in Belgium, my boomer parents never got a higher education because it was not affordable for working class families with 6 or more children. My dad had to go to work in a factory at 14, which was very common at the time. Props to him though, he got a degree through evening classes when he was already married with two children and working full time.

          Higher education only became common and affordable with my generation.

          On the other hand, while I make more money than my parents ever did, they were able to buy a 4 bedroom house in the 1980s on a working class income, whereas I could only afford a 2 bedroom appartment in the mid 2000s, the tail-end of affordability for housing.

          • hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            While it’s true that I was speaking from an American perspective on a time period that definitely saw different situations in the US vs Europe, I would also say that the experience you’ve shared shows a similar effect, just in a different environment.

            Your father (to his credit) was able to work his way through night school while supporting a family and (presumably) not incurring a mountain of debt.

            The notion of working one’s way through college is something that was certainly difficult, but also certainly doable in the time when the boomers were in their 20s and 30s. Many of them still think that it’s possible to work a part time job while you study to pay your way through college and graduate with little to no debt (and use that perspective to pass judgement on anyone who doesn’t do that as lazy).

            These days, a part time income may not even be enough to cover books, let alone room and board… forget about tuition. Honestly, it’s so impractical that it’s probably better for a student to not work and focus on study and health rather than try to mitigate debt through a side job.

    • Drewelite@lemmynsfw.com
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      1 year ago

      People are so much more “connected” now. Everyone hears about everything that goes on in the world. Well, except the good stuff, that’s not engaging. This and modern popular culture has us focused on the state of the world, which we largely have no ability to directly impact. In the past, people have been more concerned with their community and bettering their immediate life.

      Now, this allowed for us to bury our heads in the sand and ignore global issues caused by state actors and accept systemic issues. But it also often set people up for success. The problems modern people are expected to solve is shit like climate change. Which, you know, is impossible for a single person to achieve. The irony is that we’re actually more alone. People today have fewer close friends and deep relationships than ever before.

      The good news is that the world’s actually in a better place than it ever has been by many metrics. The woeful feelings are created by societal shifts and pressures. Things we can control in our own life. So I think the answer is to get yourself right and into a good place. Set limits and disconnect from the internet, build close and meaningful IRL friendships. Once you’re set, then reach out into the world and do whatever good you can.