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Old 12-04-2007, 12:13 PM   #41 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Strange Famous
maybe there are differences between young women and more mature women too?
HOW DARE YOU!

Young girls NEVER say anything that is offensive to men, minorities, or homosexuals. Young girls could NEVER be described this way:

Quote:
difference between a mature woman and one who still doesn't have things together. I see how these girls think about and treat men and minorities. Most of them are white and suburban and come from decent homes. They have little sense of empathy for other people, and that disturbs me very much.
Or this..

Quote:
My biggest issue is with the lack of empathy among girls today. Most dislike, seemingly vehemently hate, other people who are not like them. It's not something they notice outright about themselves, and sometimes they brush it off as nothing but "Internet humor."
HOW DARE YOU MAKE SUCH CLAIMS. ONLY YOUNG BOYS ARE CAPABLE OF SUCH THINGS.
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Old 12-04-2007, 12:28 PM   #42 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mixedmedia
I saw this segment on 60 minutes last weekend I think it was.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/...n3475200.shtml
Great article, thanks for the link.

In fact, this is a comment someone left on that site, regarding the article, and I think it makes a series of great points. Bolding is mine.

Quote:
Why should we work so goddamn hard? We were raised on the expectation that we had to work and support an aging population while getting no benefits (social security) ourselves. And with so many stories of retirees getting screwed or loyal employees being laid off after 30 years, to live a life of poverty, who wants to invest so much into one company? I think our generation knows that we cannot rely on the government or company in the future, so we have to take care of business ourselves; do these qualities breed loyalty? NO. It simply causes people to base their lives on something of more permanence, such as friends and family.

I don''t see a problem with treating a job as a job and not the center of your universe, especially since employers sure don''t feel that way about employees. There is only one thing that Americans from all walks of life hold reverent, and that is the dollar. "Millenials" will work hard for their dollars, but I think we all recognize that most organizations only value workers for their effect on the company''s bottom line.

Last edited by analog; 12-04-2007 at 12:35 PM..
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Old 12-04-2007, 12:42 PM   #43 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JinnKai
HOW DARE YOU!

Young girls NEVER say anything that is offensive to men, minorities, or homosexuals. Young girls could NEVER be described this way:



Or this..



HOW DARE YOU MAKE SUCH CLAIMS. ONLY YOUNG BOYS ARE CAPABLE OF SUCH THINGS.
For my part, I haven't excluded women from my assessments.

What I did say was that women are, in general, less extroverted than men when it comes to this kind of frivolity. IN GENERAL...and when they are sober, lol.

Quote:
Originally Posted by analog
Great article, thanks for the link.

In fact, this is a comment someone left on that site, regarding the article, and I think it makes a series of great points. Bolding is mine.
It does make some relevant points. Very relevant points. But I think over-indulgence still plays into the phenomena.
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Last edited by mixedmedia; 12-04-2007 at 12:43 PM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost
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Old 12-04-2007, 12:56 PM   #44 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mixedmedia
But I think over-indulgence still plays into the phenomena.
Oh, definitely. It's definitely still a generation rife with "gimme" attitudes and "all about me" selfishness. It's dead-on-accurate that these kids have been coddled their whole lives and are now facing the existing establishment, which does not favor or even want to allow any sort of employee reward system. They want their work-hard-until-I-give-you-permission-to-die boomers, the people who will take a heaping helping of bullshit from bosses and others, and smile.

Separate thought, for all:

Does the fact that this new generation won't take that sort of treatment, and markets themselves as valuable employees to be appreciated, not taken for granted, make them worse? Certainly there are many bad portions of their behavior/attitude, but I don't think the overall "work is not my entire life, and you WILL appreciate my loyalty and hard work" business model is a change for the worse. See Google, among many others, for examples of such.
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Old 12-04-2007, 01:47 PM   #45 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cyborg Ninja
I see how these boys think about and treat women and minorities. Most of them are white and suburban and come from decent homes. They have little sense of empathy for other people, and that disturbs me very much. .
How can you say you're reading the OP if you think this is "normal" teen rebellion?

I totally agree with her post. I was a rebellious teen and that kind of hatred didn't exist in my world.

Why? IMO: poor parenting, technology, and the general pace of everything today.
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Old 12-04-2007, 05:25 PM   #46 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by analog
Does the fact that this new generation won't take that sort of treatment, and markets themselves as valuable employees to be appreciated, not taken for granted, make them worse? Certainly there are many bad portions of their behavior/attitude, but I don't think the overall "work is not my entire life, and you WILL appreciate my loyalty and hard work" business model is a change for the worse.
I think many of them take this to the extreme. They're less likely to take crap from their employers, but they're also less likely to pay their dues; many of them think that it's beneath them to do the shit work that everyone has to do.
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Old 12-04-2007, 06:48 PM   #47 (permalink)
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Old 12-04-2007, 08:46 PM   #48 (permalink)
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I read the first dozen or so posts in this thread. What I can't get past is the level of generalization expressed by the OP and some of the responders.

simple fact: not all young men/boys are like this. I'd venture to suggest that not even a simple majority (51%) are.

and I'd also suggest that most of it is normal adolescent behavior, which will be grown out of in due time. as well, it seems a reaction to the insanity of political correctness here in America.

as the saying goes: this too shall pass.
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Old 12-09-2007, 08:49 AM   #49 (permalink)
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I detest this guy but i force myself to listen to his radio show during my commute from work. This is a recurrent theme of his. It will come off as partisan, it's unavoidable....but much of halx's description of deficient attitude and behavior seems to be about intolerance and lack of empathy.

Could conservatism, circa 2007, a "movement" grown astoundingly out of proportion to what I, as a high school student observing the "Woodstock weekend" that took place in August, 1969, could ever have imagined emerging, and growing, just ten years later, be a culprit?

It is acceptable to be openly negative towards gays and just about anything else that is not affluent white protestant in America. Forgive me, but the Ron Paul "movement" seems to be the rallying point for the more political of the older range of the young men and boys you've described, halx.

I do conceed, though, that boys have become more feminized, less able to enjoy a "Tom Sawyer" boyhood. A sign was when their toy guns were mandated to have orange highlights. Suburban development cleared and built on the woods boys used to role play in. They went inside, permanently, and played video games, instead. I see lifeless suburban cul de sacs in my environment, no kids out riding their bikes, playing basketball, or drawing hopskotch squares in the driveway with chalk.

Quote:
http://www.sacunion.com/pages/columns/print/6157/

....And the truth is that men and women are profoundly different.

One of these differences is that women generally have a more difficult time transcending their emotions than men. There are, of course, millions of individual women—such as Margaret Thatcher—who are far more rational than many men; but that only makes these women’s achievements all the more admirable. It hardly invalidates the proposition.

Far more common than Margaret Thatcher’s rationality was the emotionality of the women jurors in the Menendez brothers’ trials. All six women jurors in the Erik Menendez trial voted to acquit him of the murder of his father (all six males voted guilty of murder). A virtually identical breakdown by sex took place in the Lyle Menendez trial for the murder of their mother. The women all had compassion for the brothers despite their confessions to the shotgun murders of their parents.''

To say that the human race needs masculine and feminine characteristics is to state the obvious. But each sex comes with prices. Men can too easily lack compassion, reduce sex to animal behavior and become violent. And women’s emotionality, when unchecked, can wreak havoc on those closest to these women and on society as a whole—when emotions and compassion dominate in making public policy.

The latter is what is happening in America. The Left has been successful in supplanting masculine virtues with feminine ones. That is why “compassion” is probably the most frequently cited value. That is why the further left you go, the greater the antipathy to those who make war.
[...]In the micro realm, the feminine virtues are invaluable—for example, women hear infants’ cries far more readily than men do. But as a basis for governance of society, the feminization of public policy is suicidal.''


http://townhall.com/columnists/colum...&comments=true

...That is one reason our schools are in trouble. They are increasingly run by women — women with female thinking moreover. Such thinking leads to papers no longer being graded with a red pencil lest students’ feelings be hurt; to self-esteem supplanting self-discipline as a value; to banning games such as dodge ball in which participants’ feelings may get hurt; to discouraging male competition; to banning peanut butter because two out of a thousand students are highly allergic to peanuts.”...
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Old 12-09-2007, 10:14 AM   #50 (permalink)
 
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i watched "we jam econo" last night---a documentary about the minutemen (you know, d. boon, mike watt, george hurley).
it was made in 2005.
d. boon was killed in 1985. december 22, actually.
i came late to the minutemen, but double nickels on the dime is still an amazing record.
anyway, i mention this for a couple reasons, which i am making up as i go.

turns out that these gentlemen are the same age as i am so watching the film was also kinda like watching a generational piece.

mike watt said something on the order of having been listening to captain beefheart and the stooges in high school, so in 1976--when uk punk broke--he wondered about the punk "rebellion"---"what's the big deal?--these others guys did it already..."

later, watt went on at some length about the effect that d. boone's mom had on the band in her insistence that they invent their own activites, make their own music, not copy, learn for themselves.

you provide too much structure, he said, you create a generation of robots.

and he talked about just going your own way, doing it, and continuing to do it, fuck what other people think---which made sense in a new way (to me at least) of the minutemen's politics. and the difficulties of going your own way--little symbolic moments like opening for black flag and getting spit on by the audience of punk "rebels" because they weren't "punk enough" or "punk" in the right way...

so argument number one: we operate in a smothering culture of copies.
if there's a problem with "the kids" it's servility, the willingness to subordinate themselves to models, to conflate copying and thinking.
trick is that there's nothing in itself problematic about copying---keeping with "we jam econo"--the minutemen covered blue oyster cult and creedence tunes for example---its the relation that you imagine obtains between what you are doing and what is. if you do more inventive stuff and then cover something, it's not the same as making yourself into a copy of what already is.

thing is---linking this to the op--that the culture of consumer servility isn't new--it's what in the main americans confuse with freedom.

and there's an interesting segment in "we jam econo" during which watt and d. boone talk briefly about an imaginary alternate future in which minutemen music was mainstream and so was the ur-copy of a host of sub-minutemen.

kids are not encouraged to take chances. they aren't given the tools to think independently. creative work has to be safe. it has to be "normal"--it has to fit somewhere. but this fitting somewhere enables folk to slot what they are doing straight into something that already is, and to use that framework to simplify the process of considering what you do, why you do it. it truncates process. to my mind, the major result is a strange inflexibility in thinking. it gets paradoxical when groups of the inflexible band around a style and understand themselves as being "in revolt"...


in an interview, d. boone said that he felt that there should be bands in every apartment block, clubs on every corner where musicians could play, record labels in every neighborhood--cultural production should be radically decentralized, kids (and everyone else) encouraged to go their own way, get the chance to play, acquire discipline on their own terms---and not to think in terms of being "stars"-----but do what you love in your way. do something that seems new to you. fuck what other people think. if they like it, cool. it they dont, it doesnt matter. ultimately, it's not for them.

i graduated high school in 1976.
it was already like this.
i teach in universities and see lots of good kids. good smart kids, kids who contradict every last generalization that has run through this thread about "the youth of today"....but i also see that their modes of expression--and worse of thinking--are off the rack, chosen like jackets from a range of pre-fabricated alternatives, and that they have trouble getting their heads around the fact of this and imagining how they--or anyone--could be otherwise.

i think that it is wrong to imagine that revolt happens amongst 18 year-olds.
my experience teaching...and being in the world myself--showed me that working your way out from under the smothering effects of a culture of copying takes time, and that more radical stuff happens as folk figure their way out. i also think that there is no particular time-line nor is there a particular way to move through to get to a different relation to process.

hell, the minutemen were collectively there when i was still foundering about in new hampshire. they were there in their early 20s and i think in many ways i'm only just figuring out what they already knew and i'm--well--older. and i think that's the case because the way out is in the doing--you can't sit around watching fucking television or consuming shit and wait for someone to hand you a template.

the most efficient form of domination is convincing people--particularly without ever having to say as much--that they should dominate themselves.

folk dont take themselves seriously, they dont take their process seriously, they dont see thinking as a basic activity that opens up options for how you are in the world--they think it's work, something imposed on them from outside--and when they figure out that this is auto-lobotomy time, often they dont have the tools to do much about it. this simply because they dont understand how much is in the doing, how much is in projects---they miss the simple fact that thinking is a form of creative work (it must not be confined, as it is in academicworld, to generating commentary on texts by legitimate Authorities)--they---no we----undervalue creative work and overvalue it at the same time--they think the idea of doing such work is to be a star and quit your day gig----when its an end in itself. it's the process that matters. it's the doing that is important.

if there's a single cause, i think it's in the simple fact that education is social reproduction.
we have an educational system that at every point de facto imposes an image of a dysfunctional social order--in the widest sense---as an image of a natural order.
we allow a system that is geared around fear of change to stamp us.
we look to that system to legitimate us.

and we collectively reap what we sow.

i dont think there is particular drift amongst "the youth of today" into any heightened state of mediocrity--we're already there and if we stumble across a path that seems to lead us out from under it, we are working our way along that path. same as it ever was. but to the extent that the servility of auto-emulation runs deeper, glen brown has it right:

you better watch out
you better watch out
the youth of today
will be the youth of tomorrow

except it applies to ourselves as much as to "kids these days."

it's easy peasy to pass general judgments on others.
there's some line that jesus said about the mote in your eye.
it's a good line.
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Last edited by roachboy; 12-09-2007 at 10:19 AM..
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Old 12-09-2007, 10:36 AM   #51 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by host
I detest this guy but i force myself to listen to his radio show during my commute from work. This is a recurrent theme of his. It will come off as partisan, it's unavoidable..
We would assume your account was hacked if you weren't.

Seriously...

Anyways, thats nice and all, but no, welcome to humanity. Just because a portion of the 60's generation decided to do a lot of recreational drugs and sex before becoming normal middle class citizens didn't change anything, nor did having Bush president suddenly turn people into mean homophobes.

You might be closer on your second point, but again, the pussification of America hasn't changed basic human natures.
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Old 12-09-2007, 01:14 PM   #52 (permalink)
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OK I've read most of the post here, so if I plagiarize someone, well...oops

Our youth have become jaded
they are exposed to more than we were. They have to deal with stuff we didn't and they are doing it under circumstances that are more difficult than our's were.

We grew up in communities, neighborhoods and towns. Everybody knew everybody. Families were accountable to those communities, children included. If you f-ed up, someone told you parents. And your parents were expected to address the issue.
Also parents stayed together, marriage wasn't as disposable as it is today.
Family is way important.
It's Feminism. I support women doing whatever they want or can, as good or better than a guy. But the other side of that is the sacrifice she makes in her family
It's the modern man. We have become soft. Fathers are afraid to take their position in their families for fear of being labeled domineering or abusive.
It's work being more important than home.

It's so much more but apparently I'm rambling too, so I'll stop it there
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Old 12-09-2007, 02:33 PM   #53 (permalink)
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http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2004/03/19



This sums up about 3/4ths of it right here
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Old 12-09-2007, 03:10 PM   #54 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Issmmm

We grew up in communities, neighborhoods and towns. Everybody knew everybody. Families were accountable to those communities, children included. If you f-ed up, someone told you parents. And your parents were expected to address the issue.
This community aspect is something that I had not considered. Yes, this is an aspect that is lacking in urban/suburban America. In French polynesia there's still this community discipline. I imagine every region has varying levels of degregation in this regard. It'd be interesting to conduct a study on this.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Issmmm
Also parents stayed together, marriage wasn't as disposable as it is today.
Family is way important.
It's Feminism. I support women doing whatever they want or can, as good or better than a guy. But the other side of that is the sacrifice she makes in her family
Family is still important. Marriage does appear disposable in some sense - but is it not possible that broken marriages are less of an issue than simply not putting family first? I do not like the idea of making divorce difficult. There are far too many women in abusive situations. Divorce must remian simple for this reason alone. Poorly-educated women with domineering husbands, women that do not have any concept of their rights - if divorce were not easy, these women would never gain the courage to work their way out.

I agree that femminism on the whole is moving in a direction that could be negative. But a woman who has rights, knows her rights, votes, speaks out in the community, and still looks out for her famly is not a bad thing.

Without at least a portion of the femminist movement, I do not know that a woman's place in society could have progressed to a healthy level.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Issmmm
It's the modern man. We have become soft. Fathers are afraid to take their position in their families for fear of being labeled domineering or abusive.
Er... well, there are still domineering and abusive men in the world.

There are soft men. There are also not-soft men.

What position in the family do you mean? My father always worked, provided, disciplined when necessary, taught me to ride a bicycle and went riding with me often, taught my sister to rebuild an engine and other classic car tinkerings.

My mother balanced the books, kept track of the kids' schedules, did the bulk of day-to-day enforcing of rules and only called in father when she needed the big guns. She did the shopping, the raising, the everything consequential. Not to say that my father wasn't important to me - he was - but Mother really wore the pants. Father's income just made it possible for her to take such an active role.

I see no reason why this could not have worked just as well with reversed roles.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Issmmm
It's work being more important than home.
This I'll agree to. Definitely a contributing factor. Again, when children are involved, the home should be the top priority.
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Last edited by genuinegirly; 12-09-2007 at 03:20 PM.. Reason: to correct typos.
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Old 12-09-2007, 03:36 PM   #55 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by genuinegirly
Without at least a portion of the femminist movement, I do not know that a woman's place in society could have progressed to a healthy level.
I wasn't swinging at the femminist movement. What I meant that in a very practical way, if Mom is working the same hours as Dad, that is how many hours the kids are alone.



What position in the family do you mean?



the big guns
father always worked, provided, disciplined when necessary, taught me to ride a bicycle and went riding with me often, taught my sister to rebuild an engine and other classic car tinkerings.
Father's income just made it possible for her to take such an active role.
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Old 12-09-2007, 05:46 PM   #56 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Issmmm
I wasn't swinging at the femminist movement. What I meant that in a very practical way, if Mom is working the same hours as Dad, that is how many hours the kids are alone.
Yes, that makes much more sense. Thanks for the clarification!
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