ACamp1900
Counting my ‘bet against ND’ winnings
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reps for the great link...
The "younger workers" are just as soft and entitled as the baby boomers. You have an entire generation of kids raised on the idea of participation awards and taught they are all special and destined to be appointed head of UNICEF as soon as they graduate from college with their poetry degrees. This has all driven this prevalent idea today that there is some nobility or virtue in being average or being no better than anyone else that I find to be at the least very disappointing and at worst disturbing and a big factor in degrading the economic competitiveness of our country.
Regardless of the comparison between the baby boomers vs. Gen X or Y, there is almost no way that any generation can compare with the one that went through the Great Depression, World War II, and helped build the U.S. into the economic and world power it is today. Just a really incredible and resilient group of people and society our country was (and had to be) back then to meet those challenges head on and drive the country and the world forward.
Crazy that this thread comes up now...
I was talking to a guy I met (who is white) and he was giving his thoughts on immigrants (but really it was about Mexican immigrants because that is pretty much the only ones he knows) and how they are taking jobs away from Americans...
Then he says the strangest part
He said he preferred to hire them because they weren't lazy and whiny like the American kids
About me... I grew up poor, in a single parent household. Very comfortable now due to the way I was raised. I volunteer and donate to an organization that helps train the poor and refugees with job skills, resume building, interviewing skills, etc..
That said... growing up I saw first hand that some people were perfectly satisfied living off the goverment's tit. Fast forward 30 years (I'm 43 now), there are a lot more, as it's gotten easier. I'm not some person sitting on high guessing. I've been there (poor) as a child, and I go back there to help those that want to help themselves. Unfortunately there are a lot more that aren't interested in helping themselves. I also find it very sad that refugees who come here with nothing to thier name, are more interested in being productive citizens than some Americans.
And to be clear, nobody is saying welfare is enjoyable. But to some, it's easier than going out and working your tail off to improve your situation.
i'm not sure that the gov't makes it easy to fail. you realize that the lives of people on welfare are not all that enjoyable (assuming that's what you were referring to).
Crazy that this thread comes up now...
I was talking to a guy I met (who is white) and he was giving his thoughts on immigrants (but really it was about Mexican immigrants because that is pretty much the only ones he knows) and how they are taking jobs away from Americans...
Then he says the strangest part
He said he preferred to hire them because they weren't lazy and whiny like the American kids
Dare I say the richer you are the more opportunities you have as well?Ask Wall Street how hard to fail. Most of the focus tends to be on ordinary people, but at the highest levels of wealth and prestige there is entitlement. The richer you are, the safer you are from failure. You own the politicians, and that makes all the difference.
Ask Wall Street how hard to fail. Most of the focus tends to be on ordinary people, but at the highest levels of wealth and prestige there is entitlement. The richer you are, the safer you are from failure. You own the politicians, and that makes all the difference.
All I can say that the members participating in this discussion who have children, just raise them the right way and the world will already be a better place.
In my personal anecdote above I made $17/hr pushing a button (17 years ago) and there was always spots open for overtime. Sundays were 2X pay. That position now pays only $10 to a person who can't work more than 39 hours/week and no benefits. No overtime.Lol. Hire Mexican-Americans? Actually the crap is hitting the fan with a bunch of companies here in Cali now that construction is turning around and a large number of Mexicans have gone back to Mexico. Will be interesting to see if wages go up. From what I understand many landscape companies are having a hard time competing with vineyards who are paying up to $15 an hour.
As far as I know, Americans have always complanied that america isnt what it used to be.

We've managed to do it so far for 5 years. My kid has seen such little tv, that when we watch something on the internet and a commercial comes on he does not understand.It ain't easy. Insulating one's kids from our sh!tty culture is a massive undertaking. Still trying to talk my wife into dropping DirecTV.
This whole thread is a blame game.
My father and his friends had a big influence on me. All of them served. My father was shipped overseas on January 17, 1942, and save 14 days furlough on the West Coast did not return until December 12, 1945. Over half that time until July 1945 was spent behind enemy lines. My father won a bronze star with clusters. His unit won a Presidential Citation. Here is what he told me (paraphrased). His generation was called a bunch of sissies by those that passed before. And there were plenty of sissies as he grew up. Life was different than what was written in the history books. He remembers sitting in parlors, in social settings with everyone crying over the loss of a brother, son, or father during the First War. That is where isolation came from.
And when they got their calling, they went because they were told to. He painted the picture more of sheep being led to be shorn, that of brave individuals fighting to make something right. That's from the movies.
He also talked, just before he died of the 200,000 Japanese landed on New Guinea with thirty days of rations. By the end of 90 days, my father had learned the meaning of the Japanese word for "dark meat" (Papua), and "white meat", him. Those were different days.
In my personal anecdote above I made $17/hr pushing a button (17 years ago) and there was always spots open for overtime. Sundays were 2X pay. That position now pays only $10 to a person who can't work more than 39 hours/week and no benefits. No overtime.
Crazy. I made $10 an hour doing landscape work almost 20 years ago. That's still about what the wage scale is $10-15/ hour.
Dare I say the richer you are the more opportunities you have as well?
To make matters worse, what you could buy with your $10 twenty years ago is significantly different that what you could get today.
Crazy. I made $10 an hour doing landscape work almost 20 years ago. That's still about what the wage scale is $10-15/ hour.
Lol. Hire Mexican-Americans? Actually the crap is hitting the fan with a bunch of companies here in Cali now that construction is turning around and a large number of Mexicans have gone back to Mexico. Will be interesting to see if wages go up. From what I understand many landscape companies are having a hard time competing with vineyards who are paying up to $15 an hour.
I don't know how he sees MA's, I will ask him.
Cool. As an aside, most of the Mexican guys I worked with in the past would give me a hard time and say stuff like "you sure you're Mexican?". That is until they saw me work my magic with a pick and a shovel. Then it was "Ohhh...you really are Mexican!". Haha.
Some skepticism of this argument is warranted. Every generation has been the "Me" generation. The old have always complained about the young, and will likely continue to do so until the end of time.
That said, I can't help but feel like there's some merit to the argument, also. Neoliberalism started hollowing out our communities and undermining civil society long ago. What we're left with is a bunch of isolated individuals indulging in shallow consumerism.
Many of the examples of "what we've lost" in this thread have involved team sports, which is no coincidence. A successful team requires hard work, sacrifice, and putting the group before one's self. Those values are incomprehensible in a greed-drive consumerist culture.
So now people go the work in the morning already looking forward to instagramming their lunch and sharing it on Facebook (expressive consumerism at its finest). Starting a family is no longer a vocation, but merely one lifestyle choice among many. And the kids grow up to be just like their parents.