Quote:
Originally Posted by manasecret
Ick, more of this "in my day" nostalgia crap, and you're only 20! What is it about humans that makes us always think that everything was so much better back in the day?
Yes, I know what you mean about bringing up politics in a discussion, and people don't want to talk about it. Do you really think things were much different in previous generations? Weren't people just as focused on celebrities 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, and 90 years ago? Wasn't the two-party system the same broke-as-fuck as it was 100 years ago? I know plenty of people my age and younger that are more than willing to talk politics and are very opinionated about, some of them here! Don't you think that it has always been that some people give a shit about politics, and others don't? Or do you really think this generation has all of sudden become so different than the past ones?
I'm going to go out on a limb and say that people didn't know nearly as much about starving children in Africa even 30 years ago, let alone 50, or 100, as we do today. I can prove this just by Googling "starving children in Africa" and read all the articles that come up. I'm going to go out on a further limb and say that we contribute much more time and money to those causes as a whole today, including people our age, than we did in those previous decades. I think people in the Peace Corps our age would be pissed off if you told them that they don't care.
And you talk about needing another World War?? Don't be so glib.
|
There is so much here, I would have to quote every single sentence to point out every flaw. Instead I'll list the main ones:
1) You are completely different from previous generations, just as my generation is completely different in most aspects from Baby Boomers and they are completely different from Veterans, and we are from different generations (I'm an GenX, you are a Echo Boomer or Millenial).
I teach a class on generational Identities that is based on seven published studies, so I doubt you know more on this subject than I... unless you, you know,
GOOGLE it, then you would of course be an expert, just like your generation apparently has mastered Africa's ills by reading a Wikipedia entry.
And you think I'M glib?
2) Do your generation really know that much about starving children in Africa? If you do, why doesn't anyone care enough to do anything about it? Has knowing about starving children in Africa stopped ANYTHING? No, while we might know MORE about tharving childen in Africa, in the end our knowledge changes NOTHING. Actions change the world, not knowledge, and you can only act on knowledge when history and experience put that knowledge into context.
By the way, I find your arrogance about how much your generation KNOWS to be silly. If your generation knows so much, why was LIVE AID created by Baby Boomers ands the Children's Miracle Network created by Veterans? We've known quite a bit about Africa and world events for a long time now, without the aid of the misinformation and bias bible that is the internet.
That whole section of your post was assinine, to be honest.
3) And I never said I wanted to start a World War, and in history, it has been INACTION that has made World Wars inevitable. I could run through every single parallel bewteen this situation and those in the past that have lead to horror, but you've made it quite obvious making decisions based on evidence and history mean nothing to you, so I won't bother.
In the end my main reason why I think the younger generations don't care about world events, but they know about the, and that makes it worse. Knowledge is not a virtue, and in fact, if you are aware of the evils of the world, but still do nothing or advocate inaction.... well, someone said it better than I:
Quote:
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."
- Edmund Burke (1729 - 1797)
|