http://www.esquire.com/features/young-people-in-the-recession-0412
3/31/2012 2:33:16 PM
The answer is clear! Old people are vampires!Go cry yourself to sleep. I'm sure it's the system keeping people down again, not irresponsible behavior and an entitlement mentality.
3/31/2012 3:01:20 PM
3/31/2012 3:16:11 PM
I kinda agree with a lot of the arguments in the article but I don't necessarily blame old people. For me, the debts young people are going to be paying aren't just monetary either. I also don't think this is some new paradigm, recent history has a lot of examples of generations continually kicking the can into the future. I give old people credit: They get out to vote and the politicians know it. That coupled with the shear numbers of the baby boom generation I think explains some of this. But its more than just governments taking from the young and giving to the old, its also our economic structure starting to crumble a little bit. I think it will take a consciousness/paradigm shift on the part of young people to begin exploring alternatives to our current system to break the cycle. [Edited on March 31, 2012 at 3:22 PM. Reason : ...]
3/31/2012 3:16:21 PM
I don't think there is a point to blaming old people necessarily. But there are widespread problems in our institutions creating systematic dysfunction to society as a whole and it disproportionately affects young people. There can be no doubt that these problems arose under the watch of the older generation and young people will suffer the consequences. Framing the debate in an honest and factual manner is the first step in rectifying the situation.
3/31/2012 3:27:07 PM
agreed, the previous generation telling kids to "do what they love" is fucking stupid and has caused great harm, as there is a dearth of STEM talent coming out of colleges. Silicon Valley is literally starving for engineering talent. The pickings are only moderately better elsewhere.
3/31/2012 3:31:00 PM
I'd say neglecting the country's infrastructure over the past 30-40 years has caused far more harm than telling people to not be miserable.
3/31/2012 4:09:15 PM
Aww, that's so cute. You just go right on believing that.
3/31/2012 4:12:52 PM
Your convincing argument has swayed me.I'd say maintaining the country's infrastructure over the past 30-40 years has caused far less harm than telling people to be miserable.
3/31/2012 4:21:47 PM
I'm wondering when all the fucking old people dying in my family are going to finally include me in their wills
3/31/2012 5:09:11 PM
Look, I'm the last one to defend baby boomers, their idiotic policies, how the government coddles them--and least of all their goddamn entitlement programs...But that graphic is kinda dumb. I mean, is it really news that the financial stability of 20/30-somethings is more tenuous than that of 50/60-somethings?
3/31/2012 5:20:08 PM
I don't think general financial stability of young versus old is so much the point as the then and now. One group has fallen by 70% over the past 25 years while the other has improved by 40%.Of course, it doesn't help that nearly the entire savings and investment career of those currently under 35 consists of bursting bubbles and constant war.]
3/31/2012 5:45:17 PM
^This indicates that you think those under 35 are saving and investing.
3/31/2012 8:09:41 PM
I think it's unwise and extremely difficult to ignore the large-scale problems facing my generation on the social level. The escalating costs of attending college combined with the fact that it's basically a necessity for obtaining a job worth a damn nowadays means that people are being systematically disadvantaged. Is it possible to be successful despite all of these challenges that were not forced on the Boomers? Sure it is. Is it a lot harder to succeed which means that inevitably more people will fail? Absolutely. The first step to fixing the problem is to identify it.
3/31/2012 9:34:27 PM
That graphic tells me that 50% of the population is $3,662 away from joining the revolution.
3/31/2012 9:56:56 PM
^^ We have indeed diluted the value of a college education by sending every other fucking knuckledragger to college and acting like it's a good idea. Supply and demand, from there, has caused college education to get a shitload more expensive as the worth of the degrees go steadily down the toilet.
3/31/2012 10:45:19 PM
4/1/2012 1:04:58 AM
4/1/2012 1:14:53 AM
Oh, for sure, that shit was courtesy of FDR and LBJ.What I mean is, now that we no-shit need to do something about those programs, we can't, because of how influential the Boomers are in our political landscape.
4/1/2012 1:15:09 AM
We, no-shit, need to do something about Medicare spending and Defense spending, but not Social Security spending...[Edited on April 1, 2012 at 1:22 AM. Reason : ]
4/1/2012 1:18:21 AM
The lawmakers are composed of wealthy rich old people.And you're surprised that the majority of the laws benefit them the most?
4/1/2012 1:28:58 AM
I wonder if it is because old people have knowledge, wisdom, and experience and realize the value of a strong work ethic, whereas young people don't know s%#t, but think they know everything and are entitled to everything without working?
4/1/2012 9:51:37 AM
Better go shoo those kids off your lawn.
4/1/2012 2:58:19 PM
4/1/2012 11:21:41 PM
4/2/2012 12:28:29 AM
4/2/2012 12:55:34 AM
4/2/2012 1:03:07 AM
Except capital, networking, real-world experience, and government red tape. But yeah, the barriers to entry are pretty much gone.
4/2/2012 1:56:53 AM
Vocationalism has its pitfalls too.
4/2/2012 2:20:06 AM
4/2/2012 6:40:13 AM
4/2/2012 9:28:05 AM
4/2/2012 10:30:59 AM
Is it an excuse to admit that the economy is depressed due to government and bank policies? That's totally incontrovertible. There are still good and bad decisions to be made on an individual level, but many opportunities have simply evaporated due to the burden of debt - good money being sent after bad in perpetuation, making it unavailable to those that could actually use it in a productive manner.
4/2/2012 11:19:33 AM
4/2/2012 12:00:55 PM
4/2/2012 12:03:42 PM
4/2/2012 2:48:46 PM
the problem with startups today is that everyone thinks "Silicon Valley" startups, which really means making an app and a website.The really useful startups come from someone understanding an industry, understanding a need in that industry, and having the connections, capital, and drive to make it happen.the problem with that reality, is that it doesn't fit the lovely story of the outsider coming in and changing everything. Startups are businesses like all other businesses. Mal-investment can happen too, just as it did in the .com bubble.The bottom line is that education should match the need. But that's the real problem - poor access to economic opportunities. People go into dead-end law schools because they don't know what else to do, and it's available for them. Although it's a bad option, it's an option they have entry to. There are more useful applications of their labor, but either that door isn't open to them, or they don't see that door.It's the entrepreneurial spirit itself that creates value, and this exists within the context of many different business structures. Individuals in an established company can have an entrepreneurial spirit, even Japan in the 1970s economic boom was powered by an entrepreneurial drive, even though they were hanging onto concepts like lifetime employment at the time, which is a virtual self-contradiction by our modern business thinking.
4/3/2012 9:25:52 AM
4/3/2012 10:55:00 AM
Hard to read but interesting graph:The US stands out for having the largest proportion of 55-64 year olds with a post-secondary degree, aside from Israel. Also for being the only country aside from German that hasn't gained in this area.
4/3/2012 10:59:44 AM