LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,715
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
We can't change the world. But we sure as hell can throw a monkey wrench into it.
At only 24 years old, I see a shocking difference even just between members of my generation, and the kids I’ve been exposed to through family and friends. I know relatively young children who are literally sucked into the machine from age 3 on – constantly attached to a gaming system, computer, or smartphone for hours and hours each day.
It's bad enough when something that I've never seen as such is called an "art." But what's really frightening is when that "art" becomes a "science."
I can be fairly certain that I would, in fact, be happier then, than now. I know what I am, I know what I like, and a society years back would be more tailored to a fella like myself.
In the Mad Men fifties, they called it "motivational research," and it really was the start of this pernicious invasive marketing that we're surrounded by at all times in modern culture. Read the works of Vance Packard to see how even then there were people who saw thru it and found it appalling -- I read "The Hidden Persuaders" in high school, and never looked at the world around me in the same way again.
I've been lurking around for some time here, but the subject and responses to this post really speak to me. In regards to all of 'us' longing for a self-projected illusion of the past that never existed - I strongly disagree. I am relatively young (24) and thankfully thus far have been relatively successful (for a member of my generation that is, who has woken up with a multitude of hangovers passed down from previous generations’ partying). I say this simply to point out that I do not feel ostracized by society for lack of socio-economic means, popularity with my peers, etc., etc. However, to get back to the point I’d like to argue – the past, particularly ‘The Golden Era,’ really was better in many (most?) ways. The reason I feel so strongly that this is true is because I’ve been fortunate enough to be around all of my grandparents for extensive periods of time. Not to get into any political debates, but one set of them are Roosevelt-loving, big government liberals, and the other set Ron Paul supporting, tear down the government conservatives. They grew up in the 20s and 30s in vastly different circumstances (Midwestern plains vs. Brooklyn), and went on to very different careers, and yet, they all tell me of the years when this country, and this society was vastly superior. Not only do they tell me how superior things were back then, I can see it in the way they live and have lived their lives. At only 24 years old, I see a shocking difference even just between members of my generation, and the kids I’ve been exposed to through family and friends. I know relatively young children who are literally sucked into the machine from age 3 on – constantly attached to a gaming system, computer, or smartphone for hours and hours each day. There is no such thing as playing outside anymore, just as there is no such thing as allowing your children to play outside. Who knows what could happen to them if you’re foolish enough to let your brood explore the world around them. From my personal experience, they will probably end up drunk, high, pregnant…or perhaps all three simultaneously. Without turning this into an all-out rant, I’d like to conclude my remarks with a more analytical statement. The only constant in life and in this world that we live in is change. And as someone who is paid to analyze these changes that occur around us, I firmly believe that that is one of the only constants you can rely on – change in the form of technology and in the nature of human interaction. Basically, all that this means to me is that society is never going to get back to the way it was…things will always keep changing, for better or (mostly) for worse. I know and accept this. That said, I still find it exceedingly difficult to look at the world around me, with the values imbued in me from my childhood, without thinking that the world has lost its mind in a thread of code buried deep in some hollowed-out building packed full of servers running algorithms designed to rip me off a cent at a time. Wish we could go back, or at least import some of that bygone era’s simplicity and decency.
*As well, fedoras and clipper planes rule.
Would that there were more "young'uns" like yourself!
... I too believe that I'd "fit in" better back then. ...I would fit in more with society in general.
Like in another post a couple of pages back, I too believe that I'd "fit in" better back then. It wouldn't be easy, of course, but I realize that I would fit in more with society in general.
-Kristi
I was just thinking, during WWII the most bloody war in history, with unimaginable atrocities, there was one song that all sides listened too, Lili Marleen. Even the Russians sang it, even though they were threatened with execution for singing it, so they changed the lyrics to X ratted version. It wouldn't surprise me if the Japanese new the words. Has there ever been a song like that before or since?[video=youtube;vL0KniirXHM]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vL0KniirXHM[/video]
Forget empathy, how about basic historical knowledge. My problem with the layman and his God given right to express opinions is if you talk to people they will gladly tell you they dislike history. Most will tell you they hated history class in school and have done nothing afterwards to broaden their horizons on the matter.The problem here is the layman's general lack of historical empathy.