• @iarigby@lemm.ee
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      31 year ago

      ask them why didn’t they have savings to “buy a private yacht yet” at your age, because I would guess it’s roughly similar in the proportion of pay/cost

    • Tar_Alcaran
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      1 year ago

      I’m 35, and if you squint a bit at the mortgage, I “own” home. With my partner. And we’ll be paying it off for another 27 years. And we’re the lucky ones of this generation.

      Buying a home with saving, fucking lol

  • @rustyfish@lemmy.world
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    51 year ago

    To keep your sanity you just have to lower your expectations.

    I, for example, am really stoked for the burrito I ordered. Fuck, it’s good to be alive.

  • @omalaul@lemm.ee
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    41 year ago

    The century of find out with almost no active participation in the previous century of fuck around.

    A lot of “climate collapse global late stage capitalism and food is more and more plastic” stick with very little “convenience products are kinda nifty” carrot

    • Random Dent
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      31 year ago

      It’s kind of bittersweet being a very tail-end Gen X person. On the happy side, I got to do my childhood and teen years in the “fuck about” era, but on the unhappy side my entire adulthood has been in the “find out” era, and I get to remember what it was like briefly living in a world that wasn’t entirely going to shit.

  • @Wirlocke@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    21 year ago

    The Ukraine-Russia & Israel-Palestine wars, and the likelyhood of China going after Taiwan before 2027, and the Koreas continually being a powder keg influenced by all of this. Between all that and me being 23 years old I sincerely think I might witness World War 3, it’s terrifying, yet it feels inevitable with our era of false 1st world peace built on a house of cards.

    That’s not even mentioning the Republican Project 2025, as a trans person I might have to fight for my life.

  • Uriel238 [all pronouns]
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    11 year ago

    My GenX existential horror was learning in my thirties that all the western American Exceptionalism ideology I was indoctrinated in as a kid was just a way of keeping us from getting proactive for sake of the future generations, and my parents and teachers and ministers knew this and actively lied to me anyway.

  • @Naatan@lemdro.id
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    11 year ago

    I really wish my generation was a bit more optimistic. Yeah shit sucks, don’t get me wrong. But have you guys seen all of history? This is par for the course. Yeah the challenges are different but every generation had their challenges. And yeah baby boomers definitely had it better than us, but that doesn’t mean there’s nothing but bad stuff to come. You have to take life with the good and the bad and make the most of it.

    • @Sylvartas@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The bad is starting to look more and more like an impending global societal collapse with every passing day though

      • @bitsplease@lemmy.ml
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        11 year ago

        Yeah I don’t know about “par for the course”

        What other generation had the threat of scientifically proven ecological collapse looming over them?

        • ozebb
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          01 year ago

          scientifically proven ecological collapse

          This is a pretty specific thing, but the general “we’re all doomed” vibe is definitely not unique to today. Boomers and older had the threat of nuclear annihilation looming over them, and before that… well, disease and famine and death and destruction due to war have historically been the norm.

          Imagine how you’d feel living in the Americas in the 16th or 17th centuries and either watching the destruction wrought by European settlers firsthand or, maybe worse, watching your peers die en masse of the diseases introduced by those settlers. Imagine living in Eurasia in the 13th century and watching the Mongol army sweep through.

          None of this is to say that today’s challenges aren’t real and serious. Just that we’re not the first to face such challenges.

          • @OrteilGenou@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I think the doom is real, but we’re all looking at it through 6" x 3" magnifying glasses that condense all the shit into one giant nugget, and then the easy thing is to comment on that nugget because, well it’s right there, and last winter was unseasonably warm and there were some pretty catastrophic wildfires, and the ocean is doing weird shit, and it’s easy to think that that’s all there is, but you can still take a walk in the woods on a sunny day, and say hi to some people, and maybe make a friend.

    • @stolid_agnostic@lemmy.ml
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      11 year ago

      What’s interesting when you look at birthrate declines is not that they are declining, it’s that they are declining to NORMAL LEVELS. Everyone is freaking out that the next generation won’t be big enough to support retiring Boomers without understanding that there should never have been so many Boomers in the first place.

      • @Marin_Rider@aussie.zone
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        11 year ago

        Boomers without understanding that there should never have been so many Boomers in the first place.

        its literally in their name too: ‘baby boomers’. too many in too short a time and they have dominated politics for the better part of a century now

    • @Squirrel@thelemmy.club
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      1 year ago

      Most generations don’t need to deal with an impending threat to the whole planet. Nuclear apocalypse, sure, but at least there was no pretending that it wasn’t a problem.

      This is ignoring all of the other ways in which we’re fucked.

      • Wugmeister
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        11 year ago

        Another thing that is worse is how we havent had anything recently to inspire hope. The Higgs Boson would have been the Millenial/Gen Z equivalent of the moon landing if the public hadn’t been so distrusting of physics because of string theory evangelists.

  • Tar_Alcaran
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    01 year ago

    My method is hoping that I’m just old and western enough that I’ll be dead before the real bad shit hits me. I’m 35 though, so… let’s say there’s a smidge of optimism in there.