Gori the Grey
The Poster
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2009
- Messages
- 13,142
Talkin' 'bout my education!
And those with just a HS degree (or less) also have a lot of common traits and pretty much are a tribe unto themselves. But few of them are able to overcome that disadvantage, so they still support Trump.It seems unfair and inaccurate to judge people in groups. But if you are going to do it, I think it would be more pertinent and revealing to look at educational status. IMO, university trained people have a lot of common traits and pretty much are a tribe unto themselves. Though many are able to overcome the disadvantage.![]()
Post generational differences you believe to be noteworthy.
Some more serious, others less so.
Gen Z has the worst music. Taylor Swift is potentially more overrated than Beyonce. How can that be? Did this cohort willingly look at the greatest pop culture mistake of my generation, and consciously decide to top it?
We've let them down, evidently.GenZ has the worst music [names 2 millennials]
We've let them down, evidently.
We are far apart.Sincerely don't know what you're on about. There's an embarrassment of musical riches out there right now.
I'm okay with identifying as a Boomer. We get mocked a lot, but it's easier than having to remember a bunch of alphabet soup. And it's nice to get that 20% discount at some stores (ie. on the first Tuesday of the month at a particular pharmacy). I had no idea they even had that policy until the clerk hesitantly asked me if I was over 55 and I said yes; she then said I could have 20% off my purchase for being a senior, if I wanted it. She was afraid I'd be insulted at being called a senior (it's weird how some women are about that). Vanity vs. a few dollars off my purchase? Gimme that discount! And age is only how many times you've been around the Sun. Next year I want to go somewhere else, but so far NASA hasn't made that possible.Again, what ages are in what generation changes depending on who you ask. Gen Xers are mostly in their 50s, and possibly early 60s, not 40s. People in their 40s, particularly their early 40s are generally considered Millennials. It gets fuzzier with folks in their late forties... they could be Gen X or Millennial, depending on who you ask. Same thing for early 60s. They could be Gen X or Boomers depending on who you ask.
I guess another factor is how the person themselves identifies. There are people who are in their 60s who would self identify as Gen X and some who would identify as Boomers and some people in their forties who would self identify as Millennials while others would refer to themselves as Gen X.
The older you make Gen X, the more its going to swing in favor of Trump.
There are 16 months between my age and hers. My "back in the day" music is late '60s-'70s folk music. Even some of the best filk music is from that era. I've posted Leslie Fish's "Hope Eyrie" here on the forum; that's her homage to the Apollo program, and she started writing it the same day she watched Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin step onto the Moon.I'm going ahead and placing Harris as an older Gen X.
Like I've said before, the categories are very squishy at the margins. I'm pretty confident that Harris would identify 80's music as her "back in my day" music. That's clearly Gen X. 90's kids are in-between Gen X and Millennial. 80's kids are pretty solid Gen-X.
That's a shame. Lots of interesting stuff happened before 1988. Mind you, Halley's Comet was a letdown, as it wasn't anywhere as bright as people had hoped. I kept looking for it and was never sure if I saw it or not. Fast-forward to the '90s, and I was in no doubt whatsoever about Hale-Bopp. Hyakutake was cool, too.I'm the same age as you, Narz, but I still wouldn't describe the 80s as back in my day. The first "big things" I remember are the Challenger disaster, Halley's Comet and Prince Andrew's wedding, all of which were in 1986, but I still barely remember anything before 1988.
Just pick up a Cathy comic digest from that time. Cathy was a comic strip about a businesswoman whose mother kept nagging her to marry, and Cathy was juggling boyfriends Irving, David, and a couple of others - while dealing with her feminist friend Andrea. Cathy and Irving never denied themselves anything, whether it was the current trendy restaurant thing, or expensive, one-purpose kitchen appliances. They had to always go with the currently-popular thing, and I was floored when one strip had Cathy babbling about whether her friends and someone else's friends played Trivial Pursuit. Apparently playing Trivial Pursuit was the measure of whether someone was worth knowing: "My friends play Trivial Pursuit. Do your friends play Trivial Pursuit? My friends and your friends should get together!" (or something like that; I'm going by memory here).The original term was "the Me generation," with the focus on selfishness and a feeling of entitlement.
There's a current trend on FB to mock boomers for liking AI pictures and not understanding that they are indeed fake and disrespectful to artists who have worked at improving their skills over many years.TBH I think this is accurate of Gen X and I'm a millennial. Sorry Xers.
Expect it all, to be praised and respected, yet fight for nothing, so cynical, and not really great at anything, anti-talent and anti-competitive has actually characterized most Xers I've worked with.
I prefer working with much maligned boomers tbh.
And those with just a HS degree (or less) also have a lot of common traits and pretty much are a tribe unto themselves. But few of them are able to overcome that disadvantage, so they still support Trump.
Would you believe that I have never listened to either of these two singers? I've probably heard their songs at some point, but wouldn't be able to identify them as being the singers.Post generational differences you believe to be noteworthy.
Some more serious, others less so.
Gen Z has the worst music. Taylor Swift is potentially more overrated than Beyonce. How can that be? Did this cohort willingly look at the greatest pop culture mistake of my generation, and consciously decide to top it?
So... my grandfather, who was born in 1901, was both "Greatest" and "Lost"? That seems to be a contradiction.One list of the the various generations:
Other listings here:
- Gen Alpha: Born After 2010
- Gen Z: Born 1997–2010
- Millennial Generation: Born 1981–1996
- Xennial Generation: Born 1977 to 1983
- Gen X: Born 1965–1980
- Generation Jones: Born 1955 to 1964
- Baby Boomer Generation: Born 1946 to 1964
- The Silent Generation: Born 1928 to 1945
- The Greatest Generation: Born 1901–1927
- The Lost Generation: Born 1883-1910
![]()
Do You Know the Meaning of Your Generation Name? An Explainer
Discover the fascinating world of generational classifications! From the Silent Generation to Gen Z, each group has its own unique characteristics shaped by history. Do you know where you belong in this generational tapestry and the name meaning? Find out!bestlifeonline.com
I don't think that's it.I confess to feeling that younger generations are generally not accustomed to hard work and appear taken aback when it is required of them. But that's just because we don't work kids anymore.
There, I did.Post generational differences you believe to be noteworthy.
I'll tell you one difference between my generation and the later ones. Opportunity.
And that's why I never will vote for a Democrat. I graduated in the midst of the Carter inflation and Carter's economy nearly bankrupted our family business. My pop said that the family could only send one of us to college (my younger sis couldn't work on the crew, so) and the other would have to stay and work. So, I didn't go, turns out by the time she was old enough to go it had become pretty easy to borrow money for school.
So, the younger generations have had the opportunity to go to college and sleep with everybody and everything and spend 4 years drunk and stoned and get a magic piece of paper that puts them in the front of the job line and live Godless lives, subsidized by my tax dollars.
So, Carter screwed me over and I will never vote for a Democrat. But after that, I ended up on the right side of everything. So, it turned out that while the younger generations have opportunity handed to them on a silver platter, our generation had to make our own, so
There, I did.
I think what we have seen over the past few decades is that work life has transitioned from "While you are at work your activity choices are very limited" to "while at work your activity choices have greatly expanded." Phones and computers have widened the choices we have in how we spend our work time. Many people would much rather stream games or videos or chat on social media while on the clock than just focus on work. Those options were not available in the past. We have far more distractions now than in the past.I confess to feeling that younger generations are generally not accustomed to hard work and appear taken aback when it is required of them. But that's just because we don't work kids anymore.
Carter had little to do with the inflation of the 1970s other than to try and fix it. In fact it was Carter who appointed Volker to the Fed and he was the guy who eventually ended it in 1982.And that's why I never will vote for a Democrat. I graduated in the midst of the Carter inflation and Carter's economy nearly bankrupted our family business. My pop said that the family could only send one of us to college (my younger sis couldn't work on the crew, so) and the other would have to stay and work. So, I didn't go, turns out by the time she was old enough to go it had become pretty easy to borrow money for school.
So, the younger generations have had the opportunity to go to college and sleep with everybody and everything and spend 4 years drunk and stoned and get a magic piece of paper that puts them in the front of the job line and live Godless lives, subsidized by my tax dollars.
So, Carter screwed me over and I will never vote for a Democrat. But after that, I ended up on the right side of everything. So, it turned out that while the younger generations have opportunity handed to them on a silver platter, our generation had to make our own, so
Scholarly analysis of the question of how Kennedy won has focused, quite rightly, on administration of the electoral process in two crucial states: Illinois and Texas. Kennedy ultimately was credited with the electoral votes of both, which gave him victory in the Electoral College tally. The problem with answering the question of how he prevailed there is twofold in nature. In Illinois, the most recent and fair-minded study (Kallina’s Kennedy v. Nixon) concludes that sufficient evidence does not exist to determine whether Chicago’s Democratic machine stole more votes there than Republicans did downstate. Texas presents a different kind of problem. A system of free and fair elections in the modern sense had not yet taken hold on the ground there in 1960. Voter fraud was fairly common, safeguards to prevent it were few, and 1960 was no different in those respects. Thus, the most dispassionate analysis of this issue from the perspective of fifty years later is that we will never know whether Kennedy really “won,” in the sense of what result an entirely honest and effective administration of the electoral process in Illinois and Texas would have produced on Election Day in 1960.
If you are looking at election controversy, don't forget 2000 when SCOTUS decided Bush won. As far as 2020 goes, there is no credible evidence that Trump won or that there was any fraud sufficient to cause a Biden win.To be fair:
![]()
Who Really Won the 1960 Election?
November 8, 2010 marks the fiftieth anniversary of the presidential election of 1960, which still very much interests those who care about disputed elections.www.historynewsnetwork.org
Like 2020, we will never know. At least back when this article was written people were honest enough to admit that cheating is a fact of life.
Nixon was a great president pulled down by the lousy Democrats for some minor thing that both parties do all the time...and who could blame the guy given that Joe Kennedy and the Democrats stole the 1960 election in Chicago!