Grandeeod wrote: » If you don't believe that the Snowflake generation exists, your mad!
Grandeeod wrote: » There was an article on the Indo website earlier today. I can't find it now. Basically it was about an over weight female journo being told by some bloke in Amsterdam that he didn't like fat women, but found her face attractive. The article was so mixed up and ****ed up that I couldn't finish my ****ing weetabix! She cried. Then she didn't cry, but by **** did she rant about how upset and offended she was by the experience. Me and my missus are in the oul 40s like, so I asked herself what she would have said to this dude if she was overweight and somewhat younger. Well I got the answer I expected and thats why I love her. She would have told him to **** off and look in a mirror ya stupid bollox. Now go off there and screw a plug hole. Bottom line, she would have the confidence and ability to dismiss the dope. If you don't believe that the Snowflake generation exists, your mad!
Alun wrote: » A handful of extreme cases reported in newspapers and the Twittersphere doesn't mean a whole generation is like that though. Have you ever met anybody like that in the real world?
Grayson wrote: » You couldn't finish your weetabix and had to go and find someone to validate your opinion..... you're a snowflake.
El_Duderino 09 wrote: » Pressure on getting a job has never been like this. When you were looking for jobs back in the 50, did you have to go through all the rigmarole of applications, preparing and rehearsing interview answers and attend several rounds if interviews before getting a job? That's what lots of young people do now. But it's different from the past which, some older folks think invalidates it somewhat. I'm older than the ones were discussing. If the young ones of today are in the same boat as you were for all theose years between the 50s-70s, why all the whining about the young ones now? Why is the urge to kick them in the guts, so strong in the older folks?
marienbad wrote: Anyway I am rambling at this stage - must be another senior moment .
El_Duderino 09 wrote: » The only senior moment us that you're missing the fact that the problems have changed form. Sone problems don't exist anymore which you see as a good thing. And you don't understand the new problems to you discount them. The modern world must look rosey from your perspective. I envy you that.
marienbad wrote: So you have gone from accusing us of being smug and unaware to one of being just clueless !
marienbad wrote: Give me an example of some of these new problems that you assume I don't understand or I don't know exist .
El_Duderino 09 wrote: » Those things aren't exclusive. I was referring to the people to whom the label applied. You appear to have identified with it. Ask the bambinos. A few people have banged on about how their grandfather worked down the fish mines from the time he was a sperm. Back-breaking work for a machine let alone a boy. And he never complained. Not like the snowflakes of today. How do these people know about the jobs their grandparents did? Maybe they asked grandad. Have you ever had a chat with a young person of today about the jobs they compete for? My own mother doesn't have a clue what I do as a career. Sometimes she asks and then her eyes glazes over when I tell her. Mainly because she's retired and doesn't realky give a toss what other people do. It's easy to criticise those who are out fighting for jobs when you don't have to worry about it for yourself. Go ask a person under 20 what their problems are. Half of them will be things we all whinged about when we were young. Half of them you'll probably dismiss as trivial because you won't understand them.
marienbad wrote: What a presumptions and condescending post !
El_Duderino 09 wrote: » Not going to speak with the people you're happy to make pronouncements about? Jeez the kids have a lot to learn from you alright. Maybe they're as well doing it their own way
marienbad wrote: As for speaking with them , I do it night and day .
El_Duderino 09 wrote: » You're keeping yourself busy. That's good or so I hear. Must have it all sussed at this stage in the game
TallyRand wrote: I genuinely think you have resentment / anger issues with the older generation possibly with your own mother by your description of her eyes glazing over when describing your job.
TallyRand wrote: Look we all have our baggage and pain to some extent but to compare working on the docks at 13 years of age to having to do three rounds of interviews is just off the wall.
TallyRand wrote: Well you obviously have it all sussed, your single handledly making the case to prove the snowflake generation exists.
El_Duderino 09 wrote: » Cheers Sigmund. The problems change firm they don't just disappear. Grandad gets to air Gus grievance and gets kudos for never complaining - even while complaining decades after the fact. Young people of today complain about the problems they have at the time and it's written off as snowflake stuff. Now that's interesting.
marienbad wrote: You don't handle disagreement very well do you ? Best leave it there .
El_Duderino 09 wrote: » I'm older than that. Unless you're using snowflake to mean people you don't agree with. That's just dull though. It winds my up the way everyone feels free to give the young people of today a kick in the crotch. 'My generation had real problems, not like the young people if today', said smugly by every generation ever as if it was meaningful
TallyRand wrote: I think your the only person who sounds smug on this thread. As someone already mention this is the best time in the history of mankind to be a youth and be whatever you want to be.
TallyRand wrote: You do know what 18yo's a hundred years where doing in the trenches don't you? No time to be offended as you seem to be when your get a nice lungful of mustard gas
TallyRand wrote: Who's complaining? This is something you must have personal feelings about that I can't agree with you at all on, I actually think most people look back with rose tinted glasses on their conditions and comfort levels in life etc
TallyRand wrote: Also I don't remember hearing generation snowflake in the 90's early 00's. Perhaps coincidentally I dont remember hearing SJW, safe spaces, 101 types of gender either.
El_Duderino 09 wrote: » This whole thread is for older people to complain about young people. The people complaining about the young people of today are doing it from behind rose tinted glasses. The notion that nobody complained in the olden days should be ridiculous, even to a fool. Those are modern terms. Why would you gave heard them back in the 90s or early 00? Do you think the gender stuff started with this generation? I suppose you think people turned gay after the referendum too?
steddyeddy wrote: Yes duderino people were gay and transgender all the way back into antiquity, but they're accepted far more in this day and age than they ever were.
Rainman16 wrote: » Do you guys think this is an accurate description of young people today? or is it unfair?