There's a huge cultural shift happening right now that isn't being discussed nearly enough.
It's the effect that our educational system is having on work ethics. I hear older people talk a lot about how gen z is lazy, entitled, soft etc. but there's never much talk about why that might be the case.
The answer I think has to do with the way kids were raised in the last few decades. It's been accelerating since sputnik shook American elites to radically invest in public education.
Schools pump out young people who are programmed to think of themselves as intellectuals. This is especially true of college and higher education, which the lower grades are geared towards setting kids up for. The average Starbucks barista or McDonald's employee has spent about 15 years of their lives learning all kinds of things that don't immediately apply to them. Imagine the investment. The long hours spent in a classroom instead of playing with friends. The hours and hours of studying, homework and frustration. Now imagine after all of that your life consists of repeating the same menial tasks every day for barely enough to afford gas. That's the world young people face today. No wonder people aren't giving a shit.
Giving everyone access to a broad education has unforeseen consequences. It endows each person with an identity that doesn't mesh with the outside world of adulthood, where most people find themselves with "unfulfilling" jobs. Kids spend the first quarter century of their lives being encouraged to dream, develop self esteem and think highly of their own abilities. Then they run into the brick wall of adult work culture and become depressed and disillusioned. Many turn to socialism or self destructive behaviors to cope with the loss of their perceived status. They feel unrecognized and abused by the system.
I don't know what the solution is here, but I've been thinking about this a lot and felt like typing this up. I'm wondering what everyone else thinks of my hypothesis.
A lot of people, both young and old, are tapping out because they realize that the system is broken. They might not be able to give you a detailed breakdown of why it's a mess, but every gut instinct they have is telling them that something isn't right here.
It's the massive cognitive struggle we all face when the world as they tell us it is and the world as it actually is end up being very different.
Yeah, The system is busted. I have practically given up all life aspirations. If anything, I'm just waiting patiently for the system to fall apart like everyone else here, so we can rebuild the economy anew with Trump's populist vision in mind
Same here, just waiting for things to progress to the next stage. Honestly though, I won't give a fuck about money even if we do end up in some miraculous new golden age. I've seen and experienced too much to ever go back to a materialistic and shallow world view that's based around "wealth".
Honestly I've been largely "phoning it in" since 2020, I probably still have my job and keep getting raises because they've lost so many people for various reasons (a lot of retirements and I know of a few who died off even and I know they were jabbed up) and even when I'm goofing off I'm still outperforming a good portion of the department. I just see no reason to work my ass off like I used to after realizing how broken everything is and how it's by design.
Yep, you can't expect people to thrive and live happy, vibrant lives when the system they're forced to live in is intentionally rigged against them by people who want them either enslaved or dead.
I work to survive, that's about it. Any dreams of my youth are dead, that world doesn't exist anymore.
Well said. It's the consequence of taking the red pill, so to say. You take the blue and all the mundane "normies" joys are there. Take the red and without the Lord, all seems lost.
I desperately cling to Jesus Christ every day of my life for this exact reason. At some point you realize there are problems in this world that are beyond our ability to fix.