What are valuable skills that young people are losing?
What are valuable skills that young people are losing?
Focus
Comradeship
Optimism
Professionalism
Frugality
Socialization
In-Person Communication
Ambition
Ironically, basic computer skills
Since when these became "skills"?
As a young person, I say:
> Professionalism
> Job Loyalty
> Budgeting
Writing, grammar, spelling.
Young people these days are "deep rollers." They have the unfortunate combination of a desire to be entrepreneurial and independent, but lack the courage or resources to take risk or the ability to comfortably and unemotionally handle loss. This is partially their fault, but more than anything it's the effects of bad Boomer upbringing and policy. If they don't destroy the planet by the time they're rotting in the Earth, the end of the Boomers will mark the beginning of a renaissance in the U.S. and possibly the rest of the world.
sales and negotiation. The whole "me me me I'm a special snowflake" mentality all of these cucks have is going to make it too fucking easy in 10 years to fuck them outta their money.
>What are valuable skills that young people are losing?
Critical Thinking.
Millenials are unoriginal, group think prone, walking parrots.
Which is why they are easily preyed upon by Liberal Group Think mentality.
The ability to tell real life apart from the internet.
The ability to be a real person because Facebook etc is just massive social engineering on a global scale to make everyone think and behave the same way. Ostricizing and banning anyone who doesn't, to reinforce it in the rest.
>Ostricizing and banning anyone who doesn't, to reinforce it in the rest.
This is the most dangerous aspect of Millenial mentality.
"Anyone who doesn't agree with me needs to be labeled, marginalized, censored and silenced."
This
>The ability to tell real life apart from the internet.
>Ostricizing and banning anyone who doesn't, to reinforce it in the rest.
>unironically believing Twitter twits are representative of most millennials
oh, the irony
Millennial detected.
It doesnt need to be most to be a problem, and Ive met enough irl for it to be a problem.
>23, so millenial myself I think
>Facebook etc is just massive social engineering on a global scale
no its a method of sharing information. you choose what to share. I could make an account and shill meme-coins all day, nobody is stopping me. is the info I choose to put out there
Self respect
So youre going to socially engineer people to buy memecoins? Is that supposed to be a counter-argument?
>but more than anything it's the effects of bad Boomer upbringing and policy
Taking responsibility for their own mistakes
The ability to finish a
no, I'm pointing out the freedom to post what you want and not conform to expectations
This is 'Labeling & Preconcieved Notions - PC Edition.'
The importance of hard work
Nobody owes u shit
Even if u go to college u need social or other skills
How to be basic fucking human beings to strangers
Blacksmithing
In 1999 when i was 5 and got a pc
U get zucc
I would kill myself if those were my co-workers
Ability to communicate without a screen
determination/persistence
toughness in the face of criticism
In-person social skills.
Sales.
Basic finance skills.
Critical analysis skills.
>Job Loyalty
>2017
They got you cucked good.
Companies are unable to retain talented employees for a reason.
>Ostricizing and banning anyone who doesn't, to reinforce it in the rest.
>I've met enough irl for it to be a problem.
So you act like an ass then get upset that people don't care about how much you tip your special snowflake fedora?
I wouldn't preach tolerance if you yourself are intolerant.
I'd say monotasking, but the very young people seem to be getting better at that than my generation (Millenials) ever was.
In person conversations are definitely less of a thing though.
This. Have you seen how many millenial chicks fell for that lularoe pyramid scheme? I need to figure out a similiar business to screw people out of some cash.
being able to take a hit....with dignity
Memorization skills have definitely fallen.
Our universities are also no longer churning out cultured individuals who can hold a conversation about higher arts.
So basically millennials can't do anything and the future of humanity dies out in this generation
Stop exaggerating the problem.
We're at a socioeconomic crossroads though. Paradigms will be broken and made in the next 50 years.