Millennials, the Dying Children (2020)

Macrobius

Megaphoron
original: https://lexic.co/barfblog/millennials-dying-children

via https://tunisbayclub.com/index.php?threads/millennials-the-dying-children-2020.1709/

tl;dr
My entire life, the only message I got from school, or church, college, and the media was that every decision I made, from what degree to pursue, to where I lived, to whether to marry, was with the goal of having a maximally pleasurable life.


Millennials, the Dying Children


Millennials, the Dying Children​

Last updated January 20, 2020 16:41​

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Captain Barf
@captainbarf
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I am one of the oldest millennials. Something terrifying is happening to us. We are dying while we are still children. We men are going bald, and the ladies are starting to sag. We have graying hair. Our eyes crinkle when we smile. We have unsightly fat deposits that are going nowhere. Our joints pop in the morning. We get injured by turning around too fast. Our vision is fading. Our reflexes are slowing. Many of us know someone our age who has died of cancer, a heart attack, or some other old-age disease that occasionally strikes the middle-aged.

And we're still children.

The oldest of us are rapidly closing in on 40. We are the least married, least fecund generation in history. Really, only 30% of people under 40 are married! Big-brained thinkers blame economic conditions, largely because big-brained thinkers go through years of training to ensure they don't see what is right in front of their faces. We started coming of age in 2003, and economic conditions were nowhere close to as bad as the 1930s, 40s, or 70s, when people had little trouble marrying and procreating. Yet here we are, aging out of our ability to enjoy childhood, feeling death creep up on us. The video games have grown boring. The TV marathons are suffocating. The candy tastes like ashes in our mouths. We're committing suicide and consuming antidepressants at record rates. We try to accumulate even more, and it fails to make us happy. We don't know why, and we don't know how we got here.

Well, I'll tell you.

My entire life, the only message I got from school, or church, college, and the media was that every decision I made, from what degree to pursue, to where I lived, to whether to marry, was with the goal of having a maximally pleasurable life. True, as someone raised in a conservative church, I was warned against fornication and substance abuse, but these were framed in terms of interfering with the good life. In the 1990s, there was no difference between Christians and non-Christians in that general outlook. Both Christian and non-Christians were equally horrified at the notion that a bright young woman might not end up "maximizing her potential," which meant putting 40 hours a week into a cubicle. Both warned her against getting married too young, because marriage could cut short a promising career. Evangelicals, for their part, indulged in a pious fiction that the unmarried 25-year-olds in the church were all virgins, but still, everyone agreed that the proper way to treat the world is as your playground.

Any kind of social responsibility or context to our choice-making was completely absent from what our boomer elders told us. What is the social purpose of marriage? Conservative boomers couldn't say. They appealed to "tradition" without understanding why it existed, to a Biblical literalism that was as mindless as it was quaint, in a world where their own self-indulgent concept of marriage had led to record-smashing divorce rates in the 1970s and 80s, and my generation growing up with every weekend alternating between parents. The boomer had already set up the foundation of marriage as an exercise in self-indulgence; gay marriage came as the consequence. If marriage has a social purpose, to channel and direct human sexuality in a way that promotes social cohesion and provides for a man's progeny, then gay marriage is nonsense. It's an absurdity. But if it's just to "be happy with the person you love?" Then why not?

Similarly, we weren't told that the purpose of a job is to provide for your family. If that's the point of working, then any kind of moral imperative to put women in the workplace evaporates. Why would they want to be there? Find me a woman who dreams of providing a new car for her husband, or who feels any satisfaction at knowing that her money will be well-spent by her husband for the children, or who feels that the ability to take the husband and the kids to the beach for a weekend is worth that drudgery in the office. We were told work would be "fulfilling," that it would be yet another endless source of amusement for us. Turns out that work sucks. Nobody can really explain why Grandpa was willing to drive from town to town sell vacuum cleaners, because delivering the same pitch for the thousandth time isn't fulfilling at all (none of us ever thought to ask grandma whether she envied grandpa's long days on the road when she was at home with the kids). Millennials are bored and angry in the workplace. We were told fulfillment would be here. Instead, it's...work. And since we don't have families, it has no purpose.

It's sad to watch my generation collapse into nihilism and fear as our bodies begin the process of dying. The men become bugmen, living to consume, filling shelf after shelf with toys their adult brains can't find amusement in, because they know of nothing else to do. The women are in a panic, desperately trying to hold onto their evaporating youth, trying to prove to themselves that a woman can be just as sexy and alluring at 35 as she could at 23. There's a lot of rage at the Boomers, but it's aimless and uninformed. Mostly, people are mad that they "crashed the economy" or "destroyed the climate," as though the double-digit inflation and choking smog of 1978 were so much better.

No, what the Boomers did to us was what their parents did to them. They ruined us by trying to give us the life they never had. Our grandparents grew up in the Depression, and overindulged their children with toys and attention to the point the boomers failed to develop any real sense of self-awareness. And what, you may ask, did the Boomers lack? The Boomers had their idyllic teenage years cut short. WW2 & Silents still ran the world, and made our parents put on a tie, go to work, and serve The Man before they were ready to stop playing. Your average Boomer male looks back at the summer of '69 wistfully, wishing it could have gone on forever, slightly resentful that just a few years later, he was driving a shitty Toyota, getting nagged by his wife, and listening to a baby scream. The Boomer female thinks that if it wasn't for that marriage and those babies she had by the time she was 26, she would have been an editor of a fashion magazine. She never would have gotten that baby belly. She would have been young and sexy forever.

Boomers have a perpetual teenage mentality that their parents never understood, and they raised us to be the eternal teenagers they didn't get to be. When you're 17, the idea of just buying cool stuff, having consequence-free sex, and binge-consuming media for the rest of your life sounds fantastic. You do not understand that when you are 40, you will not want that any more. There are tons of guys my age and younger, who wear Star Wars T-shirts, collect Marvel Funko Pops, and have gotten vasectomies, and they have no idea why they're so miserable. There are women my age who just broke up with another live-in boyfriend of three years and have no children. So here we are, and we're falling apart. Our parents instilled in us a totalizing selfishness that they never got to indulge, assuring us that marriage and family "would just come" when "the time is right." As far as they were concerned, that's just what happens. Except it "just happened" to them because of all the social capital of previous generations that was still there for them, which they razed to the ground. Now my generation is absolutely miserable, because we're reaching that age where your brain shifts modes from "consume and copulate" to "prepare your offspring for adulthood," and we don't understand that's what is actually happening. Women of my generation have been told their entire lives that loneliness is a psychological disorder, that children are parasites, and that exhausting yourself for 40 hours a week at work is the meaning of life. It turns out that continuing to live as though you were a teenager does not in fact bequeath eternal youth. "Age is just a number" is the most insidious of all Boomer proverbs.

For my generation, there is not really a path back out. All the social institutions of this country have been detonated in the quest for money and self, or via the hysterical condemnation of every kind of organic social relation as "sexist" or "racist." In the cities, nobody knows anybody. Professional associations and social clubs are borderline nonexistent. Nobody knows or cares about anyone, and nobody knows how to start. It's so sick and twisted that my generation uses the word "community" to refer to people who buy the same consumer products, like going to see a movie means you're part of the "Star Wars community." Even churches have been consolidated into massive theme parks where anonymous masses of people go to be entertained; centuries-old congregations have shuttered as the people moved to the megaplex. Brain-dead "conservative" pundits can only worry our declining birth rate in terms of funding entitlements or GDP; hardly anyone will come right out and say a society with low fertility is fundamentally sick and disordered.

Millennials need to accept that the values inculcated in us were a load of horse crap. I don't see that happening, as we're mostly are upset that we can't live the idyllic lives of self-indulgence the Boomers promised us. Even suggesting that divorce should be harder, marriage should be younger, and women were built to be mothers, not office drones, causes the average Millennial to dissolve into hysterical outrage. We're the generation that thinks having a country is racist and the most important thing about space exploration is making sure hijab-clad Muslimas are a part of it. So we're probably not going to snap out of it. We'll be buried in Batman coffins, surrounded by our Xbox games. Maybe whoever buries us will finally discard the morality of the Boomers.

- 30 -
 

Macrobius

Megaphoron
This isn’t the fault of the Boomers. You can blame the Boomers for a lot but they did not create the world they are credited with.

The Greatest Gen and all of their self aggrandizement created the world the Boomers inherited. They burned the world down with their parents and grandparents. The forced integration of schools? Civil rights? Replacement immigration? The mass media culture? Suburbanization? Sure Boomers can be said to have continued and perpetuated these trends but they can in no way be credited with starting them. But all of this was done by the generations before the Greatest Gen with the permission or go along with it attitudes.

While the post-1945 order can be called the Boomerreich. It isn’t the Boomer World Order until the mid-1990s, best exemplified by a still young Bill Clinton.

Even then William Jefferson Blythe III (latter name changed to 'Clinton') was born in 1946, and the 'peak Boomer' of Woodstock fame would be born rather later. Early Boomers are somewhat different, in that while exposed 'Greatest Generation' (read, Communist) propaganda and social structures built by them and their parents as part of the 1947 security state, nonetheless they mostly grew up in a world very similar to those born in the late Depression or during the war -- the semi-militarized but decidedly White world created during the Wilson and FDR administrations.

There primary characteristic would have been growing up in the world of _A Christmas Story_, without experiencing the last of the pre-electrification world (1920s) or the Great Depression which radicalised those generations you identify as their parents and grandparents -- not the world of _The Graduate_ or _Rebel Without a Cause_.

Does this matter? Millennials were by and large birthed by LATE Boomers and Early to Mid-GenX, not 'Boomers'. The author identifies himself as one of the earliest Milliennials, and in 2020 identifies this as 'age 40' (so, birth year 1980, essentially the Reagan years down until the mid Clinton administration. Zoomers are usually identified as 1996+ because they were not school age during '9/11'.

So, in 1980, Boomers, who are sharply those born post-War down to 9 months after the Kennedy assassination (so, mid 1964) would have been aged 16-35 years old -- that is, the oldest Boomer women were already passing their prime childbearing years, but the very youngest boomers were were entering the critically important, for total lifetime fertility, 20s. By 1996, end of the Millennial birth years, the 25 year old mother of a millenial would have been born in 1971 -- hardly 'Boomer' territory at all -- and could easily have been spitting out Milliennials for a half-decade or so.

Thus, the Millennial contstruct (which really just means those who grew up only knowing the Neo-Liberal system) really doesn't have all that much to with 'generations' and everything to do with the post-Nixon coup political and social order. Which I read as mostly the consolidation of Communist power in America.
 

Macrobius

Megaphoron
One other useful data point is that before the inflation of the 70s and the Volcker Recession (foundational crises of the Neo-Liberal order) it was received lore among late Boomers, passed on from their parents and grandparents of course, that 'earning your age' was a good benchmark and measure of career success (for men because women were rare in the workforce still and had a very different pay scale):

So, 23k out of college, and by 40, 40k. In current dollars, that 'benchmark' would have had, in 2020, our 40-year old Millennial earning 5x [ratio of 2020 to 1970 deflator] his 1970 equivalent's 40k, or 200k, for *midlevel success* and that in a mid sized urban area, without excessive taxes to support the welfare state of 1968, and without the 10k automatic perk a STEM career would have given the same Boomer (so, 250k for you IT developers, in constant dollars).

A second, and different point, with the OP, is that *real Boomers* (as opposed to GenX) had much higher rates of instilling religious values in their children. In my family, all the children with birth year down to 1968 were strongly religious, and not until those *born* in the very late 60s or early 70s (mid-GenX) is there a noticeable decline in churchgoing among *their* children.

You could easily find a Tradwife in the 70s, but by the 90s, you would need extensive networking and 'community support' of a REAL COMMUNITY. This divide by the way cuts right across the designation 'Millennial' and is also very dependent on living in more conservative areas (even Blue ones, as they are now called, in the Mid-West).

In 1975, when Nixon 'resigned', Middle America was still staunchly religious, girls in Midwest High Schools had *nothing* like their coastal rates of pre-marital sex (in some places probably not unlike the 20% experience rate of the 'fast' crowd in the 1920s), and the only thing that really made 1975 different from 1965, as far as the mass of Americans were concerned, was the War and the Economy. Civil Rights were a side show that mostly didn't matter in White areas not under direct attack.

The trajectory of social and cultural degeneration and decline was both clear, but the oak [since Wilson even], while rotting, had not yet fallen, even in 1980. But 12 years of damage from 1968 to those entering their prime fertile years in 1980 was enough to bring it down. And *that* is what makes Millennials special, not 'Boomers'. Bretton Woods era vs Neo-Liberalism and Junk Bonds and the Big Short.

The deep irreligion didn't settle in until, again, the Neo-Liberal Revolution, which in the course of consolidating Communism also made Communist-style public Atheism the norm, not without protests and court battles of course. I'm sure it is a transient episode that will leave a mark on the US similar to the godless Soviet years of (similar) political repression.
 
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Lord Osmund de Ixabert

I X A B E R T.com
Dr. Macrobius:—
I consider myself a "mideniast" or "nilennial", if I may be permitted to coin a couple of new terms. Mideniast is by analogy to "chiliast" (millenialist), as you seem to fancy the Greek; Nillennial is by analogy to "millennial", in case you prefer the Latin. The former I derived from the Greek miden "zero; nought", the latter I derived from the Latin nil (nihil, nulla), of like meaning.
I consider myself a medeniast or nilennial—generationless—for three reasons, viz.:

i. I have always considered myself ageless and timeless. I assumed everyone else did until I was told otherwise. Why does not everyone else think of himself in the same terms, I wonder? Is not everyone keenly aware of the timeless character his own soul? Does anyone honestly think of himself in terms of his age or generation? Inconceivable! Surely he lies, and is only pretending to do so?
ii. What is considered my chronological age is far removed from my biological age. If I were to base an identity on age, I'd naturally self-identify with persons of the same biological age and not necessarily the same chronological age.
iii. I don't play intergenerational astrology; I think identities so defined are, like homosexuality for instance, examples of the sort of artificial social constructs that certain ideologues call the real or natural identities; at the same time, they describe identities based on natural and real things as if they were the artififial social constructs (e.g., "race", "sex", and "family").
         They make the natural out to be the artificial, and the artificial out to be the natural. The way they speak of "generations",—as if each generation were as different from the preceding one as a biological race is from another biological race; that the generations, are inherently at odds with each other,—all of this shews that this kind of "intergenerational astrology," as we have called it, is but another psyop, another attempt to divide and weaken us,—another Satanic inversion, too. Hatred of the boomers is just the bait that they put out their for the rest of us to bite on. Very tempting morsel no doubt; the Boomers are the most brainwashed of all generations, after all... but I think I shall pass..
That is all I have to say on the matter, subject to any objections that might behove your grace to urge against me, the which I should be happy to entertain. I therefore conclude, semper tuus,
And remain, dear Sir,
        For the Present,
                 Most Cordially,
                    Yours Truly,
                               Lord Ixabert.
 
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