Re: Trustafarian Heartbreak
Wait a second, how did we jump from trust fund kids to hipsters?
Many of the people labeled as hipsters:
- Grew up during the housing boom, dot com bust and growing global market. They have a general disdain for commercialism, displays of wealth, mass marketing, etc. They are aware that anything they do will be marketed back to them, which is an eternal frustration.
- Believe they are screwed by social security, the state of the economy, US policies, distribution of wealth, overpopulation, inflation, etc.
- Believe in living with a light footprint. Recycle, particularly clothes which are usually second hand. Ride bicycles. Garden.
- Are accepting of race and sexuality, though distrust people who are older due to the values and biases they are more likely to have.
- Value simple education and simple pleasures over expensive luxuries, preferring to work manual labor jobs that aren't all consuming with respect to time.
- Have known only times when art was cheap and easy to produce. Self expression is valued as a ways of expressing themselves in a 'genuine' (ie not pushed/marketed by someone else) way.
Now, there are definitely ugly bits to the culture - and the fact that it became a culture at all runs against the underlying values - but it seems like some of the values aren't entirely out of line with people here. The greatest mismatch is likely the value in hard work and investing in the future. I think a lot of young people simply that the world is getting worse and there isn't much they can do as individuals to prepare for it starting from a standstill.
Wait a second, how did we jump from trust fund kids to hipsters?
Many of the people labeled as hipsters:
- Grew up during the housing boom, dot com bust and growing global market. They have a general disdain for commercialism, displays of wealth, mass marketing, etc. They are aware that anything they do will be marketed back to them, which is an eternal frustration.
- Believe they are screwed by social security, the state of the economy, US policies, distribution of wealth, overpopulation, inflation, etc.
- Believe in living with a light footprint. Recycle, particularly clothes which are usually second hand. Ride bicycles. Garden.
- Are accepting of race and sexuality, though distrust people who are older due to the values and biases they are more likely to have.
- Value simple education and simple pleasures over expensive luxuries, preferring to work manual labor jobs that aren't all consuming with respect to time.
- Have known only times when art was cheap and easy to produce. Self expression is valued as a ways of expressing themselves in a 'genuine' (ie not pushed/marketed by someone else) way.
Now, there are definitely ugly bits to the culture - and the fact that it became a culture at all runs against the underlying values - but it seems like some of the values aren't entirely out of line with people here. The greatest mismatch is likely the value in hard work and investing in the future. I think a lot of young people simply that the world is getting worse and there isn't much they can do as individuals to prepare for it starting from a standstill.
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