馃懡 shway

Gen X, Millenials, Boomers... what a pointless label.

How can you compare a "millenial" from Yugoslavia and another from California? What about 2 "boomers" from Alabama but one of them fought in Vietnam and the other didn't? Even identical tweens are individuals and can be very different in almost everything.

1 year ago 路 馃憤 aka_dude, comatoast

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8 Replies

馃懡 comatoast

This is a pointed and valid critque. Generalizations like this can be helpful for statistics and data analysis from time to time, though. 路 1 year ago

馃懡 smokey

Some people need labels, not all intellects are equal. The mental effort it takes to try understanding the near infinite complexity of people and the factors that made them who they are greatly outweighs the ease of instantly putting people into easy to understand boxes, generalizations. Whats seldom thought about is that every time you make a generalization, name a thing, assert *your* simple human understanding over it, it degrades the beauty of the unique indivdual. A common practice in meditation is un-learning to the need to label. Allowing your mind to passively observe things as themselves without asserting your intellectual ego on it. 路 1 year ago

馃懡 hyperlinkyourheart

I don't think they're entirely useless, because people of different generations do have different experiences in broad, general ways, but some people make way too much of them (especially the media). Almost anywhere that generational cohorts are being discussed would be better off talking about class instead. 路 1 year ago

馃懡 marginalia

We kind of need to label the world to make sense of it. No labels are ever going to capture it, but the alternative is the uncomprehensible and unbridled chaos that is things as they really are. 路 1 year ago

馃懡 mc

All generalization is absurd. 路 1 year ago

馃懡 maria

post-modernist propaganda... 路 1 year ago

馃懡 tskaalgard

These terms aren't trying to label groups of people as exactly the same - they exist to refer to a shared temporal context, in the way terms like "Yugoslavia" exist to define a spatial context. Words only refer to the things they're supposed to refer to and we need to stop inferring more than that. We've watered so many words down to the point of uselessness and it's supremely frustrating. 路 1 year ago

馃懡 cobradile94

I think they are relevant to an extent. The world where Boomers grew up, regardless of country (except maybe North Korea), was very different to the one Zoomers are growing up in now. 路 1 year ago