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Millennials Share 45 Posts And Memes That Show The Struggles They Face
InterviewYou might’ve done everything ‘right’ growing up: you studied hard, got the degree you wanted, worked your butt off. But even if you did everything that your parents told you to do, success isn’t guaranteed. Heck, sometimes, a comfortable middle-class lifestyle seems out of reach. And there you are—well-educated, with a strong work ethic—unable to find even a low-income job to pay your rent. And it isn’t all your fault: the world has changed.
These and other struggles that millennials, especially working-class ones, face are documented on the ‘Lost Generation’ subreddit. It’s an online group, founded in 2009, in the wake of the previous financial crisis, that has nearly 262k members and calls out capitalism, income inequality, and how unfair the system can sometimes be. We’ve selected their top posts for you to see, dear Pandas. You’ll find them below, as you scroll down.
Some of you highly-educated Pandas will have noticed that the subreddit’s name refers to the Lost Generation that was in early adulthood during World War I. The term refers to how disoriented, wandering, and directionless many people in the postwar period felt. Feelings that some millennials (aka Gen Y) and members of the younger generations embody as well.
Bored Panda reached out to Eddy Ng, the Smith Professor of Equity & Inclusion in Business at Queen’s University, for his insights on how the financial crisis of 2008 restructured the economy and affected millennials, as well as the fact that the Covid-19 pandemic has exacerbated inequality. Bored Panda also had an in-depth discussion with the head moderator of the r/lostgeneration subreddit, u/Adahn5. Scroll down for both exclusive interviews.
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Vanilla Wafers Are More Than Half Of What Minimum Wage Workers Earn In An Hour
"We had the global financial crisis which led to many millennials who were employed being displaced. When the economy recovered, it changed structurally, and many quality jobs were lost," Eddy from Queen's University told Bored Panda. He explained that this then led to the emergence of various precarious jobs, the gig/sharing economy, and the rise of digital labor. The result? Income and social inequalities for those unable to join the new economy.
Eddy pointed out that some racialized groups, e.g. Black and Brown workers, fall into a poverty trap and are unable to climb out of it. The expert stressed that financial literacy, while helpful, might not be enough for people to pull themselves out of poverty. "You need to have the resources to, for example, access training and education," he said.
Meanwhile, fast-forward to the present day and you can see that the Covid-19 pandemic has exacerbated the factors that contributed to income and social inequalities. "Workers work more hours with lower pay in order to survive. That leaves little time to accumulate the necessary resources for skill upgrades or retooling for the new economy. This is the poverty trap I alluded to," he said.
They Are Villains
Workers Deserve Better Than This
Ah yes, Ann Widdicombe. The one woman representation of Boomers, Karens and the reason Brexit happened with no thought for Northern Ireland because they just wanted to bring the Empire back to when England (important - not Britain, England) was important. God, I hate being English.
Meanwhile, redditor Adahn5, the head moderator of r/lostgeneration, told Bored Panda that they consider millennials, aka members of Gen Y, to be born between 1981 and 1996. They noted that some of the ambiguity about who might or might not be considered a millennial stems from whether or not someone grew up near the beginning or the end of the generation. What's more, those growing up with siblings may have been influenced to have different identities, too.
However, the moderator thinks there's a certain element of subjectivity here, too. "From our perspective, if you consider yourself to be a millennial, you're a millennial. Though when it comes to the subreddit, we try to cultivate a sense of working-class solidarity that intersects with this generational experience, more than just making it drily about the clichés or memes of what it means to be a millennial," they told Bored Panda.
Don’t Forget Their Morning Routines
Just Work Hard And You'll Succeed
A Choice?
Wellll. You gotta eat and you need money. There is a lack of jobs so yeah, you kinda are forced to work the job you hate.
According to Adahn5, neoclassical or classical economists tend to argue that a lack of financial literacy might be the main issue that millennials face. "But the truth of the matter is that this perspective ignores greater, macro-economic and historical development of capitalism. The contradictions present in this system, such as the need to seek greater profits by offshoring jobs, the articulation of austerity measures that would cut public services and assistance programs, often coinciding with the drive for greater privatization and financialization of what were once public services, hand-in-hand with a freezing of wages since the 1970s, would better explain the burden that Gen X first experienced, that millennials were saddled with, and that Gen Z were effectively born into."
In short, the subreddit broadly believes that there are socio-economic problems present that can't be solved just by improving financial literacy on an individual level.
I was curious to learn more about the online community's history and Adahn5 kindly explained the roots of the group and how things changed. All of the current moderators weren't there at the founding of the sub back in 2009, right after the recession. It was at the time that "American millennials were very starkly shown that the promise most of them were held to, that if they studied hard, got into college, and graduated with a decent degree, they would have a guaranteed job, turned out to be false." The financial situation was tragic and the repercussions were catastrophic.
The Struggle
We bought our house in 1992 for € 50 000. It's now valued by the council at €180 000, but in real life similar houses in my street have sold for €325 000. So yes, millennials don't stand a chance on the housing market.
Precisely
When the hope that Alzheimer's doesn't make you accidentally vote for something that is beneficial for the people is fighting with your fear of sh!tting your diaper in congress.
Pay People What They Are Worth!
Biden said "pay them more" and he was right. That's the invisible hand of the market : if work is too expensive, pay your workers more.
"The subsequent debt that most were saddled with, combined with the badgering of their parents and the mainstream media portraying them as lazy, entitled, or unrealistic, lead to the feeling of discontent that fueled the initial impulse for the subreddit's creation."
According to the head mod, the members of the r/lostgeneration community have become much more class conscious, has shifted from criticizing Baby Boomers to incorporate anti-capitalist theory, and focuses on working class solidarity across generational lines.
"There's been a shift in understanding that much of the ideology arrayed against us isn't solely based on generational disagreements per se, but also in capitalist hegemony. Our parents and grandparents, for example, particularly if they already held some conservative viewpoints before, fall easy prey to mainstream media narratives that exemplify the talking points expressed above. That the kids of yesterday made the wrong moves, chose the wrong degrees, were coddled and thus developed faulty characters, and that they ought to blame no one but themselves for their lot in life," they explained.
Mad Max Hours Who Up?
One Law For Them, Another For Us
Translation: Ok Boomer
Generalizing an entire generation because of the stupidity of some, isn't changing anything for millennials.
The head moderator added that they've noticed quite a lot more people questioning the system we're currently living in every time there's an election cycle and equality-conscious politicians like Jeremy Corbyn in the UK and Bernie Sanders in the US lose. "Their defeats have only led to further questioning of the system and deeper criticism of the socio-economic system and the state apparatus on which it depends," they said.
Redditor Adahn5 also shed some light on what most of the members of the subreddit are like. As you could expect, a lot of them are (over)educated. "The people who frequent the sub are intelligent, critically-thinking young folk, overwhelmingly educated," they told Bored Panda, pointing out that many have at least a bachelor's or master's degree while some even have PhDs.
"They realize the core issues that they face are not of their own, individual making. Any political organization or party seeking to develop a set of popular policies would do well to incorporate and adhere to a platform that incorporates the needs of young folk. If they did, they would have at their back a great number of highly trained, articulate, and competent workers whose only desire is a bit of comfort and for their lives to have meaning and purpose."
But Did They Really Try Making Coffee At Home?
Just Make It Illegal
It's a problem in my hometown right now. Private interests from oversea and local buys houses and residential buildings, a lot in less fortunate neighborhood. For the house, they don't even flip them, they just raise the price after buying from 300K to 800K. For residential building, that's where I hope there's a special kind of hell for those people. They use a loophole in the law where they evicted EVERYONE for "renovations", changes a few door and then re-rent the apartment for twice or triple the rent. I've seen affordable 500-600$ apartments getting their door changed and being re-rented 1200-1800$ a month. Politicians says they care, but they don't care at all since those buildings makes more money from taxes.
We Have Been Conditioned To Ask For The Bare Minimum
At the core of the ‘Lost Generation’ subreddit lies the belief that millennials struggle far more than previous generations. Despite being educated and following their family members’ advice, they’re not all enjoying the same success as their loved ones. In short, they were promised the world but realize to find that carving out even a small scarp of muddy land on God’s green Earth for themselves can be tremendously difficult to do.
Finding a job was hard enough. Then the Covid-19 pandemic hit and sent shockwaves through the labor market. If that wasn’t enough, some millennials feel like they don’t know what to do with their lives even if they manage to get a stable job, buy a house, get married, and have kids. Directionless? Like the actual Lost Generation from a hundred years ago? Perhaps.
The subreddit frowns upon any posts that have nothing to do with working-class millennials “or their shared experiences.” They also don’t allow any so-called ‘Boomer Ideology’ in their group. “Poor-shaming, bootstrapping, anti-millennial rhetoric, or using stand-point epistemology to justify inequality, injustice, or oppression, is not sanctioned,” the moderators explain.
I'll Give You Something To Cry About
I’ve Been Trying To Explain This To My Parents For A While
Sad but true. Even young people outside of the USA are finding it very difficult to get a decent start in life. Only when you have a more than moderate income, you'll be able to buy or rent a decent house and start a family. And it doesn't look like that is going to change very soon. In the meantime shady landlords and investors are buying up every house that comes on the market to make ridiculous profits by renting them out. And as usual; Authorities are reluctant to stop these practices.
How It Started, How It's Going
people are willing to pay into a fund to help someone get medical treatment that they wont benefit from but wont pay extra for universal healthcare because they dont want to pay for someone else this is exactly how universal healthcare works like a nationwide go fund me only you actually get to benefit from it imagine everyone paying into a fund like we do in the UK we call it national insurance if a country the size of the US did that they would solve their issues with paying for healthcare
Naturally, there’s no place for any hate speech or oppressive language on the sub. And the moderators note that “anti-working class rhetoric and ideologies” aren’t welcome either. In other words, new members are expected to be polite and to toe the subreddit line carefully. Whether or not this stifles genuine discussions about capitalism, generational differences, and economics is another question entirely. Hopefully, the subreddit engages with those who genuinely want to discuss these things and isn’t just an echo chamber for its members to vent.
Eddy, who was previously the James and Elizabeth Freeman Professor of Management at Bucknell University, also shared his thoughts about millennials during an earlier interview with Bored Panda. To be fair, there are various interpretations about who can technically be considered to be a millennial, depending on who you ask. There is also some overlap with Gen Z and we can even talk about older and younger millennials as well. In short, when it comes to millennials, things aren’t as clear-cut.
“Millennials have been defined by demographers in North America as those born on or after 1980/1981. Generally, they have been socialized during the turn of the century with technology influencing everything they do. Because they have been raised in a relatively middle-class environment, they tend to be over-parented (the terms ‘helicopter parents’ and ‘lawnmower parents’ were coined to describe the parents of millennials),” Eddy explained to me earlier.
3rd Party For 2024?
Being A Millennial Rules
It Isn’t Adding Up
“As a result, millennials have higher self-esteem compared to previous generations. They tend to portray themselves as assertive, ambitious, and achievement-oriented. The general public and media have also referred to Gen Z (those born on or after 1995) as millennials. We should bear in mind that the oldest millennials are now about 40 years old (from the Gen Y cohort).”
Eddy went further in-depth about millennials. “Because millennials were raised in very different environments (middle class, over parenting which is a part of the self-esteem movement), they do not conform to the more traditional approaches of doing things. For example, there is less respect for hierarchy and ‘doing time’ as technology has changed the way we work,” he said.
“This inevitably creates a faultline in the workplace between older and younger generations of workers. Older workers (e.g., boomers) are rule-bound (they created the rules!), millennials ignore them and rewrite these rules. For example, older workers strictly observe the 9 to 5 workday, millennials would stream into the workplace at 10 but work during their ‘waking hours. Previous generations find these behaviors to be irritating,” he said.
Gatekeeping Through Irresponsibility
The now 73 year old would vote for the same politicians again because they were the best politicians ever....
Less Yachts More People Able To Afford Food And Have A Roof Over Their Heads
Capitalism, isn't the problem...corruption is. Plenty of capitalist nations and their citizens fare fine....most, really. The US is different in that we don't use the word corruption...we call it lobbying and career politicians.... Funny how these people go into it for "service" and end up part of the richest percentage of this county.
Six Dollars
I've literally never seen a coupon for any kind of healthy food, ever. They're always only for processed junk food.
“Every generation is focused on themselves—even boomers and Gen Xers. It’s really interesting hearing Gen Ys (older millennials) complaining about Gen Zs (younger millennials). ‘Kids these days…’ Part of this can be explained by the anxiety or fear of being displaced,” the expert explained.
“Boomers considered themselves as ‘the greatest generation.’ This (irrational) fear is most acute when technology changed how we live and work. Millennials, having been born and raised in a digital era, are much more adept and versatile in incorporating technology in everything they do. The boomers find it more difficult transitioning from their pre-technology ways. They still wear an old-fashioned analog wristwatch (to tell time) and don’t understand why millennials need to be plugged in through their smartwatches.”
Explains A Lot
Everything, EVERYTHING! Food, clothing, everything a person uses has been monetized and divided into shares to be sold off. You want to know a major contributing cause, it is the stock market. Where everyday people people put their hard earned money into to keep the wheels greased, and where they end up losing most of it in the blink of an eye
Load More Replies...Don't have kids then, the fewer working people the lower their pensions, and the smaller the human race, the better for the planet!
Mission Impossible
In 1992 we had a combined income of €900 per month. We had no problem to get a €50 000 mortgage on a 1930's house without central heating and in bad state of repair.
How Capitalism Cause Generational Gap
Meanwhile, financial expert Sam Dogen told Bored Panda that building wealth requires four things: belief, grit, time, and community. He also notes that a lack of financial education might be the biggest obstacle to climbing out of poverty and building wealth.
“We learn things like chemistry, geology, and English in high school and college, but there are no mandatory courses on personal finance. For example, if more people thoroughly understood their mortgage contracts before signing, the housing crisis between 2008–2010 may not have been as deep,” he told me.
I Think This1% Are Unaware Of Other People
No, half your politicians just don't give a f**k about you, and the other half can't be bothered.
Mission Accomplished - Covid-19 Edition
Only difference is that Covid still is active and doesn't make prisoners.
I Feel Motivated
The problem isn't with capitalism. The problem is with American style capitalism. Everything "American style" is a huge problem. Capitalism, Healthcare, Education, Military, Politics, Religion, Housing, Food and even Democracy. Reagan & his cult have done most of the damage & Republicans have continued with those policies to date.
“If more people knew they could negotiate a severance instead of quit with nothing, more people would have a more comfortable financial runway to take their time and find a new job or start a new business that is truly meaningful to them. The more people are empowered with financial knowledge, the better financial decisions they can make to ultimately live the lives they desire," Sam said.
Political Evolution Of Millennials
Surely A Coincidence
"every single human act gets monetized". Let that sink in, everyone.
Hindsight Is 20/20
GenX had childhood threat of nuclear Armageddon, teenage terror of AIDs/HIV, Adult recession after recession and negative equity, Nuclear disaster after nuclear disaster, climate crisis where no one was listening.
Have You Realized Skills Of Average Person Have Increased But Wages Still Remain D Same!?
I applied to 72 jobs recently. I have a BSN (I wanted to get away from floor nursing as I was burnt out) and got a MBA with emphasis in healthcare management. I got 2 call backs, one offer for a entry level job at half of what my first nursing job paid 10 years ago. And back then, that baaaarely paid my minimum student loans due. I was a RA and worked all through college, which wasnt recommended in the program. Lived with my parents and worked 6 or 7 days a week at different nursing jobs to afford a super crappy house after a few years. I was able to live with my parents after graduation and have my aunt co sign for my student loans to even get approved for them. How the s**t do you make it otherwise??
Every. Election
Not To Mention The Debt
Minimum Wage Earners Can’t Afford A Two-Bedroom Rental Anywhere
Family Dependent Surpasses The Great Depression
Workers' Passion Shouldn't Be Exploited For Profit
The Dream Killer
Explains why a growing number of US citizens are moving to other countries.
Worker Shortage Is A Corporate Pr Spin For Capital Strike
My son was looking for a job this summer and all these places with "sorry our hours are erratic, we're understaffed" wouldn't hire him. He's 18 and just wants to work, willing to take minimum, and had to apply to 20 entry level jobs before someone hired him, despite everywhere claiming to be drastically understaffed. I call BS.
Our Sad Reality
Go To College, They Said. Get A Job And Buy A House, They Said
its ridiculous i cant afford to live by myself i live with my parents and im 39 there is no point in me moving out if its gonna cost me nearly all of my earnings each month
When I Magically Become An Adult In 3 Month
They could have also joined the military, kill people and get a free education. But no alcohol allowed...
Anytime Now
The company I work for was hiring for customer service jobs, entry level, full time, literally answer the phone, transfer the call, and maybe make a few copies - starting pay $9. They got one application for eight open positions. The eight people that left went to work as grocery store checkers or warehouse workers. The hiring manager was incensed and started the "no one wants to work" BS in a meeting. Someone said, "You need to finish that sentence. No one wants to work for poverty-level pay." The hiring manager was absolutely flabbergasted to learn that grocery checkers make $15 and warehouse workers are now getting paid $20.
I know a high school student who makes $23/hr at Whole foods. She makes more than me with a college degree
Load More Replies...Do y'all think thoughts and prayers might help the millennials? Asking for a friend.
About as much as they help kids during school shootings. Your friend's screwed. :/
Load More Replies...I know some late 20 somethings who have just bought a house in Toronto and had a baby. They are doing everything right! Actually the thing they did right is have parents who paid for their education plus her parents gave them a down payment for the house and will be subsidizing daycare for the baby.
Me not having entered *real life* yet and reading this article, and thinking, "in a few years I'll be fkd" | Update on that: My views of life went "Oh, when you're around teenage years, you can get some nice funds by doing basic chores, helping others (i.e. mowing lawns and all that stuff), and getting a basic job. Then you get a better job using your education and you succeed" to "Parents have been having some financial struggles from time to time, but some of the stuff we did recently was expensive, so I get it" to "*reads about current events and starts to understand stuff a little bit* Well life is not at all how I pictured it. I see why my parents are having trouble (everything's becoming so darn expensive), wonder how the heck I'M gonna get through life"
(hugs) my kid is 11, and the world you two grow up in will be entirely incomprehensible to my generation
Load More Replies...After WWII, the US vastly expanded its public universities to accommodate veterans and then the baby boom. The result was an educated society leading the greatest economic growth spurt in history. But after that growth suffered a few recessions, grants were sacrificed for loans, and today foreign students paying the more lucrative rates (and who in the majority take their skills back home) outnumber domestic students who grew up in homes with under $35K income. US higher education ate its own seed corn.
States continuously cut funding to public universities, arguing that private donors are giving more. Private donors direct their donations, often for endowments, buildings, and equipment. No one wants their name on "operating funds."
Load More Replies...I understand Millennials have a lot to be angry about and I don't blame them. The problem I have is blaming "boomers" as if all of them live in luxury without a financial care in the world. Titles like "boomer" "buster" "Gen XYZ" and Millennial make it too easy to play the us against them game promoting more division and hostility. Some boomers have money but there are others hanging on by their fingernails. More than you might think. We all need to stop pissing on each other and realize we've all been screwed. The question then becomes, "what are we going to do about it?"
My dad had over over 500k in cancer surgery and meds paid for by medicare. I live in a tent. Yes I blame the older generation
Load More Replies...When I was going to college, it took me 3 years in community and 3 in a university. Community took me an extra year because of my commute. I often got up at about 6, then finished classes to a part time job in the evenings. Did some work on the commute (with distractions of a handful of hometown friends) so I can be sure I had my work done. In university, I had to spend a year on pre req's before getting into my major. My dad had the audacity to comment on how long it was taking me once. My mom and I set him straight on how times have changed and my circumstances. And when my husband and I were renting it was my mom who informed us how it will cost the same to own.
I did something similar in my 20s, taking 7 years to get a university degree while working—3 at a CC (yay less expensive credits!) and 4 at uni. My dad wondered the same thing, was I ever going to finish?
Load More Replies...I used to tell my parents I would own an Aston Martin by the time I was 30. I understand why they used to laugh. My goals are more along the lines of, which fabric conditioner gives me the most washes for £5
HCA facility fired/forced to resign or retire many employees (including nurses who's been working there for many years) during pandemic. And many health workers decided to resigned due to understaffing. The facility saved a lot of money, they replaced them with new graduates, with less pay rate since they have less experience. The managers/directors responsible for doing so were given with big bonuses and raises and of course the CEOs rejoiced. It is really about money to them they don't care about their employees or the patients.
I'm almost 60, a young boomer. In my 20s a older man was flabbergasted that we bought single wide trailer. He had built a house when he got married. He went to the lumberyard and shook hands and paid them like 10 a week. Millenials aren't the only ones who have been ragged on. I wish I had enough money to help my daughter.
This s**t hits hard. I actually have a 24$/ hr job in a poor state(usa) and I literally live in a fuc3ing tent in my parents yard. Dad had the b@lls to complain about "why not just buy(70k+) a place or rent(600+)".
My bad while also giving him 150$ a month strictly for letting me have a tent in his yard...that I bought...with my 20k sign on bonus from the military
Load More Replies...Self employed. I am issuing a fee increase at the end of the year because of inflation. My clients think they are going to get more work out of me at the higher rate. Nope. When the price of gas goes up, you don't get more gallons at the higher price.
The housing market is BRUTAL. We bought a townhouse 2 years ago for $613,000 after saving hard for 5 years, and a $50,000 cash gift from husbands dad. Now, just barely over 2 years living here and this townhouse is now worth 1 million dollars. I am absolutely flabergasted. We have two great kids and I don't know how they will ever get their own homes by the time they're wanting to go on their own
I wonder what would happen if everyone in an apartment building where the rent unfairly went up refused to pay rent. Or if an entire grade level of college students refused to pay their tuition. I wonder what would happen if we could turn that into a movement.
Rent strikes happened in a lot of places in the country. But if you don't pay your tuition, they just don't let you go to class or take the tests.
Load More Replies...I have no idea what generation I belong to, but I have what I think is a fairly well paid job (£26K), it's the most i've ever earned. I've been renting and working full time since I was 19, I'm now 41, and it's only in the past year that I've had what I could call disposable income. I mean I can finally buy a pair of jeans without worrying about how to eat for the month. I've accepted the fact that without a lottery win I will never be buying my own home. However, a lot of my work colleagues who are in their mid 20s stayed at home longer and are now buying houses... not sure it's as black and white as just millennials or gen z (or whatever they're called) who are fooked!
I doubt I’m unique but I’m 36 and a hairdresser so not making big money but I own my house, I think part of the problem is people sometimes confuse what they want with what they need. With houses I bought a fixer upper which took a few years to make perfect but a lot of my friends were only interested in the Instagram worthy properties so of course that is going to cost more. Houses are parents bought weren’t a like for like comparison with homes of today or no central or modern heating methods, no fancy kitchens etc etc also populations were much lower so there was enough space for everyone which brings prices down.
Honestly this is just no longer attainable. If you want to pay a reasonable amount, you have to move to an unsafe area. All of the "fixer uppers" that aren't perfect and are in decent areas are instantly bought by rich people and flipped as cheaply as possible so they can charge an absurd amount for the "Instagram worthy" package that will fall apart in two years. Either you pay more than you can afford, or you can't leave your house after dark.
Load More Replies...Black Friday? You read/commented on this on Nov. 19th 2021. If you are in the U.S., Black Friday is next week (where companies have big sales and lots of shopping occurs). If you are out of the U.S., please explain what your Black Friday is.
Load More Replies...Every generation is the same. They all think it's worse but it's not same struggles trust me our kids and our grandchildren will be saying the same It was so much easier for my mom or dad
Because it is true. Millenials are the first generation to be worse off financially than their parents and no hope to ever do better than they are right now. Gen Zs are the first ones to be living (and coming of age) in a literal climate emergency, that is already killing people, and late stage capitalism, which makes it impossible for the majority of people to just exist. The (future) children of gen Zs (if they will have them, because who will when there is a literal climate emergency) will never even know a world without the climate emergency. People are saying that they've got it worse than the generation before them, are saying that because it is the truth. That doesn't mean that boomers and gen x'ers didn't struggle, they did, but it does mean that the struggles they faced were far less far reaching as to what later generations are facing.
Load More Replies...It shouldn't be a thing. That's the problem. No one, not one single person should be struggling to exist and for things they need to live. There are plenty of resources for us all to live be healthy and thrive. The way it is now is not how it was supposed to be. It's like this because of pure greed and people who don't care about other human beings. We are all valuable and maintaining everything in this world. There's no excuse for people to be going without and struggling like we are. Especially for the things we all equally need as humans to carry on living. Food, water, shelter, clothing, and healthcare. Are things every person needs equally.
Load More Replies...The company I work for was hiring for customer service jobs, entry level, full time, literally answer the phone, transfer the call, and maybe make a few copies - starting pay $9. They got one application for eight open positions. The eight people that left went to work as grocery store checkers or warehouse workers. The hiring manager was incensed and started the "no one wants to work" BS in a meeting. Someone said, "You need to finish that sentence. No one wants to work for poverty-level pay." The hiring manager was absolutely flabbergasted to learn that grocery checkers make $15 and warehouse workers are now getting paid $20.
I know a high school student who makes $23/hr at Whole foods. She makes more than me with a college degree
Load More Replies...Do y'all think thoughts and prayers might help the millennials? Asking for a friend.
About as much as they help kids during school shootings. Your friend's screwed. :/
Load More Replies...I know some late 20 somethings who have just bought a house in Toronto and had a baby. They are doing everything right! Actually the thing they did right is have parents who paid for their education plus her parents gave them a down payment for the house and will be subsidizing daycare for the baby.
Me not having entered *real life* yet and reading this article, and thinking, "in a few years I'll be fkd" | Update on that: My views of life went "Oh, when you're around teenage years, you can get some nice funds by doing basic chores, helping others (i.e. mowing lawns and all that stuff), and getting a basic job. Then you get a better job using your education and you succeed" to "Parents have been having some financial struggles from time to time, but some of the stuff we did recently was expensive, so I get it" to "*reads about current events and starts to understand stuff a little bit* Well life is not at all how I pictured it. I see why my parents are having trouble (everything's becoming so darn expensive), wonder how the heck I'M gonna get through life"
(hugs) my kid is 11, and the world you two grow up in will be entirely incomprehensible to my generation
Load More Replies...After WWII, the US vastly expanded its public universities to accommodate veterans and then the baby boom. The result was an educated society leading the greatest economic growth spurt in history. But after that growth suffered a few recessions, grants were sacrificed for loans, and today foreign students paying the more lucrative rates (and who in the majority take their skills back home) outnumber domestic students who grew up in homes with under $35K income. US higher education ate its own seed corn.
States continuously cut funding to public universities, arguing that private donors are giving more. Private donors direct their donations, often for endowments, buildings, and equipment. No one wants their name on "operating funds."
Load More Replies...I understand Millennials have a lot to be angry about and I don't blame them. The problem I have is blaming "boomers" as if all of them live in luxury without a financial care in the world. Titles like "boomer" "buster" "Gen XYZ" and Millennial make it too easy to play the us against them game promoting more division and hostility. Some boomers have money but there are others hanging on by their fingernails. More than you might think. We all need to stop pissing on each other and realize we've all been screwed. The question then becomes, "what are we going to do about it?"
My dad had over over 500k in cancer surgery and meds paid for by medicare. I live in a tent. Yes I blame the older generation
Load More Replies...When I was going to college, it took me 3 years in community and 3 in a university. Community took me an extra year because of my commute. I often got up at about 6, then finished classes to a part time job in the evenings. Did some work on the commute (with distractions of a handful of hometown friends) so I can be sure I had my work done. In university, I had to spend a year on pre req's before getting into my major. My dad had the audacity to comment on how long it was taking me once. My mom and I set him straight on how times have changed and my circumstances. And when my husband and I were renting it was my mom who informed us how it will cost the same to own.
I did something similar in my 20s, taking 7 years to get a university degree while working—3 at a CC (yay less expensive credits!) and 4 at uni. My dad wondered the same thing, was I ever going to finish?
Load More Replies...I used to tell my parents I would own an Aston Martin by the time I was 30. I understand why they used to laugh. My goals are more along the lines of, which fabric conditioner gives me the most washes for £5
HCA facility fired/forced to resign or retire many employees (including nurses who's been working there for many years) during pandemic. And many health workers decided to resigned due to understaffing. The facility saved a lot of money, they replaced them with new graduates, with less pay rate since they have less experience. The managers/directors responsible for doing so were given with big bonuses and raises and of course the CEOs rejoiced. It is really about money to them they don't care about their employees or the patients.
I'm almost 60, a young boomer. In my 20s a older man was flabbergasted that we bought single wide trailer. He had built a house when he got married. He went to the lumberyard and shook hands and paid them like 10 a week. Millenials aren't the only ones who have been ragged on. I wish I had enough money to help my daughter.
This s**t hits hard. I actually have a 24$/ hr job in a poor state(usa) and I literally live in a fuc3ing tent in my parents yard. Dad had the b@lls to complain about "why not just buy(70k+) a place or rent(600+)".
My bad while also giving him 150$ a month strictly for letting me have a tent in his yard...that I bought...with my 20k sign on bonus from the military
Load More Replies...Self employed. I am issuing a fee increase at the end of the year because of inflation. My clients think they are going to get more work out of me at the higher rate. Nope. When the price of gas goes up, you don't get more gallons at the higher price.
The housing market is BRUTAL. We bought a townhouse 2 years ago for $613,000 after saving hard for 5 years, and a $50,000 cash gift from husbands dad. Now, just barely over 2 years living here and this townhouse is now worth 1 million dollars. I am absolutely flabergasted. We have two great kids and I don't know how they will ever get their own homes by the time they're wanting to go on their own
I wonder what would happen if everyone in an apartment building where the rent unfairly went up refused to pay rent. Or if an entire grade level of college students refused to pay their tuition. I wonder what would happen if we could turn that into a movement.
Rent strikes happened in a lot of places in the country. But if you don't pay your tuition, they just don't let you go to class or take the tests.
Load More Replies...I have no idea what generation I belong to, but I have what I think is a fairly well paid job (£26K), it's the most i've ever earned. I've been renting and working full time since I was 19, I'm now 41, and it's only in the past year that I've had what I could call disposable income. I mean I can finally buy a pair of jeans without worrying about how to eat for the month. I've accepted the fact that without a lottery win I will never be buying my own home. However, a lot of my work colleagues who are in their mid 20s stayed at home longer and are now buying houses... not sure it's as black and white as just millennials or gen z (or whatever they're called) who are fooked!
I doubt I’m unique but I’m 36 and a hairdresser so not making big money but I own my house, I think part of the problem is people sometimes confuse what they want with what they need. With houses I bought a fixer upper which took a few years to make perfect but a lot of my friends were only interested in the Instagram worthy properties so of course that is going to cost more. Houses are parents bought weren’t a like for like comparison with homes of today or no central or modern heating methods, no fancy kitchens etc etc also populations were much lower so there was enough space for everyone which brings prices down.
Honestly this is just no longer attainable. If you want to pay a reasonable amount, you have to move to an unsafe area. All of the "fixer uppers" that aren't perfect and are in decent areas are instantly bought by rich people and flipped as cheaply as possible so they can charge an absurd amount for the "Instagram worthy" package that will fall apart in two years. Either you pay more than you can afford, or you can't leave your house after dark.
Load More Replies...Black Friday? You read/commented on this on Nov. 19th 2021. If you are in the U.S., Black Friday is next week (where companies have big sales and lots of shopping occurs). If you are out of the U.S., please explain what your Black Friday is.
Load More Replies...Every generation is the same. They all think it's worse but it's not same struggles trust me our kids and our grandchildren will be saying the same It was so much easier for my mom or dad
Because it is true. Millenials are the first generation to be worse off financially than their parents and no hope to ever do better than they are right now. Gen Zs are the first ones to be living (and coming of age) in a literal climate emergency, that is already killing people, and late stage capitalism, which makes it impossible for the majority of people to just exist. The (future) children of gen Zs (if they will have them, because who will when there is a literal climate emergency) will never even know a world without the climate emergency. People are saying that they've got it worse than the generation before them, are saying that because it is the truth. That doesn't mean that boomers and gen x'ers didn't struggle, they did, but it does mean that the struggles they faced were far less far reaching as to what later generations are facing.
Load More Replies...It shouldn't be a thing. That's the problem. No one, not one single person should be struggling to exist and for things they need to live. There are plenty of resources for us all to live be healthy and thrive. The way it is now is not how it was supposed to be. It's like this because of pure greed and people who don't care about other human beings. We are all valuable and maintaining everything in this world. There's no excuse for people to be going without and struggling like we are. Especially for the things we all equally need as humans to carry on living. Food, water, shelter, clothing, and healthcare. Are things every person needs equally.
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