How is workplace?

I guess what it really comes down to is the older you get the more close-minded, conservative and selfish you get.

That's why you see the 50+ age group voting more on Republican side and 18-29 group voting more on the Democratic side. The 30-49 group is pretty even, as they're shifting toward the Republican side.
 
WTTCHMN said:
To Get Ahead at Work, Lawyers Find It Helps to Actually Be at Work

The generational divide on returning to the office is not neatly drawn. For some young professionals, even in a pandemic, showing up is more than half the battle.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/22/business/economy/law-firm-return-to-office.html

I've heard this my whole career and even had it brought up a couple times in performance reviews but I've still chosen to work remotely as much as possible (probably averaged 1-2 days a week in the office pre pandemic).
 
CalBears96 said:
I guess what it really comes down to is the older you get the more close-minded, conservative and selfish you get.

That's why you see the 50+ age group voting more on Republican side and 18-29 group voting more on the Democratic side. The 30-49 group is pretty even, as they're shifting toward the Republican side.

Maybe, maybe not. My mom was a republican through and through and turned into a democrat and dems could do no wrong as she got older and republicans could do no right. She even was against Ronnie. Turned herself into a "taker" who thought she was entitled to everything cuz she was a SENIOR by God.
 
CalBears96 said:
I guess what it really comes down to is the older you get the more close-minded, conservative and selfish you get.

That's why you see the 50+ age group voting more on Republican side and 18-29 group voting more on the Democratic side. The 30-49 group is pretty even, as they're shifting toward the Republican side.


Actually with age comes wisdom?.the more taxes you pay the more conservative you become?.youth breeds idealism..age hammers out reality. It?s just evolution. Don?t worry Calbear96 I am Uclabruin86 and you?re not that far behind me :) ;D >:D
 
daedalus said:
OK millennial.  Just calling it like I see it.  Maybe grow some thicker skin.
hahaha. I think it's hilarious how you think I need to have thick skin. I'm the one trying to hold you accountable for your ignorant and baseless claims. You're over here defending your baseless claims with your little tiny social circle while I'm here laughing at you.

There is a saying that you can't argue against ignorance. I think you need to check yourself, before you wreck yourself.
 
morekaos said:
Actually with age comes wisdom?.the more taxes you pay the more conservative you become?.youth breeds idealism..age hammers out reality. It?s just evolution. Don?t worry Calbear96 I am Uclabruin86 and you?re not that far behind me :) ;D >:D

Like I said, more conservative and selfish. The ones with wisdom would be someone like Warren Buffett who stays Democrat.

Sure, I don't like paying more taxes, but Republicans work the ultra rich, not someone like me. Trump taking away SALT didn't help Californians, did it? And I HATE all the conservative ideals, especially the current Republican party, which is based on hate and ignorance. I would NEVER become a Republican.
 
CalBears96 said:
morekaos said:
Actually with age comes wisdom?.the more taxes you pay the more conservative you become?.youth breeds idealism..age hammers out reality. It?s just evolution. Don?t worry Calbear96 I am Uclabruin86 and you?re not that far behind me :) ;D >:D

Like I said, more conservative and selfish. The ones with wisdom would be someone like Warren Buffett who stays Democrat.

Sure, I don't like paying more taxes, but Republicans work the ultra rich, not someone like me. Trump taking away SALT didn't help Californians, did it? And I HATE all the conservative ideals, especially the current Republican party, which is based on hate and ignorance. I would NEVER become a Republican.

Evolution is very hard to fight...see you in the future... ;D ;D >:D

?All the Hippies Are Executives Now, and Everybody?s Sold Out?

In Garry Trudeau?s animated short film, A Doonesbury Special, the stoner ex-hippie Zonker announces to his group of middle-class roommates that ?the commune is pass?,? at which his roomie Mark worries out loud, ?Where will I go? Who will I be? What will I eat?!? Zonker responds saying, ?unless you?re from Vermont, the commune is finito,? and he continues to suggest that the group ?disband, intermarry, and move into condominiums.? After Zonker?s speech, Mike, the contemplative character in the house, sadly comments to Mark that Zonker was right about ?the passage of an era,? and Mike questions: ?When was the last time we fought for anything??[1]

By the time A Doonesbury Special debuted in 1977, the decline of the Sixties dream was already well-worn territory. A year prior, Tom Wolfe penned his influential essay, ?The ?Me? Decade and the Third Great Awakening,? in which he argued that the communitarian ethos of the 1960s had shifted into a prosperity-driven, individualistic quest towards self-realization. He notes how the Boomer generation in the 1970s began asking themselves ?what will the Real Me be like??[2] In his essay, ?Decade of ?Image, Skin Flicks and Porn,?? Norman Mailer said that the 1970s were a time when ?people put emphasis on the skin, on the surface, rather than on the root of things. It was the decade in which image became preeminent because nothing deeper was going on.?[3] Boomers in the late 1970s seemed to have altogether abandoned their hippie ideals in exchange for corporate jobs, traditional marriages, and houses in the suburbs. It was a time that Bruce Schulman described as ?an era of narcissism, selfishness, personal rather than political awareness.?[4]

Like Trudeau?s characters, many Boomers were coming to terms with the loss of their activist identities. What had begun as a countercultural fight against the system had turned into complacent acceptance of it. By the end of the 1970s and the early 1980s, Boomers were selling out?turning ?from yippies to yuppies??and the what did it all mean?

https://tropicsofmeta.com/2017/12/21/all-the-hippies-are-executives-now-and-everybodys-sold-out-late-boomer-and-early-gen-x-cinema-in-the-1970s-and-1980s/
 
This is hysterical but I think on point...

Gen Z workers are terrifying millennial bosses with woke demands: Junior at vibrator startup called boss on weekend to demand BLM support while others assign tasks to their bosses, and demand PTO for 'anxiety'

Born between 1997 and 2012, the 72 million members of Generation Z are beginning to enter the workforce - and stump their older bosses
Gen Z'ers are starting their first jobs amidst a pandemic that has revolutionized possibilities for working from home and upended social norms as we know them
Polly Rodriguez, 34, CEO of vibrator startup Unbound, said a Gen Z employee asked on a Saturday how the firm would support BLM
Gabe Kennedy, 30, founder Plant People was asked by a Gen Z job prospect why she needed to work an 8 hour shift if she completed all of her tasks for the day
Ali Kriegsman, 30, co-founder of Bulletin said she doesn't know how to handle texts from younger staff who say they are 'too anxious to work' or have cramps

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/ushome/index.html
 
Kaos - Do you still think Gen Z will end up being more conservative than their Millennial elders?
 
Liar Loan said:
Kaos - Do you still think Gen Z will end up being more conservative than their Millennial elders?

Hard to say...pretty much all the gen Z kids I know are very conservative (including my own) but thats due to our area.  We may be an outlier.  I haven't quite figured that out yet.
 
morekaos said:
Liar Loan said:
Kaos - Do you still think Gen Z will end up being more conservative than their Millennial elders?

Hard to say...pretty much all the gen Z kids I know are very conservative (including my own) but thats due to our area.  We may be an outlier.  I haven't quite figured that out yet.

Yeah, I volunteer with jr. high and high school ministries and these are really good kids, but probably don't represent the norm.  I do think the flow of toxic information directly into kids brains via their phones has been a game changer in terms of forming this generations' opinions.
 
I don't disagree.  My kids actually don't have a Facebook, Instagram page but do have snapchat that they use but are not really addicted to.  Some of their friends are and I tried and experiment last summer in Catalina and took away all their phones for a day and watched all of them flop around like fish out of water...it sort of scared me how dialed in they are to the matrix.  It is like half their brain is missing. ;D ;D >:D
 
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