This guy has enough experience and network to get a "highline" article on huffpost but he's unable to land a steady job?
yup!
― difficult listening hour, Saturday, 16 December 2017 07:47 (six years ago) link
lol yes exactly
― Nhex, Saturday, 16 December 2017 07:51 (six years ago) link
nothing matters
with a little luck tho the huffpo check'll come by easter
― difficult listening hour, Saturday, 16 December 2017 08:04 (six years ago) link
Dunno, maybe things are just terrible in the US.
Wait til you hear about our healthcare system...
― louise ck (milo z), Saturday, 16 December 2017 08:31 (six years ago) link
sry to hear about crazy rent everybody, that's terrible!
just to clarify I rent a very small room and spend about 25% of my income on this - renting an apartment on my own would easily cost 50% of my income (so I don't, would be nice tho)
btw I know it's hard to come by steady jobs in journalism, I was suggesting that with the author's skillset it would seem he'd be able to land a different kind of job, pretty sure he could have my job if he applied
anyway, I don't mean to dismiss issues of poverty in the US, just found the author's tone... a bit much. Iirc pay gap and poverty issues have a terrible racial and gender slant, something about his apocalyptical victim narrative abt college educated millenials seems off to me. Not sure how trustworthy the US Census Bureau is but general outline in this article seems realistic to me https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/09/13/493751949/census-bureau-poverty-rate-down-median-incomes-up
― niels, Saturday, 16 December 2017 09:48 (six years ago) link
Hobbes is from Seattle where the average rent in commuting distance on a 1br apartment is $2000. To hit the 25% mark, after federal taxes, etc, you’d need to earn $120k - of course he would still need to pay for healthcare, etc, which we do not. idk what the ratio of millennials to $120k jobs in Seattle is.
Renting a room, sharing a house, etc are all solutions to existing in a big city but the broader point about living in those conditions being a bar on a transition to doing ‘adult’ things like getting married, having a family...buying a table?…, etc is true. Living a perpetual student lifestyle is great if you enjoy it but generational expectations are being radically redefined.
Whiny millennials have access to the public ear in a much more obvious way than the people who bear the greatest burden of poverty but the contraction of the traditional middle class and expansion of paycheque-to-paycheque living aren’t things that we should be glossing over because other people have it worse.
― Wag1 Shree Rajneesh (ShariVari), Saturday, 16 December 2017 10:04 (six years ago) link
French owners are allowed by law to avoid renting to you unless the rent is at most 1/3 of your income, and in practice they take advantage of this, because French law makes it hard to kick someone out when they can't pay. so when we moved here we had to live 1h20 by train from the city. granted, we are a family of 5, and so need a bit of space (~70 m^2 works) but yeah, living in the city was impossible then.
now we live in the city because we got social housing (being gov employee with a long commute & big family got us priority). but to qualify for this *highly* subsidized apartment my salary still had to meet the 1/3 threshold and my starting salary did not, so we had to wait a year and a half to be eligible for social housing.
living in the countryside & commuting wasn't that bad because I picked a town where I could commute by train (we didn't need a car bc French villages are compact for daily life)(and half my transport costs were paid by my employer, by law). USA countryside doesn't permit this, so you're talking long car commutes there if you're not in the city.
― droit au butt (Euler), Saturday, 16 December 2017 10:27 (six years ago) link
Accounting for inflation, I spend twice as much a year on a train ticket as my (poor, immigrant) father spent on renting a two bedroom Victorian flat with a huge garden in central London in the eighties. The flat would rent for a minimum of £36k-£40k a year now. And I’m lucky! I own a house!
― Wag1 Shree Rajneesh (ShariVari), Saturday, 16 December 2017 10:33 (six years ago) link
What was his internet speeds like
― remember the lmao (darraghmac), Saturday, 16 December 2017 10:57 (six years ago) link
those are very good points ShariVari, thanks
― niels, Saturday, 16 December 2017 11:36 (six years ago) link
The ratio of Millennials to $120k salaries in Seattle is heavily influenced by the proliferation of software developers working for Amazon et alia. Which is to say there’s a sizable supply of kids willing to rent a studio for $2000.
― .oO (silby), Saturday, 16 December 2017 15:55 (six years ago) link
every generation has seemed to rationalize selling out their potential and playing dumb in exchange for hypothetical material security, not just millenials, the poor kids
― reggie (qualmsley), Saturday, 16 December 2017 20:38 (six years ago) link
When you say something like that
Do you ever I mean ask
Assuming it even makes any sense as a statement never mind that it's accurate let's just assume in your head this is a coherent sentence and also a fact
Assuming that and don't forget you just made an ass out of u and ming then do you ever ask yourself why each generation does this thing you think they do
― remember the lmao (darraghmac), Sunday, 17 December 2017 23:49 (six years ago) link
U ok hun
― But doctor, I am Camille Paglia (Bananaman Begins), Monday, 18 December 2017 01:21 (six years ago) link
I feel like that highline article dilutes its own argument by ultimately turning out to be about every bunch of Americans who ever graduated college during a major recession.
― El Tomboto, Monday, 18 December 2017 01:34 (six years ago) link
eh i'll take it, all that damn "milleniums are the worst" clickbait trash needs to be countered a little bit
― Nhex, Monday, 18 December 2017 03:37 (six years ago) link
― But doctor, I am Camille Paglia (Bananaman Begins), Monday, 18 December 2017 01:21 (two hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Read it aloud babes it might make more sense if it doesn't that's cool too x
― remember the lmao (darraghmac), Monday, 18 December 2017 04:04 (six years ago) link
yeah average rent is like 2 K in vancouver now, it's fucking bunk. also same as jim i'm in a decent rent sitch but it's easy to put half the cheque towards rent
― In a slipshod style (Ross), Monday, 18 December 2017 04:50 (six years ago) link
I live in a pretty small basement apt in Toronto and I spend about 40% of my take-home on rent.
― Simon H., Monday, 18 December 2017 04:59 (six years ago) link
ah, here, this is the thread
― j., Tuesday, 12 March 2019 23:11 (five years ago) link
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/12/us/college-admissions-cheating-scandal.html
― j., Tuesday, 12 March 2019 23:12 (five years ago) link
Ray Liotta [V/O]: https://t.co/LR71RqUMIx— 'Weird Alex' Pareene (@pareene) March 12, 2019
― a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 13 March 2019 16:04 (five years ago) link
https://annehelen.substack.com/p/the-millennialgen-z-strategy
I’ve written extensively about student loans, and the broken state of the student loan forgiveness program, here. That piece was the first thing I wrote after the original millennial burnout article, because it was the most tangible expression of the gap between what millennials were told their future would look like, if only they worked hard enough, and the lived, post-Recession reality. To understand millennial burnout, you can’t just understand the amount of student loans we’re carrying; you have to understand what they feel like. And if and when you understand that, it’s incredibly straightforward to see why so many support Sanders and Warren.Back in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s, middle-class boomers and young Gen-Xers were faced with the reality that their parents’ broadly stable middle-class existence would not necessarily pass down to them. The so-called Golden Age of American Capitalism had lasted just long enough that those who grew up under it could believe that it might last forever. They responded to the decline in stable middle class jobs in a number of ways: many of them, too, went to college, but because public institution funding had yet to be gutted by tax cuts, it cost much, much, much less. (Cue: your boomer uncle who loves to tell you he worked his way through college and graduated without loans).But as Barbara Ehrenreich persuasively argues in Fear of Falling, they responded by turning decisively inward: how can I do whatever is possible to help me and mine?
Back in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s, middle-class boomers and young Gen-Xers were faced with the reality that their parents’ broadly stable middle-class existence would not necessarily pass down to them. The so-called Golden Age of American Capitalism had lasted just long enough that those who grew up under it could believe that it might last forever. They responded to the decline in stable middle class jobs in a number of ways: many of them, too, went to college, but because public institution funding had yet to be gutted by tax cuts, it cost much, much, much less. (Cue: your boomer uncle who loves to tell you he worked his way through college and graduated without loans).
But as Barbara Ehrenreich persuasively argues in Fear of Falling, they responded by turning decisively inward: how can I do whatever is possible to help me and mine?
― j., Monday, 17 February 2020 23:21 (four years ago) link
in hindsight, this was all very predictable. if the capitalist class wanted to keep the american population on board with their system, they should have allowed them to be part of it, not puffed them up with expectations and then let out the air.
― treeship., Tuesday, 18 February 2020 01:52 (four years ago) link
it doesn't seem like they ever act in their long term class interests, honestly. their whole model relies on the american consumer, yet they are always trying to chip away at people's power to buy and invest.
― treeship., Tuesday, 18 February 2020 01:54 (four years ago) link
Introspective Twitter thread untangling conflicted feelings about financial dependence on his parents:
a few days ago i took a medium dose of acid and wrote for several hours straight and admitted some things to myself, mostly about moneylet's start here: last august my mom gave me $100,000 for my birthday. i resented her for this and also suppressed the resentment— Magnificent Adult Baby (@QiaochuYuan) July 15, 2021
― o. nate, Friday, 16 July 2021 20:08 (two years ago) link
My heart breaks for him for receiving a gift of $32k more than the median household income of an American family.
― Joe Bombin (milo z), Friday, 16 July 2021 20:25 (two years ago) link
“A few days ago I took a medium dose of acid and wrote for several hours…” pic.twitter.com/jKRUx9bC1c— Bimböcalan (@baddielaire) July 16, 2021
― Joe Bombin (milo z), Friday, 16 July 2021 20:26 (two years ago) link
let's start here: ask your mom for another $100K, then donate it all directly to people via mutual aid. then christ will come back and you will reign for 100,000 money years
― Z_TBD (Karl Malone), Friday, 16 July 2021 20:35 (two years ago) link
http://files.pensadorcristao.webnode.com.br/system_preview_detail_200000056-6a2606a9fc/mike-murdock.jpg
― mookieproof, Friday, 16 July 2021 20:39 (two years ago) link