As to the OP's grievance specifically: I actually agree that people are probably a little less civil and certainly more casual than they were, say, in the mid-20th century. I mean, I'm generalizing a great deal here, but I'd be willing to agree with that sentiment. I mean, I can't get behind bristling at someone who tells me to "have a good one," as that is just exceedingly snobbish and fragile. But broadly speaking, yea, I think many people are a bit less polite and compassionate than they should be. That's fair.
But that also includes everyone, not just younger folks. I see PLENTY of 55+ people who are slovenly, rude, and cellphone addicted. They, too, are living in a neoliberal hellscape that has destroyed labor unions and worker protections, assaulted consumer protections and rights, and suffer under a society that isolates them physically while overly connecting them digitally. This doesn't even touch the deteriorating effects of mass media, the long time neglect of public services and commons, the wanton destruction of the environment, and etc. Much of our entire economy is based explicitly in providing comfort and relief for the very anxieties that the economy itself creates, and much of that "service" is centered on making it so we get what we want, when we want it, with as little human interaction as possible. As older folks love to say, "The customer is always right!" Well, so it is, and now we have it. Convenience has made us savage.
But that also includes everyone, not just younger folks. I see PLENTY of 55+ people who are slovenly, rude, and cellphone addicted. They, too, are living in a neoliberal hellscape that has destroyed labor unions and worker protections, assaulted consumer protections and rights, and suffer under a society that isolates them physically while overly connecting them digitally. This doesn't even touch the deteriorating effects of mass media, the long time neglect of public services and commons, the wanton destruction of the environment, and etc. Much of our entire economy is based explicitly in providing comfort and relief for the very anxieties that the economy itself creates, and much of that "service" is centered on making it so we get what we want, when we want it, with as little human interaction as possible. As older folks love to say, "The customer is always right!" Well, so it is, and now we have it. Convenience has made us savage.
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