“What I have seen in my interviews is that the working class feels a very strong sense of betrayal…”

March 23 Comments Off on “What I have seen in my interviews is that the working class feels a very strong sense of betrayal…” Category: Feed, Tumblr

“What I have seen in my interviews is that the working class feels a very strong sense of betrayal […] Betrayed by the institutions that should help them get ahead. They feel betrayed by school because they think it should have helped, and they were told it would, and they feel betrayed by work.”

Jennifer Silva, a sociologist at Bucknell University who studies changing class identities among millennials

via NBC.

copperbadge: writeswrongs:magenmagenmagen:seriousjones:shut…

March 23 Comments Off on copperbadge: writeswrongs:magenmagenmagen:seriousjones:shut… Category: Feed, Tumblr

copperbadge:

writeswrongs:

magenmagenmagen:

seriousjones:

shut uuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuup

TECHNOLOGY IS SCARY WAAAAAAH

Some people make a living selling ebooks so go f-f-fuck yourself.

Book lovers need to know something about millenials: 

-we don’t have a lot of money

-we often don’t have a lot of space

-and we move a lot more frequently than other generations might have

and that doesn’t even account for more severe realities, like abused women who lose everything they own when they are kicked out of their homes, or how poor young urban millenials of color are likely to fall behind on rent and be evicted – and yes that means losing all your physical possessions often including books. 

The only books I still have right now are my ebooks. I swear to god every single time someone condemns me for “not caring” enough about “real” books I want to turn around and slap them upside the head. I HAD REAL BOOKS. IT WAS A LUXURY. THAT LUXURY WAS FORCIBLY TAKEN FROM ME. I CANNOT AFFORD THE SPACE AND TIME IT TAKES TO OWN PAPER COPY BOOKS ANYMORE. ALL I OWN ANYMORE IS DIGITAL INFORMATION BECAUSE PEOPLE KEEP TEARING MY PHYSICAL POSSESSIONS FROM ME. 

When you meet millenials! Who are scared of owning physical things! It is likely because they moving sublet to sublet regularly. I know most of you know someone like this if you are not literally someone like this. You sort of maybe are out of your parents home but maybe not, and when you are out of your home or if you aren’t lucky enough to have parents that will let you stay at home, you stay on couches or live in someone else’s room while they’re gone and every couple of months to years you have to pack all your shit and leave. The providence of the poor is being hopelessly itinerant. 

if you take the luxury of having physical books for granted and condemn ebooks you’re a classist and probably also a racist because mostly it’s old white people who write this stupid ass think pieces.

The sad thing is, the artist could change literally nothing about this project except how he talks about it and be making the exact statement above.

Photographing people with books could easily become a project about who can afford to buy, keep, and read books — the vanishing middle class, the wealthy, the non-disabled (who don’t need color filters or large print books or lightweight reading options that tablet readers offer to people with learning, vision, or physical challenges). They could talk about the economic savings to publishers, and the ecological impact of readers vs. books, the way we are destroying a different part of the ecosystem with each.

A provocative project about “the last book” could very easily be a statement on why people are moving away from printed books instead of a pointless nostalgic masturbation over some mythical lost intellectualism.

But he didn’t do that. He didn’t choose depth or self-examination. Which, in itself, is hilarious given the statements he did choose to make about “depth”.

Pretty fascinating reaction here.

“The whole generation has been stuck on a sort of cruel economic treadmill: working harder and harder…”

December 04 Comments Off on “The whole generation has been stuck on a sort of cruel economic treadmill: working harder and harder…” Category: Feed, Tumblr

“The whole generation has been stuck on a sort of cruel economic treadmill: working harder and harder without really getting much further ahead.”

Millennials are way more educated than their parents. They are also paid less.

“During Reagan’s two terms as president, dedicated funding for outright grants-in-aid decreased,…”

October 29 Comments Off on “During Reagan’s two terms as president, dedicated funding for outright grants-in-aid decreased,…” Category: Feed, Tumblr

“During Reagan’s two terms as president, dedicated funding for outright grants-in-aid decreased, federal guidelines pushed individual loans, and private bill collectors were brought in to ensure that the hardest kind of debt to escape was whatever you took on for your education. Even more important was the shift in tone and expectation. Public goods became private services, and by the end of the 1980s, the anti-tax, infra-structure-starving, neoliberal Weltanschauung meant that as states cut their budgets, support for higher education was thrown into a cage match with every other necessary public good.”

Ronald Reagan stuck it to millennials: A college debt history lesson no one tells. Dramatic, awful changes occurred on my generation’s watch — and it amounts to a fiendishly successful conspiracy.