Originally posted by Singuy
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Let's for some reason assume we're going to exclude the war in Afghanistan which is - for the record - the longest war we've ever fought and impacted multiple generations of service members. Millennials were in school during Columbine. We learned what terrorism was by watching 9/11 happen in real time. We were just getting our financial footing during the 08 housing crash/the great recession. Oh and by the way college was at a record high tuition rate, degrees were required for more jobs than ever and the salaries were ...and still are... stagnant.
And while I can appreciate your seize the opportunity mindset regarding access to information and the ability to sell goods and services online, lets not pretend like gig work is a way to build wealth for the majority - largely because we don't have access to affordable healthcare or retirement and competition drives the value of those goods and services down so while 60 years ago every town needed a shoe maker, now small business is being snuffed out by big business and the inability to compete with retail giants who can mass produce and outsource labor. I'm not here to say Millennials have it the worst but if you can't see the difference in financial opportunity across generations, you've got blinders on.
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