this post was submitted on 27 Oct 2025
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In the 90's a lot of popular song were pretty political, remember Killing in the name of and even the skate pop-punk has pretty popular political song's (Offspring, Blink Green-day). Actually political movies were also quite big in the 90's/00's (French Masterpiece La haine, or the whole work of Michael Moore).

I would expect to see that the people who were teens/young adult at the time would tackle all these issues 20-30 years latter when they'll finally take the power and the reality is that everything got worse, than even talking about-it make you sound like a radical, and that the gen-X/Millennials totally failed to change something.

What happened ? and how did we fail ?

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[–] givesomefucks@lemmy.world 13 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

You can't even lump Gen X as a group...

People that were married with kids before the Internet have nothing in common with late Gen X who grew up with computes; "the Oregon trail generation".

The oldest and youngest Gen X just had widely different experiences that shaped them differently. It's the result of starting out defining generations around societal changes so they're similar, and then just doing it on a set schedule regardless of what's happening.

So yeah, the oldest Gen X are a lot like boomers.

Quick edit:

Seems it’s a trend when you get older you get crazier.

As we age we lose critical thinking, memory, and other stuff.

So our brains start falling back on "cheats" like bigotry, instead of dealing with people as individuals, which is hard, your brain just assumes they'll act like everyone else from their group.

We fall back on in-group/out group biases learned as kids.

So kids that were socialized around other groups, won't see it as much.

Which is why the bigots fight so hard against diversity in children's media. The boots on the ground are idiots, but the people planning and calling shots aren't idiots. They're usually not even bigots themselves, just manufacturing conflict to divide us so we don't unite against them.

[–] starlinguk@lemmy.world 11 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Don't look at me, I died of dysentery.

[–] givesomefucks@lemmy.world 8 points 5 days ago (1 children)

American Dad had an Oregon Trail episode, and hit on the idea that spending so much time playing a game where your party just randomly dies from shit like dysenteryprobably has a measurable effect on that cohorts psyche...

Like how old school kids stories were brutal as fuck to get kids used to real life, and the opposite is the Disneyfication of always ending "happily ever after".

Younger generations expect everything to work out and good to win and evil to fail automatically. Which I think is why so many people refuse to move past "raising awareness".

They legitimately believe that if enough people are aware of a problem, it'll just stop being a problem on its own

[–] starlinguk@lemmy.world 2 points 4 days ago

"Karma will get them!"

No it won't, Kayden. There is no such thing.