Yeah, would harsh your mellow.
Sent from my iPhone On Sep 30, 2024, at 9:14 PM, Ken Hohhof <khoh...@kwom.com> wrote:
Literally a buzz kill? ---- Original Message ---- From: ch...@go-mtc.com Sent: 9/30/2024 9:23:26 PM To: "AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group" Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Gen Z new college grads
I would interpret that as a human paraquat being something that ruins
something good.
Sent: Monday, September 30, 2024 6:35 PM
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Gen Z new college grads
The Dude called the other (big) Lebowski a human paraquat, I don't
think there was any reference to getting high on it. I assume that would
be fairly unwise, not that it has stopped people from getting high on unwise
things in other situations.
Wait, I thought paraquat was
a herbicide. Are people getting high on it? That seems
unwise.
From: AF <af-boun...@af.afmug.com> On Behalf Of Jason
McKemie Sent: Monday, September 30, 2024 12:56 PM To:
AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group <af@af.afmug.com> Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Gen Z new
college grads
The first time I remember hearing about paraquat was in The
Big Lebowski.
Did roomates one
time. At college. Total Animal House back in the late
1970s. Fridge converted to a keg cooler. Sex, drugs, rock and
roll. I wasn’t down on the farm any more. My kids and grandkids
think of it as a mythological time, not sure it was real.
Anyone remember
paraquat?
Sent:
Monday, September 30, 2024 10:04 AM
To:
'AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group'
Subject: Re:
[AFMUG] Gen Z new college grads
First
apartment in 1998: $40/week for a bedroom. The living room, kitchen,
and 1 bathroom shared with 5 other guys. Power and heat were included,
and the group shared the cost of a phone. That place got incredibly
squalid, and some of my roommates were involved in illegal activities.
The police raided the place a few weeks after I moved out. These drug
dealers were very nice people though and I did feel bad for them –When you
think about it they work in sales, right? If they’re any good at it
they’re probably nice guys.
Second
apartment in 1999: $540/month plus utilities. I had heat, electric,
and phone. I used email at work and opted not to have a connection at
home. I made $8/hour. By the time I paid the car insurance I was
broke every month. But it was cleaner because it was just me.
This was literally the only time in my life when I had my own place.
One year.
Third
apartment in 2000 - 2003: Split a 2 BR house with 3 other guys. Myself
and one other guy shared the finished back porch which may or may not have
legally counted as a 3rd bedroom. This one also got
squalid, but less so than the first one, and no nefarious activities.
We mostly all got along and had fun together.
I had
one other apartment after that…..a nicer one where everybody had their own
room, but still shared. After that it was me and my wife.
Roommates
were a grand adventure. Highly recommended.
-Adam
From: AF
<af-boun...@af.afmug.com> On Behalf Of
Mike Hammett Sent: Monday, September 30, 2024 11:21
AM To: AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group <af@af.afmug.com> Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Gen Z
new college grads
There's
still stigma associated with room mates. Every time I get in a conversation
about this, I'm beaten for daring to suggest having room mates. It's always
stuff like how dare I suggest a room mate to a person whose bar as a single
person with no kids being a 3 or 4 bedroom townhouse.
From:
"Ken Hohhof" <khoh...@kwom.com> To: af@af.afmug.com Sent: Monday, September 30, 2024
9:37:10 AM Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Gen Z new college grads
We
bought the house where I still live in 1976 for $60,000. Had to save up the
20% down payment. Was living in a $200/mo apartment. We were "dinks" (dual
income no kids) although my wife was going to school part of that
time.
Main difference today seems to be a shortage of houses. Also
less people seeing home ownership as the "American dream". And majority of
new housing comes with the dreaded HOA.
But for the people working
gig jobs it's going to be tough to buy a house. Or single parents. Not sure
that's a generational thing.
The good news maybe is there's less of a
stigma living with your parents in your 20s or 30s to make ends meet. In my
day you'd rather live with 3 roommates in a run down apartment and eat ramen
for every meal, than live with mom and dad.
---- Original Message
---- From: dmmoff...@gmail.com Sent: 9/30/2024
9:18:52 AM To: "'AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group'" Subject: Re:
[AFMUG] Gen Z new college grads
The
actual cost of the house was about half after adjusting for inflation.
https://www.longtermtrends.net/home-price-vs-inflation/
Meanwhile,
real wages have been flat.
I
do believe it’s harder to save for the down payment. Your monthly
payment would be higher with a higher interest rate, but the bar people have
trouble crossing is saving for the down payment while also paying their
rent. If they can pay $1500/month in rent they could pay $1500/month
for a mortgage right? So I don’t think this problem is
imaginary.
I
also believe we live in a free market wherein most of this is determined by
the collective decisions of millions of people. Blaming any particular
group of people is oversimplifying.
-Adam
And 13.5% mortgage
rates. Buying a house in the 70's was Waaaay more difficult than it is
now...
On 9/27/24 12:06 PM,
Ken Hohhof wrote:
Sounds about
right.
Only thing I'd add is I think the Internet contributes to
this.
I hear from my 37 year old son how all these difficulties are
because the "boomers" broke everything and rigged the system against them.
I don't think the kids really know what a baby boomer is, it's a synonym
for "the olds".
At 37 he's not the Instagram/Tiktok generation,
more the Youtube/Reddit/podcast generation. But people are telling him the
boomers rigged the system and made life hard for him.
Hey, I am a
boomer. I went through recessions, the Vietnam draft, double digit
inflation, the Arab oil embargo, the stock market crash of 1987. Oh and
JFK, John Lennon and Ronald Reagan being shot. I figured I had it good
because my dad and uncle fought in WW2, and my grandfather lived through
the Great Depression. But I guess everything was just peachy until my
generation conspired to make life difficult for the "not
olds".
---- Original Message ---- From: "Forrest Christian (List
Account)" Sent: 9/27/2024 12:42:26 PM To: "AnimalFarm Microwave
Users Group" Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Gen Z new college grads
My take on this is
that most high school or college grads take a while to figure out how to
manage having a job. They also take a while to accumulate
enough resources and get paid enough that life doesn't consist of working
your ass off just to barely cover (or not) essential living expenses. Most
of us started out living in crap conditions, eating whatever we could get
for cheap, and driving vehicles which were lucky to start on a good
day.
The difference I
see is that gen Z seems to blame the 'olds' for their problems and don't
understand that everyone goes through this barely feeding yourself
stage. There is also this odd sense of entitlement mixed with
bizarre expectations. I don't remember many of my peers expecting to
be given a job where they didn't have to do normal work things like show
up and get paid large amounts of money. Oh, and to never be
given negative feedback.
I realize every
generation goes through this cycle that eventually ends up with
complaining about the younger generations. It makes me smile
to see the millennials switch from being the problem generation to whining
about the problem generation. But, I can't help but feel
that there is something fundamentally broken in a very
non-similar-to-the-past way with many in the latest crop.
I've often said
this, but part of the issue is selection bias. People who can't
hack it will eventually either wise up or remove themselves from
the work force, and then the older cohort will look better as a
consequence. I'm at the borderline between "Gen X" and "Millennial",
and people complained and moaned about both age groups. We're
senior staff and management now and complaining about how lazy Gen Z
is. You can find news articles from the 1800's
complaining about "today's young people". This is the same
wheel that's been turning since the beginning.
Ugg and Ogg
sat in their cave knapping flint spearheads and complaining about how
wheels are making kids too lazy to do real
work.
-----Original Message----- From: AF <af-boun...@af.afmug.com> On Behalf Of Ken
Hohhof Sent: Thursday, September 26, 2024 6:31 PM To: af@af.afmug.com Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Gen Z new
college grads
I assume some percentage of people in the Gen Z
cohort do want to work hard and build a successful career. Imagine
you're a new grad hired into a work from home or 2 days at the office
company. That's got to be sub optimum. I think the whole Covid work
from home thing also relieved the first level managers of actually
doing their job - managing people. Or is that done by AI
now?
Article seems to say after a couple years of just griping
about it, bosses are starting to fire the non performers. So what
were the bosses doing until now to earn their pay? Oooooh, firing
people is hard! With newbies you also need to do feedback and
mentoring, because according to the article, colleges aren't
preparing them for the world of work. And if these companies have
accumulated a bunch of worthless employees with bad attitudes,
that's going to rub off on impressionable newbies. Honestly, that
kind of happened to me at my first job after college.
Just my
$0.02 worth.
---- Original Message ---- From: ch...@go-mtc.com Sent: 9/26/2024 5:06:27 PM To:
"AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group" <af@af.afmug.com> Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Gen Z new
college grads
There seems to be a growing idea amongst the
younger citizens that there is a universal human right to never
suffer hurt feelings. The ultra woke I think would see a world
where you have to be nice all the time to everyone, irrespective of
circumstance.
This was prophesied by Rod Serling: https://youtu.be/QxTMbIxEj-E?si=KMH-oBOURYW7tPbM
-----Original
Message----- From: Jan-GAMs Sent: Thursday, September 26, 2024
3:46 PM To: af@af.afmug.com Subject: Re:
[AFMUG] Gen Z new college grads
What did you expect?
They're raised on TV and gameboxes and a diet that literally had no
food value, zero nutrition. Their brains never developed and
most of them are now living on adderal or ritilin. They're
non-functional humans and we have an entire generation of them. With
the attention-span of a fruit-fly. We might as well have
used lead-cookware, same result.
On 9/26/24 14:13, Ken Hohhof
wrote: > https://fortune.com/2024/09/26/bosses-firing-gen-z-grads-months-after- >
hiring/ > > >
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