
Originally Posted by
thegodfather
Im not going to dispute what the article "shows." However I do have a bone to pick about the things its critiscizing. What is wrong with being career oriented? or worrying about ones self? You have to earn shit in this world, no one is going to ****ing hand it to you, and if I'm going to be where I eventually hope to be in my career then your damn right I need to be a little bit self centered. I have a CERTAIN quality of life which I hope to live and sustain, and I'm not going to attain it by hugging trees and devoting every saturday to picking up trash on the side of the road. The researchers conducting this study sound like a bunch of tree hugging hippy glue sniffers to me... I'll be dead honest with you about that.
"The new report follows a study released by UCLA last month which found that nearly three-quarters of the freshmen it surveyed thought it was important to be "very well-off financially." That compared with 62.5 percent who said the same in 1980 and 42 percent in 1966."
Who the hell checked the box that said "Yes, I hope and plan to live paycheck to paycheck for the rest of my ****ing life."
"But she is dismayed by the competitiveness of some students who seem prematurely focused on career status. " What was she hoping? That all of her constituents would all want to go into debt $20,000/yr to be focused on something like helping refugees? Isn't that what FEMA is for?
"The researchers traced the phenomenon back to what they called the "self-esteem movement" that emerged in the 1980s, asserting that the effort to build self-confidence had gone too far.
As an example, Twenge cited a song commonly sung to the tune of "Frere Jacques" in preschool: "I am special, I am special. Look at me."
Well, I'm sure we'll have a much more productive youth generation if we make them all start singing "Im a worthless piece of shit, piece of shit. Look at me" Sounds more like a generation of future Sociopaths...
The information is interesting, and I obviously am a little perturbed by it. I guess my point is there is nothing wrong with being a self-absorbed college student, so long as you graduate college, get a job, and become a productive member of society... I'm going to college to become a doctor, and I hope that after 8 years of self-absorbtion I can help a few more people than I could by picking up trash on the side of the road while in college.