thaluikhain said:
People have been complaining about such things for most of recorded history.
On the whole, I'd say kids are getting better at the moment. A mere hundred years ago, people, kids included, were far less tolerant than they are today.
To be fair, most kids 100 years ago didn't have access to proper literacy or numeracy, and expected to be working at 12 years old after a scant 'mandatory' 6 year school education. This was the case in -Australia- 100 years ago, of which has always maintained a vastly superior quality of life compared to nearly all of the Western World over it's developed industrial period.
You think that's bad? in the US you had boys and girls working in cotton mills at the age of -12- if their fathers had carked it.
Do you know how infinitely better our lives have been in only 100 years?
And of course people were far less 'tolerant'. Entire towns in the US, Australia, or Canada.... Hell, even in Europe... were so isolated that they *relied* on community cohesion at whatever cost. A society that could not function as one unit was doomed to fail, and so established notions arose concerning conduct, sexuality, religious and political appeasements is expected.
The answer is simple ... humans are humans. They aren't better, or worse ... they are just a little more knowledgeable and a lot more judgemental of those from the past.
We might scoff at our grandparents but you'll find that ridicule yourself in 80 years time when your grandkids look at you and see a fossil of the past with alienesque notions of community.So the answer is neither posted in the poll. The answer is this ... humans are arrogant shitheads regardless of the era they grew up in. They split hairs about bullshit concepts that frankly don't even come close to broaching the subject of whether people are better or worse behaved.
The answer is that despite the far more extensive options a human in the Western World has, all their additional rights of Man, healthcare, access to higher education ... Man is arrogant regardless the era.
All we can do is hope every generation is a little more healthier and happier than the last, and that every generation recognize that making lives better for future generations is more important that current, short term goals.