PaulH said:
Garbage. I know for a fact that across the Western sphere that parents do fuck all in terms of 'civilization'.
Except for the fact that social dysfunction is literally impossible to separate from the breakdown of the nuclear family. A large majority of criminals come from single parent households, those with narcissistic personality disorder are much more likely then the general population to not have two parental figures in their life, youth crime went up at the exact time those who where impressionable children at the time divorce become normalized became late teenagers, and went down when the people who would have been those late teenagers ended up never having been born after the legalization of abortion.
When I say that our civilization is build on the family unit, it's not because of any bullshit, it's because that is literally the case by any metric one uses. There's a reason why the UN declaration of human rights even acknowledges the family unit as the foundation of society. It's because the family unit is the foundation of society.
[These were your words. Who, might I ask, is saying that children be ripped from their parents for no reason?.
Not a single person, because that isn't at all what I said or implied, and posting a copy of what I said only makes it harder to understand how you connect "people advocating the destruction of the family unit" with "children being ripped away from their parents". There's a middle between these two that I'm just not seeing.
Now, the media glorifying single motherhood instead of showing it in a realistic light, and brands of social science academics celebrating the end of the nuclear family, that's a problem that I despise, but as I said in another comment that's also a discussion for the basement instead of Off Topic.
The irony being, that both my parents were well off.
Wait now I'm confused, where you raised by two parents and turned out as most do or by one or none and lucked out unlike most do?
As a culture we seem to be making it harder for youth to leave their families.
Well, if parents don't raise their children to be ready for the real world when they reach adulthood it's only to be expected they won't be ready for the real world until some time after.
Hostile workplaces unsuited for young adults.
As someone who has been working since the age of 16 while being a full time student, the problem is on the side of the young adults not being prepared for entering the workforce, not the workforce being unsuited for taking in people who didn't get the preparation they needed.
No real wealth accumulation possibilities.
Maybe not for those who elect to go to university for a junk degree, but those who go for a proper degree or take a trade on the other hand have great opportunity. Hell we live in a time where there's three easy steps to avoid entering poverty: getting a high school diploma, getting a full time job (even at minimum wage, which in this economy isn't as hard as people think if they're willing to settle) and not having children before marriage. Sure not everyone can manage that, but most are more then capable of doing so and if they do there is only a marginally insignificant chance of becoming impoverished. Which is fair better odds then pretty much any time in the past.
Enlisting in the armed services is no longer even a guarantee
Well to be fair the only reason it was a guarantee once upon a time was because there was a war going on. In the 80s the USN has a manpower shortage, the 90s and 00's saw the USA with a manpower shortage, but now there is no shortage so no guarantee. Basic economics.
And with increased privitisation of health services, you're going to be needlessly sick, for longer, for no good reason.
Well that's a problem, but it's a problem that has always been there for the US. Thankfully for me my country has actually benefited from a bit of privitization. We hate to admit it up here but we actually took a few of the elements of private health care the US system showed functioned and adopted them, and while wait times up here are still terrible we've managed to cut them down when compared to the days of completely government run health care.
Though one of the problems is unbalanced regulations. Too many in areas that don't need them (or are held back by overregulation) while areas that need them are underregulated. It's a nightmare of a legal setup second only to the taxation system.