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Oct 06, 2008, 05:55AM

The Lazy Generation to the Rescue

Forget bailouts and "change" campaigns; the only real way out of this financial crisis is for young people to get off the couch and start working.

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Photo by soundfromwayout.

I’m part of the Lazy Generation. That may not be the technical name for kids born in the late 1980s, but there’s enough cultural evidence out there to support this kind of nomenclature. Raised during a decade of unparalleled American economic comfort, we’ve been coddled by ex-hippie parents and sent to more colleges—many of them small and private—than any generation before us. It’s been a good ride.

Enter: The Fiscal Crisis. By far, this is the greatest recent example of the old guard fucking over the new flock of recently winged birdies.

Come December, I will be over $40,000 in debt because of school loans. I will also be free of college. But my degree doesn’t excite me. At this point, I see myself in a future of busy-work and financial worry. Surely, I’ll eventually find some beige office job, get treated something like a stapler, and this job will be accompanied by a paycheck that my parents will snort at. But when I signed up for this whole college thing, I wasn’t expecting to be rewarded with a grim financial milieu when popping out of academia’s swollen womb. I was hopeful then. With the current economy, I would be more financially able had I trained for some technical job. But no—I chose to broaden my mind, and because of that, I feel like an idiot.

Now, along with a majority of my classmates, I stare into the double-dealing eyes of the Dollar, cursing its name with scant breaths.

That statement may be dramatic, and there has to be some hope somewhere. Isn’t there always? Isn’t that what Barack Obama and John McCain are propagating as truth? Aren’t they saying, “Vote for me and I’ll clean up this sticky mess we’ve walked into”?

This jaded, cynical, lazy generation doesn’t exactly buy into the hope wars. My generation sees beyond the self-serving power-struggle and the “brave” rhetoric. The answer to the financial crisis cannot be found in Washington or on Wall Street. The answer to our fiscal woes is the hands of people who are under 25 years old. Attention, kids: We’re our country’s only hope.

Backing up a bit, my generation’s cynicism is what will save us. As a kid of the 80s, I grew up with a heavy stock of television sitcoms that taught me how to be skeptical. From Full House to Friends, I have come to realize the difference between rhetoric and real intention. Because of this plethora of small screen narratives, I can smell bullshit from the next town over. And lately, with all of the news about Congress-this and Presidential election-that, I can’t get the stench out of my nose. I’ve tried everything—bleach, smelling salts, Chanel Number Five—and nothing has helped. That’s how I know that we’re financially wrecked, and our forefathers don’t have the slightest clue how to get us out of this mess-up. Once again: I have little faith that the generation that screwed over Generation Lazy is going to be able to help us. This situation is something we will have to fix ourselves.

I feel forced into action. As a 21-year-old, here is what I have decided I will do: Work. Hard.

It pains me to type that. You must understand that this is no easy statement from someone born into the Lazy Generation. But here I pledge to work my knuckles until they bleed and my brain until it’s raw. My hands have never bled before, at least not because of work, and I prefer to keep my brain nice and cozy, bathed in a pleasant solution of hard alcohol and Judge Judy. But no more. I’m beginning to feel desperate, and people in dire situations do crazy things. One can only hope that the rest of my generation feels compelled enough to turn off Tyra and instead turn themselves into savvy business-bots.

Many people my age are educated, tech-savvy and well informed—or at least capable of becoming these three things. But until now, there’s been no real reason to get off the couch and exercise our bravado. And why would we? It’s comfortable on the sofa.

But the stakes are high. If we flip the fiscal crisis on its side, we can begin to see this as an opportunity rather than a disaster. We are currently presented with a chance to change the guard, to rewrite rules, and to reinvent the ordinary. But young people must think—and quickly. And then we must work. This means taking that beige office job, despite the fact that it kills you a little inside. This means biting your upper-lip and clenching your fists, and plodding through the massive piles of bullshit that inevitably lie ahead. Because of this disaster, we can change the perception of our generation. And we can define ourselves in the process.

Discussion
  • Welcome to the real world and no, I'm not talking MTV.

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  • Good luck, Jason. Maybe you should go to grad school and study for a real job. Jobs that used to require a high school diploma now require a college degree. Same goes for jobs that having a college degree qualified you, now you need a Masters. Get on the stick, your generation needs to save us!

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  • An engaging manifesto. I'd say more but The View is starting...

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  • Don't waste your time on grad school, Jason. Too much money, too much debt. The country needs more young people willing to work hard immediately after college, without a few slacker years before settling down to a serious job.

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  • I'm totally watching The View right now. But after I will work. Hard. Trust me.

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  • Not to digress from this very good article, but I've never understood the fascination with "The View." A chick thing, I guess, and sorry for the vernacular. Meanwhile, Jason, doesn't seem like you're taking your own advice. Turn off the tube!

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  • The View is a shit-show. It's a nonstop idiot-fest, and I love it. (It falls in the "so bad that it's good" cliche.)

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  • Now you're depressing me. I've never believed in the "so bad it's good" bullshit. There are too many worthwhile forms of entertaiment--a book, maybe?--to waste your time on kitsch.

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  • TableMountain: I think that anything and everything can be made "worthwhile." We don't all have to have our noses in a Dickens. And even though I'm advocating getting off the debilitating couch of comfort, you must realize how much I love it there. "Mindless" entertainment is a big, big part of why I enjoy the couch. I'm no idiot, but I do enjoy playing dumb.

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  • One, why does Dickens always get singled out for abuse? Absurd. Second, you're obviously a smart guy, judging by your article, so why the hell do you "enjoy playing dumb?" Is that a facet of cool that's eluded me or are you just insecure?

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  • It's neither. The answer is in my article's first sentence.

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  • *nose

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  • jason likes to analyze the mainstream. watching "the view" is step one.

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  • This suggestion that "a book" is necessarily worthwhile bothers me. So many books today are just middlebrow bores. With so many entertainment options, I find myself attracted to the best and the worst. But the middle ground seems to me the surest waste of time, as is so much contemporary literature. Books, just as much as tv and movies run the gamut of quality. As for mindless entertainment. One can think critically of anything and it is lazy to depend on provocative material to jolt the brain into action.

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  • Oh, great, Rebecca. So do you think Jason should waste more brain cells with an analysis of reality shows and "Oprah."

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  • he'll waste his brain cells on beer, and busy them with "Oprah," most likely.

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  • Iris, hear hear! If I see one more bestseller with a title based on "The [Profession]'s [Relative]" I believe I will lose my mind.

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  • Welcome to the working week, at least as of December, Jason. That is, if you tear yourself away from "The View."

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  • I own a small business which is hurting, like so many others, by the current economy. I'm looking for new blood. I wouldn't hire this kid on a bet! Not serious enough. Damn slacker.

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  • Great article Jason. Thank you so much for writing this, and for everyone engaging in conversation. It is a direct example of how different generations react in the time of turmoil or extreme change. Almost immediately you are met with comments of "reality checks" and not being serious enough by older generations. Being a younger, working person I applaud your desire to do something about the current situation. In doing so, though, don't become a snide, know-it-all that represents a majority of the older workforce. It is very easy, as you say, to fall into "the beige" and lose sight of the original passion you had when you wanted to make a change.

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  • Well, it's about time you've come to this conclusion, Jason. I don't mean to be nasty, really I don't, but it just kills me to see so many students lounging around thinking they have a free ride. That's why I left UCLA after a year. I work for a good company, but man, the swimming pool biz in LA isn't in great shape. Anyway, I hope a lot of your fellow sofa-loungers heed your advice.

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  • I think it's offensive to label the 9/11 generation "lazy." There are so many ambitious, hard working, brilliant young people out there today doing what they love and generally making the world a better place. You can't just boil down such a productive group and call them lazy. It's plain out of touch and uninformed.

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  • Kodak, the author is speaking from his own experience and that of his friends. Maybe you're different. It's interesting, if not uncommon, that you call this group of young men and women the 9/11 Generation. I guess that's true, but almost every generation before us has had tragedy: the Great Depression, World War II, Vietnam, just to start.

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