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Ron FraserColumnist
The Ugly Transition From Gen X to Gen Y
June 1, 2009 | From theTrumpet.com
What will it take for the young generation to overcome its unparalleled selfishness?
 

Whatever happened to basic humility? Where did the experience of shame at wrongdoing disappear to? Indeed, to where did the whole concept of “wrongdoing” flee? Does anyone know what “self-effacement” means anymore? Whatever happened to the magnanimous, seemingly innate, desire of the Anglo-American peoples to give to the benefit of fellow man with the expectation of gaining little or nothing in return?

Now it’s all about self-actualization, pride in self, promotion of self, the glorification of narcissism. The outcome of the new creed, “When do we want it? We want it NOW,” is an ugly, unkempt, sloppy, self-indulgent, greedy, grasping, demanding generation of greatly ballooned egos. Generation Y has been raised by Generation X with not even a beginning concept of the self-sacrificing demeanor of the pioneering generations that built their lands into powerful nations, who sacrificed in blood to protect their freedoms and their kith and kin back home as they fought foreign enemies on far-away foreign soil.

The senior vice president of the global advertising agency jwt, Marian Salzman, said back in 2007, “Gen Y is the most difficult workforce I’ve ever encountered, because part of them are greatest-generation great and the other part are so self-indulgent as to be genuinely offensive to know, let alone supervise” (Christian Science Monitor, March 2, 2007).

The problem is that Generation Y has now become top-billed entertainment! Shows such as American Idol and The Apprentice bearing all of the sheer ugliness of character of Gen Y are raking in millions for their promoters and searing the minds of Gen-Y viewers into a stupefying mindset that says, These are your heroes; this is your expected mode of behavior if you want to succeed in life!

Nothing could be further from the truth!

Self-sacrifice built the British peoples into the greatest empire on Earth. The great pioneering spirit of help-thy-neighbor built America into the greatest single nation in history. Self-indulgence is ultimately destined to reduce these once-great peoples to enslavement by the enemies toward which they were so magnanimous in their defeat in war.

A February 2007 report titled “Egos Inflating Over Time,” produced by a team of researchers led by psychologist Jean Twenge of San Diego University, warned that the self-indulgent child-rearing techniques foisted off onto Generation-X parents have yielded bitter fruit indeed. Gen Yers are becoming known for their general lack of empathy, their innate fixation on self, their general lack of manners and inability to satisfactorily adapt as contributing members of a stable society. In fact, the report indicated that this generation presents an unattractive proposition in terms of their employability within the society that has raised them.

The trend toward innate self-indulgence among Generation Y is so deeply concerning, and its rate of progression so alarming, that the report asked the question (emphasis mine throughout),

How high can narcissism go? It is possible to imagine a narcissistic Lake Wobegon: Everyone is attractive or getting surgery to become so; competition and individual pursuits trump group or collective action; relationships are superficial and transient; kids are treated permissively at home and fed with self-inflating messages at school. This may sound far-fetched, but imagine what would happen if an American from the 1950s took a time machine to the present day. This would be how our culture would appear to our 1950s visitor, and we think it is possible to move even further in this direction.

The generation that built America into a nation of awe-inspiring wealth, made an industrial powerhouse admired the world over, created the world’s mightiest military machine, placed men on the moon and forced the Soviet Union to its knees is fast fading.

That was a generation—and the children of a generation—that had suffered a worldwide economic depression and the two greatest wars in this world’s history. Their freedoms, their wealth and their industry were hard-won. It all took a hefty dose of self-sacrifice.

Considering this history in relation to the culture of hedonistic softness within which Generation Y has been indulged, the authors of “Egos Inflating Over Time” reached a remarkable conclusion: “Self-correction may occur, however, given a strong enough external force. … [I]f another Great Depression or world war struck, Americans might suddenly have to temper their narcissism.”

But the strength of the intervention of that strong external force, it would seem, will have to be far in excess of that posed even by such phenomena as 9/11, Hurricane Katrina or the current economic crisis. As these researchers observed, “A diluted form of this decreased self-focus might have occurred after Sept. 11, 2001, when many people commented that they focused on their relationships more and were kinder to each other. However, as our data show, those attitudes—if they actually did come about—soon faded.”

What will it take to rescue America, and her sister Anglo-Saxon nations, from the grip of the nation-destroying self-indulgence that is the prime motivation of this narcissistic generation charged with the task of leading the way into the future in the 21st century? The hope these researchers offer is a dim one indeed:

Overall, it would be very difficult for a generation brought up on narcissistic individualism to suddenly become consistently self-sacrificing. Perhaps at some point American culture will realize that too much individualism, and too much narcissism, will not lead to good outcomes in the long run.

Where’s the real hope in that?

The standard of research that produced this report is excellent. Its conclusions are inarguable. However, the future it bespeaks is bleak indeed!

One thing we can tell you, on the supreme authority of the Creator of Generation X, Generation Y, and all generations of mankind tracking back to Adam himself, is that the inference this report makes is true: The only solution to the devastation of Anglo-Saxon society faced by this current narcissistic generation is, in reality, direct, sudden and imminent intervention by that strong enough external force”!

It will simply take the divine intervention of the Creator Himself to change this very narcissistic, self-indulgent nature of man, and to put, not only America, not just the Anglo-Saxons, but this whole world right back onto its original God-ordained course! That much is declared by the divinely inspired revelation of the future in your Bible.

The fact is, believe it or not, only when that supernatural, strong external force intervenes in world affairs will all mankind be able to fully realize its incredible human potential!

Thank God, the signs indicate that day will come soon. Very soon!

Ron Fraser’s column appears every Monday.
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Featured Comments:
RE: 6/1/09 Ron Fraser article is so sadly correct. This next generation is the most self-assured, self-centered, egotistical and non-commonsensical I have yet to come across. My husband’s two nephews and one niece are three of the most clueless people. Smart? Oh yes, they are all techno-geeks, their cell phones glued to their ears, but any common sense? Hardly! They all act as if their parents will live forever, so they themselves can live out their self-appointed god-hoods in style, all three still living off of mom & dad at home. Volunteer for anything? Not a chance, they are too self-absorbed in “finding themselves” with the latest tattoo style, hair color, or linking up with their friends at any given nanosecond via text-messaging, etc. They are rudely behaved, crude-mouthed, disrespectful, and gratitude is not part of their mentality. They are poised to enter upon the world stage as the best-educated of any generation, with light-years of information technology at their fingertips, with thousands of dollars spent on years in school. For what? I really hope and pray that I am incorrect, however so far, nothing has changed in at least four years with any of them. Unfortunately it will probably take another “Great Depression” for them to actually be forcibly pushed out of their comfy nests and fly in the real world.
Nan—IA/USA
Your article is insightful and true. I work in corporate America today and the characteristics that you describe in generation Y are all too present. And I am one of them, fighting it every day because I was taught to be more than this. Thank you for another excellent article.
Kimberly B.—Bentonville, AR
I don’t agree with your article at all. I have managed many Gen Y people and find them to be better than most of the previous employees I have had. In Australia most of them have had to do community service to pass their high school work. My son and daughter have done this. The “older” generation who have been under full employment and have different conditions of employment are lazy and corrupt. I have seen on countless times the “responsible oldies” lying and cheating to get ahead. They demand that the youngsters follow their examples and when they are questioned or a demand is refused they are subject to smears and innuendo. I have seen them develop projects or get new clients and the “oldies” claim them as their own and the Gen Y people get sacked. They are cheaper to get rid of! The time is soon coming here when the companies will collapse because they don’t have the intellectually capable people there anymore.
Peter E.—Adelaide, Australia
Thank you for the excellent article. My daughter who is fourteen went on a school trip to the Auckland War Museum, and she asked her friend on the way home, if war broke tomorrow would she help as a nurse. The reply was, “I have my whole life ahead of me, why should I help?”

Service and sacrifice are not on the radar screen for most youth today.

Brian Sherwood—New Zealand
 

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