I agree the article seems very out of touch, and the reason I think is because it reports this in a very neutral way.
To me it didn’t seem neutral, it seemed to imply a sense of laziness and wanting luxury over hard work from the newer generation.
I agree the article seems very out of touch, and the reason I think is because it reports this in a very neutral way. If it made clear that the author thought this was a bad thing that was happening, would you still think it was out of touch?
I agree the article seems very out of touch, and the reason I think is because it reports this in a very neutral way.
To me it didn’t seem neutral, it seemed to imply a sense of laziness and wanting luxury over hard work from the newer generation.
Theharpyeagle@lemmy.world 1 year ago
I believe it’s out of touch not because they didn’t come to the conclusion I wanted them to, but because they cite the opinions and data curated by tax and investment companies at face value instead of actually asking responders why they answered the way they did. Who is Blackrock to say what young people want to do? Hell, Blackrock garners disdain from both sides of the aisle, would millennials and Gen Z really pick them as a representative of their wants and needs?