NOYDB
BANNED
But they can vote!
When I joined the Army, I joined technical which is a six year commitment. Somehow, I ended up with a three year contract and after signing, they tried to renege but I stuck to my guns and they let me in. Knowing that I could never make E5 and I really had no desire to do so, the Army was a party for me, well, for the most part.My dear niece (with a diploma from a school I'll not mention) lives 20 miles from her Grand Mother's house. All she has to do is take a left out of her apartment complex, drive for 19 1/2 miles and take the next left after crossing the county line, then 1/2 mile and take a left into the drive way. SIMPLE! Can't manage it with out her phone telling her the directions STEP BY STEP! And she grew up in the house I'm talk'n about.
WHEN there is a "zombie" problem, it'll be her and all the rest of this generation walk'n the planet in droves TAKING what they need and can't supply for them selves.
I can cook Mac & Cheese all by myself.
Kraft?
I just bought a can of this but haven't tried it yet;
There will be some smart ones out there that see what's on the table. While most will go to college for basket weaving, there will be several porstaffers who make D+ but scrap up through the trades.
The smart kids will claim to be all smart for years and regurgitate junk they read in science weekly, while making a welders fries, but all the money will be made by plumbers and welders in 2030.
That's true. I didn't learn all my skills from my dad, but out of necessity. He was gone a lot and if the go cart didn't run, I either fixed it or rode my bike. If the bike was broke I fixed it or rode a skateboard. If I was hungry I made a grilled cheese or starved to death.There is nothing wrong with learning skills for whatever career one seeks. I think the OP was seeing that the young people didn't develop the basic skills we did or skills needed for everyday living.
Just the basic skills such as reading a multi-meter, a 12V trouble light, putting a chain back on a bicycle, changing a light switch, removing a nut from a bolt, changing/patching the inner tube in a bicycle tire, kitchen safety, money management, insurance info, how to do your income taxes, balancing a check book, decision making, etc.
Maybe some father and son, or even father and daughter hobbies such as camping/backpacking that forces the child to make decisions. Should we go this way or that way? Should we camp here or here? Should we eat this or this? What about this stove or this tent?
Did you plan the meals? Did you plan our route? Did you check the weather? Did you bring taters?
When were were going on a trip, my Dad had us boys grab a map and pick the best route. Probably when the three of us were 10-12 and early teens.
Dad would look at our choice and usually agree. We would then look at the map and navigate from the back seat. We also learned that 3 rights make a left. That comes in handy in a big city.
That reminded me of something in my recent past, 2-3 years ago, I travel for my job mostly on the road regionally with some younger generation fellows. Good boys, but just don't really have a clue as far as the real world, IMO.
For instance, we were traveling somewhere on the interstate system and I was driving, I usually do most of it, and knowing where to go without GPS came up in a coverstion in the car.
Anyway, I made the statement that as Long as I know where a location is in relation to where I am, I can drive to it using the Interstate system and only the Big green interstate signs along the way. They all laughed and said, "No way, how could you do that without a map or GPS?" I said, "because I know my Geography, and y'all have been in this car for 3 hours and basically have no idea where we are right now, or how far it is to our next route to the destination".
It got real quiet for a minute or two and they started looking for the next big green sign.
That's true. I didn't learn all my skills from my dad, but out of necessity. He was gone a lot and if the go cart didn't run, I either fixed it or rode my bike. If the bike was broke I fixed it or rode a skateboard. If I was hungry I made a grilled cheese or starved to death.
My point is we as humans have the ability, but parents just do for them until they are helpless worthless pond scum
The best thing that ever happened to me was to have crappy parents as far as nurturing is concerned. I brought myself up and could sew stitches, cook and keep chores up to date, not because they expected it, but because I did.
I still live that way. Change my oil, do my own yard etc. so many think it's a sign of success to pay to have homesteading chores handled for them. Maybe they are right and I am just frugal. My wife mentions maids, car detailers and lawn services at times. I just can't pay for those things. seems lazyI can see that. My wife was more raised like you, to fend for herself. Neither parent offering much guidance. She had to develop certain survival skills.
I was raised where we had but I still had to learn skills. If the moped didn't run, you rode your bike, if it had a flat tire, you walked. That progressed into automobiles as well.
If you wanted something, you worked for it. Either to make money to get it or to fix it yourself. Boats, outboard motors, motorcycles, stereos, or whatever.
We were just taught to be more of a DIY mentality. Change your own oil, fix your own flat, paint your own room, build your own gun cabinet, build a cricket box, grunt your own worms, cut your own firewood, rake your own yard, wax your own car, clean your guns, clean your reels, clean your paint brushes and rollers, build your own shed, enclose your own carport, etc.
Either way whether of necessity or made to do it, we did it.