Ashley Poleon
Materialism
Is
being materialistic affecting the youth today? Is being materialistic
the best way to strive for success? Does material define our happiness
and who we are? We should ask the youth of today that question. The
youth of today can be viewed as one word, and that word would be
materialistic. Material has been the only interest in the youth today,
things aren't how they used to be. Material defines who you are as a
person nowadays. Everybody is striving to keep up with the latest of
things that other people have.
In
the New York Times they viewed materialism as the road to slavery,
Father O'Toole the general of the congregation of the holy cross spoke
about the teaching of materialism, he said "education for slavery, not
freedom and is one of the reasons why communism, latterly, has made such
serious inroads amongst our youth". O'Toole is saying that the key
to education before used to be about having knowledge, having knowledge
always brought freedom. Nowadays having knowledge from the school system
is only to gain power, and having power brings money for material. Many
studies have shown that youth today are very lazy, and materialistic.
In an article posted May 3rd 2013,
psychology professor Tim Kasser
did a study on youth culture on the youth of 1970 and onwards, and
found that teens are more materialistic and less interested in hard wok
than baby boomers were. He found also that self entitlement and money
hungriness hit a peak with Generation X, the sons and daughters of the
baby boomers. The need for money got higher around the end of the 1980's
and grew as the years went by, children followed by examples of their
parents.
The
youth of the 1960's were much more different than the generation of
today. In the 1960's it was the time of music, strict parenting,
fashion, peace and love, hippies, civil rights movement, baby boom. They
weren't focused on materialistic things. The peace and love movement
was about everybody coming together, and being happy. Hippies didn't
believe in materialism, their goal was to get everybody to come together
as one, and vibe to musicThe youth culture in the 1960's weren't about
having material items to define your happiness. It was about coming
together as a youth and going against anything your parents said, and
finding your inner happiness through other people and music. In the book
called Just Kids by Patti Smith, which is based on her life in the
early 60's speaking about her life, and the youth culture of the 60's.
In the book you can see in the early 60's the youth were very carefree
and did anything to get by. You can see Patti, and her boyfriend, Robert
struggling in New York and using money on perfecting their craft in
art. Throughout the book, Patti talks a lot about being short on money,
and when having a few extra change using it on a stale doughnut or art
to improve hers and Roberts goal.You can view the 60's as a time where
people came together, and found happiness together as a group rather
than defining their happiness on wealth and material.
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