08-03-2020, 05:14 PM
(08-03-2020, 03:03 PM)2Legit2Quit Wrote:(07-30-2020, 07:34 PM)RadianMay Wrote: Here comes the old debate of whether people born around the turn of the millennium are millennials or “zoomers”. I’m currently 19, (born 2001) and although S&H suggest that I should be a millennial, it doesn’t feel right that I’m in the same generation as 39 year olds. Even worse, I cannot imagine current 16 year olds (born in 2004) to be in the same generation either. At the same time, I don’t believe that the 3T ended until perhaps 2017 or even has just ended this year. Does anyone here share this cognitive dissonance?
I agree: People 22/23 and under today are definitely *not* Millenials, they are Zoomers.
In hindsight, people born in the late 70s through to about 1990 share a common childhood, and seem to be very similar.
From about 1990 on, there is a different flavor of millenial.
People born from 1997 on onwards are definitely a different generation.
Maybe a good updated generation list looks something like this:
Boomer 1945-1960
X 1961-1976
Millenial 1977-1992
Zoomer 1993-2009
Generation means different things to different people, and the marker police have really been out in force since technology kicked-in in earnest. In a way, I understand this, because the entire concept of "shared social experience" seems to have a decreasing shelf life as time passes. How we all interact is constantly in flux -- especially now that the social environment is often dictated by what aps we use and how we use them. OK, but does that really create generational boundaries or merely a series of social boundaries separate from the less frenetic economic, political and familial boundaries that constitute life?
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.