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Zgłoś problem z tłumaczeniem
Funny how having a kid who has had to deal with cyberbullying can change your perspective on these sorts of things.
But there's something about a bunch of popular modern music that's just BAD. Untalented garbage that gets propped up like Post Malone and other "artists" with random Z's and numbers in their names that just suddenly show on Spotify with like 2M listens.
Yeah, "music" is by far the worst thing, it's just noise which sounds like it was randomly generated.
PS: TLDR - You want an answer or not? :)
First, don't take things to such extremes - "Hate" is a harsh word.
And, "they" will soon be "us" from your respective. "Why do younger people always "hate" what older people like? They have no good reason to hate such things." See? It's just nonsense - Those older folks aren't just arbitrarily choosing young-people-stuff to hate.
And, as others have mentioned, you will find this throughout human history. You can read letters from ancient Greeks written thousands of years ago where the writer is criticizing the behavior of young people. I can recall an ancient Roman exchange where the writer, and I can't recall their name, was criticizing the behavior of young people, as a group, and how they "refuse to honor the gods."
Young people push boundaries and limits in their search to define themselves. This is true from toddlerhood onwards. They search for meaningful peer groups and will go to extreme lengths to maintain social affirmation. They see all older adults as authority figures, whether or not they treat them as such in practice, and often "rebel" against authority figures in their lives in their attempts to define themselves and their status or place in society. And, that's often based on values they have come to feel closely associated with, regardless that older authority figures don't recognize those values as desirable or even rational. And, young person do all of this with incomplete knowledge. It's not that anyone has complete knowledge, but they often have limited understanding of "the adult world" and more mature interactions the adults in their world have with the systems they are currently rebelling against. (Those rebelling against the electric company for using coal-fired plants may not have experienced not having hot water or having to pay rising costs for it for years.)
And..
Older people like stability if they feel well-served by that. Older people feel threatened by instability because they have a more matured, practical, understanding of what its extremes could cause - They are risk-adverse. Older people are just plain naturally inclined to be "risk adverse." (They often have young to protect, after all.) Young people are not risk-adverse by simple, plain, physiology and a lack of brain maturity. (Note: I forgot to credit "tiny e" for bringing that up in a thread, which was a particularly cogent point there. Kudos.) That immaturity can, however, serve society as a whole - They might be the ones to discover a "better way" to hunt gazelle. Or, they'll get eaten by lions, confirming risks...
An older person sees younger persons rebelling against the norms that they believe have at least served to bring them some measure of stability. A younger person rebels against those norms nearly instinctively, with little regard to "risks" since they don't likely have much experience with such consequences and seeking those limits is part of what they "do."
Those things that have come to symbolize "the boundary-seeking behavior of young people" as a group, be they "values" or "music" or "Pokemans Cards," are not necessarily disliked by older persons due to some intrinsic nature of them, but simply because of their association with the instability presented by them and their association with the group who's natural purpose is to push boundaries and sometimes promote instability.
Also, keep something in mind - Old people were once young people. They are capable of introspection and memory. They remember their own pasts... That means they, too, remember their own period of social instability and the need to define themselves and the lengths they, themselves, went to in order to achieve that goal. They remember their embarrassments and their own disruptive behavior, too. They see their own past with a more informed eye, given their now-accumulated experience. Whether or not they recognize that adolescent behavior for what it is in a current younger population is up to the individual - You will always find some number of credulous old people complaining about kids walking on the grass in their yard. :)
if you are talking about games and the lack of freedom, you don't even need an answer
if you are talking about the current generation of squeakers losing their squeaking , you don't don't even need an answer, but them... they ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ need to become null
I want to go back to the days of when a copper would slap you across the face for being rude, where teachers could throw a kid across the room without fear, a time you wage could support your family... but hey, clocks will forever move forward.
This sounds like some obscure sport of the olden times.
Late 90's close I got were random teachers slapping people ala Gibbs
Early 90's our art teacher would just go full Mr Spock rape nerve pinch move against our shoulders
Back in the UK in the 1980's. I can remember my ears being pulled, blackboard erasers and books being throw at us, some teachers grabbing kids harshly and dragging them. Different times back then. Was it allowed ? maybe not but it happen at my school.