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Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
He has been giving the employees (all under 30s) plenty of chances to rehabilitate and become producers with work ethic. He has been setting an example, working 60+ hr weeks and constantly putting out fires created by the young and inexperienced. This week the hammer falls on the worst including a project manager who repeatedly misses deadlines and comes in late.
This is a new definition for the term "generation gap". People now over 50 may have to work til 80 until the next generation (now pre-teens) matures and can take on productive work. The current generation has so little work ethic in spite of their so-called education (and related debt.)
Obviously there are exceptions as there have been in every generation;^)
As for "most people" (on Earth), I know that I have cited "Success of the WEIRD People." Western Educated Industrialized Rational Democratic people are not natural. Ten teams of anthropologists went around the world and gave people some basic college psychology tests on physical perception (optical illusions) and social behavior. As dangerous as it is to try to generalize our Paleolithic past from today's so-called "primitives" the fact is that here and now today, some hunters wait until everyone is asleep before they come home so that they do not have to share while in another tribe hunters come home boasting of their kills so that other people become beholden to them for food. Our social norms of personal production and sharing by trade are special to us.
I think that those social norms are at the room of our political rights, freedoms, and liberties.
It's not simple. There are people today who go to the financial aid office of a state college, borrow money with federal loans, and then complain later when the loans are hard to replay, "I did everything I was told." So we are far from some utopia of liberty. But I wonder how many people around the time of the Declaration of Independence would have felt like they had a duty follow their families' instructions, to provide care for ailing family members, to make up for original sin by submitting to God's will, to follow in their parents' career and life footsteps, and so on.
It feels like on the balance liberty is on the rise, but I don't know of the facts agree with that. I suspect many of those people at cookouts who could not follow the language of the Declaration of Independence agree completely with its tenor.
Solution?
Return to conventional education RRr, and efforts to write more clearly and when necessary more simply.
I actually kind of fancy that use of language...it sometimes creeps into my writings. I had a lot of trouble with that writing my first book.
Thanks to all the practice I get interacting with good writers here at the gulch.
That said, if you had to read such a document cold, not knowing it in advance, it would take a lot of learning to get it the first time. Aside from the ideas presented, the sentences are long and complicated.
That is just one reason why it is such a tribute to the people of the time. When they said that a commoner was "literate" they meant something in excess of what we understand by "educated."
To be fair, Many teachers I have talked to these days say they are forbidden from speaking of such things and they don't like it...but they do manage to encourage their students to read it and ask questions.
Accurate history is necessary to understand the sentiments behind the Declaration but it certainly doesn't require an undergraduate degree to understand it nor to read it.
One might say, there are many parallels experience these days with our current government.