Posted on 05/09/2002 11:18:15 AM PDT by LibertyGirl77
A decade ago, I never thought I would be
Twenty-three
On the verge of spontaneous combustion
Woe is me
But I guess that it comes with the territory
An ominous landscape of never-ending calamity.
I need you to hear, I need you to see
That I have had all I can take
And exploding seems like a definite possibility to me
So pardon me while I burst into flames.
I've had enough of the world, and its people's mindless games
So pardon me while I burn, and rise above the flame
Pardon me, pardon me. I'll never be the same.
(Incubus, "Pardon Me")
Well, the guys down at the FBI caught the Pipe Bomber, and wouldn't you know ithe's a 21-year-old rockstar-wannabe. After authorities trailed him across several states following a rash of mailbox-bombing incidents, Lucas John Helder surrendered Tuesday on a desolate stretch of I-80 in rural Nevada.
Lately, I have been pondering just what, exactly, my generation is so angry about. I am also twenty-one, born within months of both Lucas Helder (confessed pipe bomber) and John Walker Lindh (American Taliban). We are among the firstborn of a generation that counts the school shooters, the murderous 'prom mom', and Britney Spears (come on, you know she's just as much a crime against humanity) among our number.
A quick spin of the radio dial reveals angry, bitter lyrics set to driving beats on the most popular music stations. Suicide, physical violence and depraved sexuality are common themes in media aimed at the twelve-to-twenty set. One chart-topping song by Christian group P.O.D., entitled "Youth of a Nation," chronicles all of these abjectly depressing topics in under four minutes.
The surprising thing about all the angry pop culture is what it's angry about. America's youth seem to be searching for something; something they're not finding from their parents, school or society. If you listen closely...it sounds like they're searching for spirituality.
Sadly, they are missing the mark. Lucas Helder (the pipe bomber), left a rambling message signed, "Someone Who Cares." The contrived, vague letter alludes to an afterlife for those the bomber supposedly "dismissed from this reality," but mostly just reads like a hodge-podge of different paranoid and/or anarchist ideologies he compiled by watching CNN. Helder followed up with a letter sent to the University of Wisconsin newspaper. Alongside even more convoluted, pseudo-spiritual babble (the most coherent portion of the lengthy screed is a section canonizing marijuana), Helder declares, "I will die/change in the end for this, but that's ok, hahaha paradise awaits!" Some paradisea 12x12 cell with an overly friendly roommate and nowhere to hide? Perhaps Mr. Helder should reevaluate his theology.
Another failed spiritual seeker, John Walker Lindh, left tony Marin County, Ca. as a teen to travel the middle-east in pursuit of 'true' Islam. His search eventually led him to a band of roving terrorist thugs (they call themselves the Taliban), from whom he learned to use machine guns and other weapons against his American peers when they arrived to eliminate the terrorists. Today, he faces life imprisonment for conspiring to kill his fellow Americans.
How can we expect this generation to find true spirituality if no one is willing to provide leadership? We are a generation that grew up in homes where most parents were ambivalent about religionor just weren't there at all. They were out worshipping the gods of money and prestige, and never realized just how badly they were neglecting their children's fundamental needs.
Proverbs 22:6 says, "Train up a child in the way he should go, even when he is old he will not depart from it." There is an entire nation of young people coming into adulthood today who have had no spiritual training whatsoever. The only things many of us have known in our lifetimes are unchecked consumerism, self-centeredness and instant physical gratification (if it feels good, do it). As young adults, it seems we are collectively rejecting this false value system, but what are we going to replace it with?
Spiritual beliefs and value systems are arguably the biggest factors in a culture's ultimate success or failure. Even a cursory glance through a history book will reveal the principal catalyst for nearly every major cultural development, good and badand it's not the hollow materialism of the late 20th century.
We face a precarious moment, as these spiritual 'blank slates' take their first steps into the adult world. What is written on those slatesand in tomorrow's history booksis up to all of us.
If all these brats hadn't suddenly been empowered by lawyers and had their butts beaten once in awhile when they were growing up things might not have been the same for them.
What in the hell do YOU propose to use to pay for food and shelter???
Sounds like someone has had a little too much whine with their cheese.
Most of us in our 40's had parents that worked. We worked in school and then went to work. We did not have time to be crybaby freaks, killing others because we are "sad".
Eaker
Who knows, I guess I'm just along for the ride..........
On top of all that, our constant complaints about the world in which we live (despite the fact that we enjoy the highest standard of living in the history of mankind) leads many rational kids to conclude that humanity is nothing more than a pain in the @ss.
I love em!
Certainly the kids I teach have well more intelligengce than I did at their age.
Of course , it is a double whammy.
I had more freedom.
If you can easily afford it WITHOUT sacrificing quality time together, then go for it. But no one should be sacrificing the emotional and spiritual needs of their family in order to compete for status and prestige. It's wrong...and it's what many, many Boomer parents did to us late-Gen-Xers and millennials.
Churchs failing their mission.
The rise of secular humanism.
Creeping socialism.
The young people should start decorating the nursing homes in 60's motifs, complete with all the hippie paraphernalia, black lights and Iron Butterfly elevator music for the ageing boomers. It would be one small way to get us back for the mess we've left you..
PS: Read the WHOLE post, think about it and then respond.
Eaker
It's even better than that, if "better" is the right word for it. Today's 20-40 year-olds are going to be the first generation of Americans who will have no qualms about killing their parents off when it starts to cost too much money to keep them alive.
LOL
And as for this latest fool and his multi-state "Time-For-Your-Ritalin-Tour", if he wants attention, I'm sure he'll get plenty as someone's prison-bitch for the next 15 years.
Once when I was 15 during an argument with my parents, I thought to myself...."ok, you're calling the shots now, but I'm going to be the one deciding how nice of a nursing home you end up in." Looking back now, that seems sadly prophetic. The one thing about having boomers for parents is that I will probably have to do that at about the same time that I'm putting my kid through college. I really don't want to make it to 70 if I end up with a shrew for a wife and kids that would kill me in my sleep for the life insurance (be careful with getting too much life insurance. It's never a good idea to be worth more to somebody dead than alive).
My generation is doing pretty good compared to your generation. At least, for the most part, we don't start riots, preach socialism and hate/screw-over the next generation.
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