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Irreplaceable-Spark

@irreplaceable-spark / irreplaceable-spark.tumblr.com

"I swear by my life and my love of it that I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine."
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The Vanishing American Adult

Senator Benjamin Sasse joins Peter Robinson to discuss his book The Vanishing American Adult and the growing crisis in America of prolonged adolescence. Senator Sasse argues that children are growing up, entering adolescence, and becoming stuck in the transitional stage to adulthood as they fail to become financially independent from their parents. He argues that because this generation of children is growing up during a time of relative peace and prosperity, it has allowed millennials to grow up without the issues of previous generations that were raised in war time. In this era of consumption and material surplus, he argues that adolescents are leading age-segregated lives and not developing a work ethic and that both their parents have an obligation to teach their children to grow up. Furthermore, he stresses the importance of intergenerational learning by allowing children to be raised around their grandparents and other adults to help them learn that the trivial trials of youth don’t matter in the long run. 

Senator Sasse believes that there are certain virtues that American children have to learn to become productive and happy adults. Part of that is by teaching children the distinction between production and consumption and how to find happiness and self-worth through jobs that make one feel like a necessary part of the company/society. This, he argues, will help raise peoples’ self-worth and lead them to happiness and fulfillment in their everyday. 

 Senator Sasse finishes by stressing the importance of building children’s identities as readers to help foster the growth of ideas and active learning over the passive activities of sitting in front of screens. He notes that sedentary life is not fulfilling and that by encouraging people to participate in production over consumption will lead to more fulfilling lives. He ends on the optimistic note, that while our youth may still need guidance, overall America’s best days still lie ahead.

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Judge could shut down Uber, Lyft in Tampa

Here we go again. Another local government bureaucracy is doing its dead-level best to squeeze Uber and Lyft out of the marketplace. This time it’s for your “safety.”

From WTSP:

Drivers for Uber could be arrested if the company loses in a Tampa courtroom and the company, which lets you use a smartphone app to hire a driver, may have to shut down in Hillsborough County.
Friday, a faceoff between Uber and traditional taxis was about your safety and the future of how we get around in Tampa Bay. But, it could take weeks until a decision is made.
Millions of people around the country are using ridesharing companies like Uber and Lyft, but that could end in Hillsborough, depending on what Judge Paul Huey decides.
…Customers who like Uber often say it’s cheaper and more convenient than a traditional taxi. But Uber is not as safe as a traditional taxi, the agency that regulates taxis in Hillsborough says, and that’s why they’re hauling Uber into court.
That agency, the Public Transportation Commission, is suing Uber. The PTC wants a judge to order Uber to meet tougher safety standards – the ones taxis have to follow:
  • More thorough background checks for drivers
  • Mechanical inspections on their vehicles
  • More broad commercial insurance in case there’s a crash
In court, the judge could rule that Uber is not a taxi service – that it’s actually a different, new kind of business – so it cannot be regulated by the county’s taxi agency.

Did you catch that? It’s technically not even the taxi companies that are suing. It’s the government agency responsible for regulating taxis. But I digress….

Is anyone actually naive enough to think that this lawsuit is about safety? If so, I have some land to sell you.

Here’s what it boils down to. Taxi companies and the government bureaucrats responsible for regulating them really don’t like Uber and Lyft. And why should they? No doubt Taxi revenue is way down since rideshare popularity exploded. But that’s not a good enough reason to bring a lawsuit. Just as Burger King can’t sue McDonald’s because they have yummy fries, a taxi company can’t sue Uber because it’s better.

So they have to contrive an ostensible reason for a lawsuit. In this case, they’ve chosen the ever-nebulous, old catch-all, “public safety.” The great thing about that particular term is that it can really mean anything the government wants it to mean and since everyone wants to be (or at least feel) “safe”, public safety laws are generally rather popular. After all, other than councilman Jamm, who’s really against public safety?

But it’s all a distracting strawman. Not only does everyone want the public to be safe, but as I stated earlier, it’s not even the reason for the lawsuit.

Look, I get it. The Taxi companies don’t want to go out of business. That’s fine. Who does? But propping up failing industries by regulating competing companies out of business is not the right way to do it. It’s not only unethical, but it stifles innovation.

And besides all of this, the real reason it would be a travesty to criminalize ridesharing is that it would be yet another massive blow to liberty. When I open up the Uber or Lyft app and book a ride, I am making a personal and private contract with someone else. The terms of this private contract, made by two, consenting individuals, is none of the government’s freaking business.

Exit thought: I truly hope that this will be a great object lesson for millennials on how government overreach stifles creativity and innovation and makes our lives worse as a result.

^^^^^^^

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« Generation Wuss » by Bret Easton Ellis

I would read this article with a grain of salt, for the writer is clearly saying some stuff just to promote himself. However, it does give a completely accurate assessment of the Millennials and properly names them "Generation Wuss." I think his points on the neediness and over-sensitivity of this generation are completely spot on, especially when he notes that childhood upbringing of everyone getting a ribbon or trophy (which is something I always hated). 

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