My big complaint with Prof. Glaude is his take on just how hard this generation has it. Harder than anyone. Oh my, those poor students who were suffering without food for a few hours after they took Hamilton Hall. I contrast that with my mother and grandmother’s stories of having to take their rations cards to buy the everyday staples of…
My big complaint with Prof. Glaude is his take on just how hard this generation has it. Harder than anyone. Oh my, those poor students who were suffering without food for a few hours after they took Hamilton Hall. I contrast that with my mother and grandmother’s stories of having to take their rations cards to buy the everyday staples of life during WWll and had to go without many times. Or the fear of young Jews, the ages of these students, living in Europe and being round up for extermination. I mean is he for real on that subject of todays student’s sufferings?
Agree, I don’t want to minimize the pandemic, but it’s hard not to feel like kids might feel better if they just put their phone down. Beaming a curated feed of nonsense and disasters into your face 24/7 can’t be good for you. There’s also such an emphasis on a sort of pop psychology online, especially around trauma, that you wonder if people are allowing themselves to be defined by perceived harm instead of learning to manage it.
My big complaint with Prof. Glaude is his take on just how hard this generation has it. Harder than anyone. Oh my, those poor students who were suffering without food for a few hours after they took Hamilton Hall. I contrast that with my mother and grandmother’s stories of having to take their rations cards to buy the everyday staples of life during WWll and had to go without many times. Or the fear of young Jews, the ages of these students, living in Europe and being round up for extermination. I mean is he for real on that subject of todays student’s sufferings?
Agree, I don’t want to minimize the pandemic, but it’s hard not to feel like kids might feel better if they just put their phone down. Beaming a curated feed of nonsense and disasters into your face 24/7 can’t be good for you. There’s also such an emphasis on a sort of pop psychology online, especially around trauma, that you wonder if people are allowing themselves to be defined by perceived harm instead of learning to manage it.