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Scott Morcott's avatar

Thank you for this important work Mr. Brooks. A comment I continue to hear from young people is a lament that they will be “the first generation to have less than their parents”. I really struggle advising about this concern as objectively my children’s lives, to this point, have seemed charmed. My understanding of their primary concerns hover around the following: housing affordability, student debt, healthcare costs, AI & robotics stealing their future and potentially destroying the world. While I agree those are significant problems & heavy concerns my worry is the attitude with which this generation seems to confront these challenges. It seems to be full of resentment, anger & fear and a certain apathy due to a perceived forgone conclusion that they are all “screwed”. Writing about a historical perspective of how other generations confronted big problems and overcame them with grit and determination rather than blame and quitting would be amazing. How do we help them to be hopeful & empowered? How do we help them lean into their faith that speaks of the inherent dignity and value of humans that can never be replaced by a robot? How do we help them find happiness in a world trying to disempower them? What a blessing you have to be a strong, encouraging voice engaged in this conversation. Press On.

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Vladimir Itkin's avatar

Arthur, you use the word "renaissance" to describe what we need, and you use the word "pandemic" to describe that we are all unhappy. Both words imply that the people were much happier many years ago. But were they? Maybe the average level of happiness was always the same, varying greatly person-to-person.

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