Hey Backstop,
Very astute assumptions there.
Now, as for drugs, I don't disagree with your observation of drugs of choice, however, you 've left out alchohol, which was always our "drug" of choice, maybe a little pot for some. I remember some weekends drinking downstairs in our parent's basements, just a few 6 packs, for kicks, most kids I knew didn't do more beyond that. In college, you either drank on weekends, or studied/worked. I did the latter.
Regarding changes in drug useage, the biggest difference are in prescription drugs like Ritalin, whose use has been 100 to 1000 times more for this generation of kids.
Also, you must look at differences and changes in demographics. There was not the amount of people of Hispanic persuasion in our North American culture by any means. The proportion now is about 10 to 20 percent larger, and that maybe conservative in certain areas, I know here in Chicago, whole communities have been taken over by Hispanic marketing. There is a new demographic to market to.
There is a growing Middle-Eastern and Indian demographic not far behind.
Also, there are FAR fewer manufacturing jobs. This has a lot of implications for the future..I know many of our younger workers wonder how they are going to pay off those college loans. We never worried about getting a job back then, it seemed that if something didn't work out, you could always get a job "at the factory", or "in construction", that one or two of your friends may have ended up at.
The younger people also are used to having somewhat more material goods/toys/lifestyle than we were used to. We were lucky to get an older car when out of high school,and we were happy with that, as I recall! (remember the term "Rustbuckets"?)
We didn't have to "be" in touch with data planners, cell phones, blackberries, etc., all that electronic junk that clutters up your life. However much I love the internet, I still think that there is something to be said about going to the library to do research.
Sometimes I miss that simple life.
I would say this..if my parents had issues about gas shortages, etc. they NEVER let on to us. We were sheltered from much of that, but not unaware. We weren't raised to think we had "no future".
We figured when we went to school, that it was "our job" to be there to learn ways to make our own future better, and if we didn't succeed, then it was our own damn fault, because no one was going to be there to make it better for us.
I figure every generation has to figure this out for themselves. We just had disco balls around us while we were doing that.
