by delphi319 » Sun 24 Jul 2005, 12:54:22
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Wildwell', 'I') know quite a few people in the 18-25 age group and they are all open to the possibilities. The most difficult group to deal with are the 45-65 year old age group – although by no means exclusively so. The latter group were brought up at the beginning of the oil age...
I'm not sure I agree with the assumption that the younger generation is perhaps more open to possibilities. I'm 27 and I've tried to mention peak oil and resource scarcity to many people in the 18-30 age group. All but 1 out of 50 have basically said I was nuts, that oil would be replaced with technology, that the world will keep growing indefinitely, etc. The Gen X and Y-ers have been spoiled by the computer age, thinking somehow that life evolves around computers, XBox, iPod, CD players, DVDs, 3D movies, video games, etc. It's no wonder why the health of the newer generations is so poor. They don't eat or exercise properly, and have this delusion that computers will solve everything.
I also agree that the baby-boomers are stubborn to this idea, seeing how they saw technology evolve the past 40-60 years, but I think they are also not quite as dependent on this notion that technology is the be-all, end-all solution to the world's problems.