by WildRose » Fri 19 Sep 2014, 19:07:42
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Timo', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', 'I') am curious to hear any feedback on one point of my last post. Do any of you see the possibility that the immediate generations to follow who will go through some severe consequences of constraints might well implement, out of necessity, some strong regulations regarding consumption for the greater good. Preserving a "free market" perhaps but the "freedom" part held within some real strict boundaries justified by preserving the commons; air, soil, biodiversity, resources. Is this wishful thinking?
Yes, with some caveats. Millenials in the US are about as far removed from Boomers as you can get. They're the anti-boomers. They're what the Xers wanted to be, but were too lazy to actually go full throttle and fulfill. Millenials are far less likely to have a car, and are much more likley to live in urban centers where everything necessary for living is within walking distance. Millenials do with a smartphone what boomers do with a car. Millenials are much more likely to start an urban garden regardless of whether or not that's even legal to do in an urbanized area. They intrinsicly know what's right and what's wrong, and they don't care what official policies are that keep them from doing what they know to be right. They go ahead and do it, and thumb their noses at the boomers who run the government.
The caveat is that this description of millenials is unique to the US and Europe, maybe to Oz and Kiwiland, too. In the 3rd world, though, i have no idea. I imagine that overall living conditions are still a bit too hard to afford the lifestyle of a 1st world millenial. I could be wrong, though. Let's hope.
What's happening in Canada is that our population growth is mainly coming from immigration, with those families from countries in the Middle East, Africa, Asia, etc. settling in the cities, of course, following the jobs. From what I can see, there is more of a likelihood that consumerism will grow by leaps and bounds as our cities grow because there is the desire to have it all, being in this first world country. I think that if initiatives will come for constraints and more urban gardens, it will be from the kids whose parents and grandparents have been here a long time and are tiring of the consumerism. Otherwise, it's full speed ahead with the pipelines and the shop-til-you-drop.