Trev-MUN wrote:
Wait, so if someone likes stuff that is recent over older things, they have ADD? If I happen to like, say, the very recent band Tally Hall over Nat King Cole from the 1920's, that means I have a short attention span?
No...I'm not saying you have to like the older stuff--I'm just saying that most people seem to act as if it doesn't even exist. They don't learn about it. And
when someone refers to Halo 2 as a "classic" video game (using "classic" in the connotative context that it's "something that's been around a long while"), it implies that they see history as if a week equaled a year.
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And are the concepts of innovation, progress, and technology all some sort of nation wide attention defecit disorder?
No, but my beef wasn't with innovation or progress, and little with technology. The only problem with technology is that there's so many new devices that people are trying to shove down our throats and get us to buy, as if it's a life or death situation if we don't have that latest iPod cover or XBox game. Yeah, technology is fine and dandy, and it helps improve our quality of life, but Americans seem to be too consumer-heavy. We HAVE to have every new little device. And yeah, Capitalism thrives on people trying to make their businesses grow and live on, which they do through mass commercialism...but I fear that we give in too easily. Maybe I'm just crazy or something--all I can say for certain is that something about the whole affair doesn't sit right with me.
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Anyway, that's a very general point, but major and drawn out international conflicts seem to bring out this edgy, angry quality in people in the U.S. The 1980's and 1990's, for the most part, didn't include such wars in which our armed forces were significantly deplyed into, or were so brief that it didn't work into the American public's psyche.
That may very well be a large contributing factor...as I said initially, I don't blame media for EVERYTHING--that'd be just silly. But you can't deny at least that there seems to have been a decline in quality in what the media has given us...which was a large part of my argument. And it's that gradual decline in quality which leads us as Americans to be accepting of less and less, to be amazed and awed by less and less.