There’s been a lot of hoopla over this CBS News report on the rise of the Millennials in the workforce. I think some of it is just flat out nonsense, written to create controversial talking points and stir up media hype, but some of it warrants closer attention.
I’m 24, going on 25 next month, so I’m right in the bullseye for this topic. It’s interesting to read this report, as some of it I can certainly identify with. I was homeschooled by caring parents who instilled in me a healthy sense of self-worth, and I’ve basically been working since my pre-teen years. Seriously. I have done freelance Web development and graphics design, performed music, and made real cash for years already. I haven’t even gone to college, yet I own my own home. It’s definitely a strange new world from the one my parents inhabited.
The key question is whether all this opportunity, skill development, technological prowess, and self-esteem translates to having a genuine impact on the world or simply produces a bunch of selfish brats. Thankfully, my parents always challenged me to pursue what is noble and excellent and not settle for personal indulgence and trite fluff. Believe me, if I started to act like a hotheaded jerk, I definitely knew about it.
But I can see how us kids growing up on video games, iPods, wads of credit cards, and a doting parenting style end up thinking so highly of ourselves that we think the world owes us a living and how dare anyone expect us to tow the line and prove we got what it takes. And as for submitting to any kind of authority, ha! It’s a YouTube world now. Everyone is a celebrity, and we got it all figured out.
But what if the Millenials have a point? The “adults” don’t have it all figured out. Our world is on the verge of economic, spiritual, and governmental collapse because of failed institutions that were unable to live up to their expected potential. And whose job is it going to be to fix all of this? Us. We’re starting to become the next generation of leadership. We’re now beginning to launch the companies, the churches, the creative culture, and the policies which will dominate the first half of the 21st century. We’re moving forward so fast with our new technological, decentralized, equalized vision of the world that our mindset is completely different from those people 15-20 years older. They’re comfortable with e-mail. We’re on Facebook, AIM, Twitter, Digg, and bunch of other sites I can’t even keep track of (scary, isn’t it?). Heck, we’re inventing whole new planets in places like Second Life.
I don’t claim to know what the future holds, but one thing is for certain: Millennials are not impressed with the dregs of the 20th Century. It’s a bold new world out there, and we’re going to reinvent everything from the ground up. No stone will be left unturned, and why should it? The adults screwed up, right?
Except soon we’ll be the adults…and we’ll have kids…and thus the cycle repeats itself all over again….

2 Comments
Well said. I really do think it’s a cycle. Each generation thinks the other had it all wrong. I think that we would all be wise to not condemn the “Millennials” as being defective for their character, but accept it as different.
I’m 28 so I’m a little older than you but I too was working as soon as I could push a lawnmower. And when I got my drivers license I worked at a grocery store. Anyway, great article.
I’m glad you managed to wade through through my fog of opposing viewpoints! It was one of the strangest posts I’ve ever written — probably due to my upbringing as I’ve always straddled the fence between youth and maturity…. weird stuff.