• AI rights.

    I’ll say something like “I don’t see why a fancy python script should be allowed to vote” and the youth will be like “that’s so fucked up in so many ways”. “My best friend is an AI why are you so prejudiced”.

  • Worrying about online privacy. Kids will accept that online privacy simply does not exist. They’ll have the mindset that OF COURSE the government/corporations spy on us, and people who are concerned about it are quaint, clueless, and exasperating.

  • I’m of the generation which has kids old enough to talk.

    They are exasperated that we use computer mice.

    They are angry that the environment is still being destroyed even though grown ups know better.

    Not sure what will embarrass them when they’re older - at the moment it’s our clothes, shoes, music, and slang.

    • I try to emphasize this point to people who are dispairing over the current political climate. Public opinion towards gay people also had a backlash when we demanded rights. Many countries have moved beyond that fairly quickly. I am still not dropping by Uganda anytime soon, but at least I feel fairly safe in my own country.

      Transphobia is much less prevalent in the younger generations, just like homophobia. It will literally die out.

      • But…like…aren’t we still dealing with homophobia from the olds? It definitely died down and has morphed into mostly transphobia now, but it’s not like everyone is cool with it these days.

        •  pingveno   ( @pingveno@lemmy.ml ) 
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          73 months ago

          Sure, and it will be a factor for a long time. But it should be considered in comparison with similar historical processes. Think civil rights for Black people in the US. I’ll pluck a few dates:

          • First slaver ship, 1619
          • Abolitionist movement starting in 1688
          • Dred Scott decision 1857
          • American Civil War 1861-1865
          • Jim Crow laws beginning in 1870’s
          • Plessy v. Ferguson, 1896
          • Brown v. Board, 1954
          • Montgomery bus boycott, 1955
          • Voting Rights Act of 1965
          • Crack epidemic and subsequent mass incarceration, 1980’s and 1990’s
          • George Floyd murder, 2020

          And after all that time, Black people are still disadvantaged as a whole relative to white people. Compare that to the modern LGBTQ movement. The modern movement really began in earnest with the Stonewall riots in 1969, but it has roots dating back to Berlin in 1897. Gallup has poll numbers going back to 1977 for various questions. Around 70% of Americans believe same sex marriage should be allowed. Attitudes towards equal job opportunities are nearly unanimous in favor, 95%. That said, it’s notable that most of these questions are about policy, so they may treat gay people poorly in their personal life. So whether you’re measuring by Stonewall or by Berlin in 1897, progress has been relatively rapid. Not that it’s ever rapid enough for people suffering under oppression, but progress runs on a generous dose of hope.

  • There’s that Shen comic where Shen— a millennial— is trying to tell a zoomer that their house is on fire, but he keeps saying inane stuff like “there’s a smoky chonker”.

    I think that sums up our legacy pretty well.

  • They just transplanted a genetically human kidney grown in a pig into a human being. Pretty sure we’re only a few decades from being able to do a lot more.

    Remember that guy from ‘Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy’? The one with two heads? That’ll be common soon enough.