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Thu 25 Feb, 2010 07:06 pm
@Amigo,
Why not asshole? Do you even have a real job ?
I used to hear Gen-Y and Millenials described as two different groups. Gen-Y used to be used to describe the transitional generation from Gen-X to the Millenials.
This is my gen.
K
O
@Amigo,
LOL. Sure. Pick a reason. Which one did you have in mind?
T
K
O
@Diest TKO,
crappy air, shitty pay, can't go camping that often.
@Diest TKO,
in my own way I tried. I'm sorry everything is so fucked up.
Heres the torch. good luck.
P.S. Neitzches an asshole.
@Amigo,
80 million baby boomers will be leaving the workforce in the next ten years. There should be plenty of jobs for the educated to acquire.
@Philis,
Philis wrote:
80 million baby boomers will be leaving the workforce in the next ten years. There should be plenty of jobs for the educated to acquire.
Are they going to vote to pay for nursing homes?
@Amigo,
Do chickens vote for Colonel Sanders?
@roger,
no
but i bet he is why they cross the street
Gen y
Y did people keep reproducing after x
A woman of my acquaintance, who would be described as a member of "generation X" used to get irate when people would say "gen exers," because she had actually read the book, and it wasn't "generation X" in the sense of the letter "x," but rather, in the sense of the Roman numeral, it meant "generation ten," i.e. the tenth generation born in the United States. I never said it to her, but i knew she was swimming against the tide. People just pick up buzz words and run with them, as opposed to actually reading books. I didn't read the book, but then, i'm from the baby boom.
hmm
i thought it was kind of common knowledge
x=10
wow
@shewolfnm,
I'd suggest to you that Roman numerals are no longer common knowledge at all . . .
The name doesn't really have to mean anything... I mean, my grandparents are great, but it's not because they were from the "greatest generation."
Ten
K
Or "ex" makes no real difference.
generation y?
i'm from generation because, that's y