[Video] Mother VERY Disgruntled her Children Can't Pet a Service Dog
17 replies, posted
https://www.facebook.com/megstoff/posts/10156779390993516
Context is all in the description. That's some crazy sense of entitlement.
Society is dying
Brainless idiot that is going to raise a child that either hates her or becomes a total asshole
I fear that the next generation will have a worse sense of entitlement.
"Learn respect."
It amazes me how easily the irony can be lost on people like this...
No
absolutely wild that there are people out there who need some sort of higher reason to not feel entitled to touching other people's dogs. is wearing a hat indoors the new "let me speak to your manager" hairdo?
Let's see her approach a highly trained guard dog on an unknown persons lawn and try to touch it - no reason to back away when it starts being aggressive or barking at her either because the owner clearly didn't exclaim that it's a guard dog, what could go wrong.
What was with that hugging in the end though.
I assumed it's an emotional support dog.
It's brilliant how she tries to defend herself with "There should be a sign" and it shows the dog completely covered in signs.
I think she needs a new prescription on those glasses.
You can't get worse than the generation currently in power
This is the kind of thick bitch that wonders why she cannot allow her own dogs and children to chase sheep.
You mean the generation crippled by student debt, unlivable rent and laughable wages? The generation dealing with the fucking planet becoming uninhabitable and the return of fascism? That generation is gonna be entitled somehow?
Gimme a break, boomers are entilted because they were middle class suburbanites who never had to worry about their costs of living riding off the coattails of a social democrat economy of ww2.
But please tell me again about how we are "Entitled" somehow, Im sure it will be some bullshit about participation trophies right? Even though those came from our parents not us.
Oh neat, this is local to me:
Service dog video from Ross Park Mall goes viral
I feel like my post is conveying the wrong message here so let me clarify what I actually mean seeing as I have apparently struck a nerve here. I am primary talking about children born circa 2008 and on. We have people growing up now these days where they can get what ever they want relatively quickly. Entertainment, information, food, merchandise, almost what ever you can think of can be delivered right to you with in seconds or just 2 days with out even having to leave the comfort of your own home. This is something that, relatively speaking, is new to the world. This helps amplify the sense of instant gratification in a person because when you grow up with this you expect it everywhere. And to add to the fact that tablet parenting and pushover parents are becoming somewhat of the norm you have kids growing up expecting their every beck and call to be fulfilled and quick. A great example is the mother in this very video, imagine how that kid is going to turn out. Now this isn't me saying grrr technology is bad and is running our children I am just trying to highlight the unique situation the newer generations and their parents are going to have to face when it comes to instant gratification and entitlement. I have oversimplified my explanation as its a complex topic with many variables that could be discussed for hours. My point has nothing to do with "you millennial feel like you're entitled to everything and the boomers are gods" as I am one myself and I definitely agree with all of the things you blasted me for. I apologies for any misunderstanding I may have caused and hope this clears up any confusion.
Fair enough, I was quite overzealous and the points you made are quite possible.
I would personally be quite interested in how well these kids attention spans are.
I was born in 2000, im 18 in a few days. I used to be an avid reader all throughout middle and elementary school. However with my phone, FP, Reddit, youtube etc I cannot even pick up a book anymore or read articles or watch movies more than a few minutes without a concentrated effort to pay attention. The reason I suspect is the nature of my time spent on my phone, the instant gratification as you put it is overwhelming.
These kids might have trouble sitting down and doing a task, as I already do.
This is why I'm glad I never owned a phone until I was 18.
I never feel compelled to use it except for when it's practical. I probably use my phone, on average, for 5 minutes a day (if I'm travelling I might listen to a podcast on it though). It also helps that I'm on a plan that sucks my credit dry if I use the mobile data, so it's not worth whipping it out every five minutes to scroll through twitter or something of that nature.
It's kind of hard for me to understand what people mean when they say they cannot imagine what it would be like not having a phone. But I think the thing is that if you've had these things from a younger age, it's much easier to grow a dependency on them which is probably unhealthy. Especially when a lot of the apps on them are engineered with the intent to steal and hold your attention for as long as possible, and you never feel good after scrolling through Facebook, you always feel as if you've had a bunch of time that you'll never get back stolen from you.
And I'm by no means perfect. I have trouble getting off of YouTube because of the fucking recommended videos prompting me to keep watching. I don't know, sometimes you've really just got to shut everything off and spend some time away from it to reevaluate things.
Sorry, you need to Log In to post a reply to this thread.