Somehow "Have millennials killed X?" turned out to be a really good clickbait article format. I suspect that this is due to clickbait becoming widespread as millennials came of age. At this point it's just going on momentum.
Don't forget ageism. Older people love memes with "back in my day" in the headline that shows some perceived difference between when they were young and the youth of today. I have friends who sometimes share that stuff on their social media. When I jokingly called out a friend recently about his "back in my day" jokes, he didn't even realize he was indulging in ageism. I imagine most don't.
Is life expectancy dropping because millennials are dying? My understanding is that it's due largely to the opioid crisis, which mostly affects people in older generations.
The opioid crisis isn't limited to older generations, it's definitely impacting millenials as well[0]. The millenials that are most likely to be impacted just tend to be from more economically depressed areas.
My anecdata is that I know 4 people from my graduating class who are dead today because of opioids. I don't know what the rates are, but it definitely affects the young as well.
Depending on the source the millennial generation is usually considered to start around 1980-82, making them currently 36-38. Speaking only for myself (age 34) I've seen and heard about many people that I grew up with getting caught up in opioid addiction.
The first first, or the first since the prosperity boom in the middle of the 20th century? The generation that went through the Depression surely was worse off than their parents.
Great Depression was followed and preceded by extreme economic growth. So, they where still better off over time.
The depth of the depression the US per capita GDP only dropped to ~1920 levels. (Industrialization is a hell of a drug.) It recovered by the end of the depression and the 40's was a massive boom.
You really want a logarithmic scale to do these kind of comparisons over time. But even that misses the kind of structural changes that are really harming Millennials specifically.
Perhaps a system that is unsustainable long term is showing signs of strain? Maybe they really are victims relatively speaking. I don’t know. I don’t think it has to do with being snowflakes or otherwise lacking mettle.
Maybe because they have been preyed upon since birth by corporations, advertising, and media, shit on by the previous generations and perpetually viewed as children incapable of thinking and acting for themselves. "Maybe it's not the people that are sick... Maybe it's their environment." - Dave Chapelle
Do you have any specific evidence that the school system teaches that the victim mentality is the greatest ideal? From what I can tell this is a popular belief amongst some that is without support or a basis in fact.