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Wasn’t able to read the article but it doesn’t sound like they really addressed the insidious forms of ageism that impacts us directly or indirectly in the job market, health care for example. So often people have not experienced it think it boils down to perception and easily taking offense which sadly obscures a real problem. It’s the “it hasn’t ever happened to me and therefore it’s not a problem” syndrome.
but it doesn’t sound like they really addressed the insidious forms of ageism that impacts us directly or indirectly in the job market, health care for example. So often people have not experienced it think it boils down to perception and easily taking offense which sadly obscures a real problem.
Actually, I agree with you, but the thin skinned whiners
get all the attention, which is why many people need to
grow some thicker skin.
There are real problems in the real world, but most
of what people complain about isn't the problem.
(BTW, I am retired because, while there are some
jobs I could do, even with my disabilities, there are
none I could get hired for.)
Wasn’t able to read the article but it doesn’t sound like they really addressed the insidious forms of ageism that impacts us directly or indirectly in the job market, health care for example. So often people have not experienced it think it boils down to perception and easily taking offense which sadly obscures a real problem. It’s the “it hasn’t ever happened to me and therefore it’s not a problem” syndrome.
Ageism in Silicon Valley has been blatant.
Yes, but you’ve found people like Fluffy’s husband who is still working, until recently at least, at the ripe old age of 60something. My cousin who is just a software engineer in Silicon Valley is still working at age 65. Female to boot and old.
Actually, I agree with you, but the thin skinned whiners
get all the attention, which is why many people need to
grow some thicker skin.
There are real problems in the real world, but most
of what people complain about isn't the problem.
(BTW, I am retired because, while there are some
jobs I could do, even with my disabilities, there are
none I could get hired for.)
They better do or they will die sooner than their natural age.
My mother was a handicap almost her whole life. I never heard she complained about anything. I’m a sissy compared to her level of perseverance.
I think there is more to life than being offended by other people's rudeness.
We all know how we feel inside. Sometimes I feel pretty darned good, loving life, enjoying the beauty of nature.
But there are also days when I don't feel well, period.
The only time I can recall being bothered is coming out of eye surgery some chipper nurse kept referring to me in every sweet word she could think of. I reminded her what my name is and to remember it.
She didn't like it too much but then I didn't like what she was doing either.
In my experience the black balloon thing was for people on their 40th birthday.
In the 80s AARP realized that because the birth rate was low in the depression years there were fewer people to sign up for membership. They addressed that by proclaiming that 50 year-olds were seniors. The media ate it up and still do today. The depression and war 2 babies are the invisible generation.
As the boomers retire there is a generation gap growing in retirement communities. As their numbers increase the Boomers tend to take over and the "Invisible generation" is relegated to the fringe until they die off. The two groups commonly have many very different tastes.
The "Invisible generation" is largely non-existent to marketers and the media.
Yes, but you’ve found people like Fluffy’s husband who is still working, until recently at least, at the ripe old age of 60something. My cousin who is just a software engineer in Silicon Valley is still working at age 65. Female to boot and old.
Presenting a few examples don’t make up for the overall ageism in the tech industry.
“The median age of an American worker is 42. Yet at Facebook it's 29, Google 30, Apple 31, Amazon 30 and Microsoft 33, according to self-reported employee data collected by research firm PayScale last year. (It did not collect data this year.) Most job candidates at those companies are 25 to 34 years old, according to data collected by Glassdoor, a jobs and recruiting website.
As the population ages, discrimination in hiring and on the job is becoming more pronounced not only in Silicon Valley but in tech hubs throughout the U.S., where workers relocated from the San Francisco Bay Area to get a fresh start.”
Basically you’ve just played the “ I know some examples of older people in tech industry therefore it’s not really a problem” game .
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