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  • The Gaslighting of the Millennial Generation

  • How to Succeed in a Society That Blames You for Everything Gone Wrong
  • By: Caitlin Fisher
  • Narrated by: Erica Sullivan
  • Length: 5 hrs and 3 mins
  • 3.5 out of 5 stars (14 ratings)

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The Gaslighting of the Millennial Generation

By: Caitlin Fisher
Narrated by: Erica Sullivan
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Summary

Millennials vs. all other generations: Everyone reads the headlines. Millennials aren’t buying diamonds or saving for retirement. Millennials want cushy jobs handed to them by organizations with futuristic nap pods. Millennials are killing the housing market because they eat too many avocados.

The truth is, millennials were raised being told they could do anything if they worked hard, and then they worked hard only to be told the world owes them nothing. Here’s a headline people need to read: Millennials were set up.

The strength of generational differences: The older generations begrudge so-called dependence on technology and social media, but this connection allows millennials to join together and adapt to new challenges faster than ever before. It allows people to plan massive socio-political movements at the drop of a hat, learn about new concepts and cultures, and understand more about ourselves and each other.

Social media and social awareness: Social media has spread the word about recognizing emotional abuse and its effects on mental health and behavior, inspiring younger generations to take back agency and power. For every injustice someone experiences, they can find someone else to say, “Me too. You are not alone.”

Millennials rising and revolting: The tide of young adults standing up for themselves is culminating in massive societal change. The Gaslighting of the Millennial Generation uncovers the misconceptions about millennials, examining not only their unique strengths but also the baggage they have inherited from Baby Boomers. It shows just how different millennials are from previous generations and why that’s a very good thing.

©2019 Caitlin Fisher (P)2019 Blackstone Publishing
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    2 out of 5 stars
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already outdated and highly opinionated

The author started off right and had an interesting setup, unfortunately, it quickly fizzles out into nothing more than righteous and highly opinionated ranting, with opinions already outdated about the housing market - to pick a glaringly obvious most people in the housing market would like to, but are struggling to buy because of sky-high prices and interest rates. Instead of examining all aspects of the current housing crisis and the various responses of millennials to it, the author chooses to rant about how it is actually better to rent than build equity. If she wanted to write a defining book for our generation, the author should have tackled all aspects and responses to them various crises impacting our generation, rather than talk as if she's defending her own (and therefore the only right) life choices to her aging parents.

DNF.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

Start of interesting then falls apart

The book and its premise starts of interesting and then falls apart, the second half of the book feels like filler, a mish-mash of self help, far left opinions (some of which are reasonable others a little ideologically cookie cutter) and diatribe. The book had a lot of promise if there was more good research in it (there is however some of that in this book and I would have liked to have seen more) and less partisan politicking, given that the author complains about the stereotyping of the millennial generation, but then stereotypes it herself into left to far left as if all milennials fill into that bracket. Don't get me wrong, I'm not a Conservative and believe civil rights are important, yet I still feel like the preaching here is uneccesary.

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