Yes.
I feel like i got older, faster, than anyone i've ever met (unless my memory is failing...).
This is clearly Obama's fault.
Internet..
allows one to see the world in a compressed informational format..
we cease to find nuance in experience.. due to the large amount of patterning our brain's been subjected to.
I could be wrong about this.... and the internet has broken my brain..
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It's broken all of our brains. While in class I see about 10 people looking for the answer on Google, while I'm the only one using a fr**cking textbook. We all know that anything is at out fingertips. I can't even begin to imagine what it was like for you when you were a child. No internet? I would insane. Quite frankly, I think we're all screwed. Americans are becoming too lazy to do anything on their own. It's already been shown by the our cars. EVERYONE DRIVES AUTOMATIC! Do you know how hard it is to find a manual? It's nearly impossible. It's not only the internet though, it's what society has made acceptable for teens to where and what to buy. 14 year olds look like they're 18.... This is truly pathetic and I really feel bad for the U.S.
I fail to see how driving an automatic car is representative of laziness. At least, in a way that carries negative connotations. If that's the argument you're making then you must be against pretty much all technological improvement simply because it makes our lives easier. And for some reason you've arbitrarily chosen a point just before the 1930s or so as the "neutral" point for vehicles. Why not say we're lazy for using cars at all, automatic or manual?
I get the point you're trying to make, but I do find it rather goofy to criticize people for making their lives easier.
Ah I see now. Well I understand that. But is it really that much harder to learn the manual? Same way that the U.S. and 2 other countries use the imperial system? Why not go to metric?
It's not much harder, no. But people don't see the need. I personally learned to drive manual because I wanted to have more fun driving. For some reason, most people don't see manual cars as a benefit. I think (and I'm speculating at this point) that driving is a more long-distance chore-type activity for most Americans, compared to a more close-knit European society where they either drive shorter distances or do more driving percentage-wise for fun. Could be totally off on that though, so feel free to correct me. :)
As for the metric issue, I think that's just people being stubborn. I'm a huge fan of metric, but it's not a part of my daily life, so I still struggle with knowing off the top of my head how the measurements relate to my every day life. I know that ~22C is room temperature, 1 metre is almost the same as 1 yard, and I can approximate 1 cm decently well (at least as well as I can approximate an inch). But I would still require a fair amount of time to transition over and be able to use it daily without converting between things in my head to get a usable relate-able figure to compare to. And I know for many others it would be even worse because they've never used the metric system (I use it regularly in school).
I'm all for switching to metric. It would be a non-trivial transition, but I think it would benefit us in the long run. But there are so many hurdles to getting that accomplished (infrastructure, industry, education), I think it would take quite some time.