Blogger of Jared

Fulfilling Scripture

Posted by Connor on January 25th, 2007

Scripture:

Behold, there are many called, but few are chosen. And why are they not chosen?
Because their hearts are set so much upon the things of this world, and aspire to the honors of men… (D&C 121:34-35)

Fulfillment:

Wealth is a top priority for youths

By Martha Irvine
Associated Press

CHICAGO — Melissa Greenwood sees it every day at her high school — the hyper-focus on designer labels, the must-have trendy cell phones, the classmates driving SUVs.
You could say it’s just teens being teens. But new polls show that the obsession with material things is growing — and that being rich is more important to today’s young people than in the past.
UCLA’s annual survey of college freshman, released last Friday, found that nearly three-quarters of those surveyed in 2006 thought it was essential or very important to be “very well-off financially.” That compares with 62.5 percent who said the same in 1980 and 42 percent in 1966, the first year the survey was done.
Another recent poll from the Pew Research Center found that about 80 percent of 18- to 25-year-olds in this country see getting rich as a top life goal for their generation.
“It bothers me because I would like to think I am the opposite,” says Greenwood, a 16-year-old high school junior from Arlington Heights, a well-off suburb outside Chicago. She tries to keep her own spending in check under the watchful eye of her parents.
But even she sometimes finds it difficult to avoid the urge to fit in.
“Let’s face it,” she says. “Honestly, what teenage girl doesn’t want to look cute and have the latest accessories?”
Young Americans’ obsession with material things recently caused talk show host Oprah Winfrey to vent her frustrations, when asked why she chose to build a school in South Africa instead of this country.
“If you ask the kids what they want or need, they will say an iPod or some sneakers,” Winfrey told Newsweek, referring to visits with students in inner-city schools. “In South Africa, they don’t ask for money or toys. They ask for uniforms so they can go to school.”
Indeed, researchers say materialism is an obsession that cuts across socio-economic lines for American youth.
“Our kids have absorbed the cultural values of more, easy, fast and fun,” says David Walsh, a psychologist who heads the National Institute on Media and the Family in Minneapolis. He’s also author of the new book, “NO: Why Kids — of All Ages — Need to Hear It and Ways Parents Can Say It.”
As his book’s title suggests, he believes parents have played an integral role in encouraging their children’s materialism. His research found that, when adjusted for inflation, parents are spending 500 percent more money on kids today than just one generation earlier.
“A lot of parents have developed an allergic reaction to their kids being unhappy,” he says.
Ann Fishman, a generational marketing consultant in New Orleans, also has found that baby boomer and Gen X parents are much more likely to spend money on their children than parents who lived through the Great Depression and World War II.
Today, she notes, young people are known for their collective billion-dollar spending power, much of it thanks to money they get from their parents.
“They have a different idea of what’s necessary,” Fishman says of young people. “For them, a cell phone is normal; an iPod is normal; a Game Boy is normal.”
Some see the heightened expectations setting up inevitable disappointment.
“There are a lot of young people hitting 25 who are making, say, $35,000 a year, who expected they’d be millionaires or at least making six figures,” says psychologist Jean Twenge. She’s a professor at San Diego State University and author of “Generation Me: Why Today’s Young Americans Are More Confident, Assertive, Entitled — and More Miserable Than Ever Before.”
They’re also entering adulthood with more college loans to credit cards debt.
No wonder, Twenge says, we hear so many 20somethings talking about the “quarter-life crisis.”
“We’re telling them they’re special and they can do anything they want — and then they’re growing up and finding out that’s not true,” Twenge says.
Tim Barello, a 24-year-old New Yorker, agrees that his generation has gotten caught up in wanting “more and more and more.”
Having grown up on Long Island’s wealthy North Shore, he thought he’d arrived when he got a job as a publicist and was able to rent an apartment in an exclusive apartment building in Manhattan.
“To be completely honest,” he says, “I don’t even appreciate everything I have sometimes.”
“Yes, I have a nice apartment, a great job, a great degree, great clothing. But I feel empty inside rather often.”
So he’s changing his focus and this week, began classes at the American Academy for Dramatic Arts to pursue his dream of acting — even if it means giving up the cushy life.
“There is so much more to life,” he says, “than materialistic possessions.”

Nephi must be rolling in his grave to see how “likened” this scripture is in our day.

3 Responses to “Fulfilling Scripture”

    My husband and I were discussing this article just yesterday. I wonder if this sense of entitlement and distorted view of what “real life” is like contributes to this:

    “Social scientists are starting to realize that a permanent shift has taken place in the way we live our lives. In the past, people moved from childhood to adolescence and from adolescence to adulthood, but today there is a new, intermediate phase along the way. The years from 18 until 25 and even beyond have become a distinct and separate life stage, a strange, transitional never-never land between adolescence and adulthood in which people stall for a few extra years, putting off the iron cage of adult responsibility that constantly threatens to crash down on them. They’re betwixt and between. You could call them twixters.”

    The article notes the indecision some college graduates have in seeking employment after graduation and in accepting the responsibilities of marriage and family. It uses a rather cruel phrase in describing such individuals as “permanent adolescents, . . . twentysomething Peter Pans” who never “grow up.”
    (article: Lev Grossman, “Grow Up? Not So Fast,” Time, 24 January 2005, 44, quoted by Elder Earl C. Tingey in the BYU 2005 Spring Commencement — also quoted by Elder Oaks in his devotional address that same year entitled “The Dedication of a Lifetime.”)

    Could this delay of adulthood be a possible result from youth being “entitled” all their lives, getting what they want without much of any effort?

    Soap box time?

    I think that the BofM cycle is in process and as a society we are on the negative side of the sine curve.

    I once read where two of the founding fathers (I think it was Madison and Hamilton) wrote a series of letters to each other which attemted to sort out and speculate about the future of the grand experiement in America. It went something like this:

    Freedom - especially economic freedom - will eventually bring prosperity to many.

    Prosperity will lead to a desire for luxury and convenience.

    Luxury and convenience will lead to a loss of the virtues that brough prosperity in the first place.

    Eventually prosperity will be lost.

    Repeat.

    I get kind of concerned about loosing the basics that bring prosperity - both in righteousness, and in wealth generating work ethic. We have become such a nation of consumers. Wealth is not ultimately generated is consuming.

    I am tempted to believe that wealth is primarily generated through agriculture and manufacturing. Taking of raw materials, improving on them, thus generating wealth. This wealth is then distributed through buying and selling of goods and services that are at least indirectly tied to agriculture and manufacturing. How many people do you meet that are really closely involved with direct creation of actual products? The decline in manufacturing in this country scares me in the long term (engineering thoughts…)

    The next generation seem to mainly want to consume wealth that others generate. Our whole country seems to be going that way. There is something wrong with eating bread that someone else earned in an ultimate sense.

    With the decline of agriculture and manufacturing in the U.S. I am concerned that the legs of wealth generation will someday be knocked out from under us. Current problems in the automotive and electronics industries may eventually spread everywhere. Then how are we going to get the latest cell phones and fabulous shoes?

    Can the Book of Mormon cycle be broken? Mormon and Moroni seem to be hopeful that we could learn from their people’s mistakes. On the other hand, they seem to be talking at an individual level. Perhaps the cycle can only be broken within an individual’s heart. The Latter-day Saints as a whole have participated in this downward spiral. Sadly, some don’t realize that is what they are doing.

    I feel, like I do about the original, this nation is headed to another great depression that is God’s warning shot to repent or be prepared for the consiquences. This nation learned many humble lessons and raised one of the “greatest generations” from that time period. Things have been going on for a couple generations that makes the roaring 20’s look tame. Maybe this time God will just let things go over the edge. That is a frightning thought.

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