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High schoolers these days

Last post 11-06-2009, 10:16 PM by cobiwan. 63 replies.
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  •  11-05-2009, 5:45 PM 3637547 in reply to 3637463

    Re: NYC High schoolers these days

    QQKirin:
    thedifferent:
    Chaos+:
    thedifferent:
    QQKirin:

    You damn youngsters with your Eyepods and your drugs and "the wrap"

    Get off my damn lawn. =|

     

     

    @OP: tl;dr 

    I know right, There "Hippy hop" I just can't take any more. 

    screw you old people with your polka music pants higher then steve urkle

    get off of my freakin web

    Back in the day, children would respect there elders, what went wrong? 

     

    We didn't beat them enough. 

    Mhm. 


  •  11-05-2009, 5:48 PM 3637587 in reply to 3637547

    Re: NYC High schoolers these days

    thedifferent:
    QQKirin:
    thedifferent:
    Chaos+:
    thedifferent:
    QQKirin:

    You damn youngsters with your Eyepods and your drugs and "the wrap"

    Get off my damn lawn. =|

     

     

    @OP: tl;dr 

    I know right, There "Hippy hop" I just can't take any more. 

    screw you old people with your polka music pants higher then steve urkle

    get off of my freakin web

    Back in the day, children would respect there elders, what went wrong? 

     

    We didn't beat them enough. 

    Mhm. 

    We dont respect you because you beated us.
  •  11-05-2009, 5:49 PM 3637601 in reply to 3637587

    Re: NYC High schoolers these days

    Chaos+:
    thedifferent:
    QQKirin:
    thedifferent:
    Chaos+:
    thedifferent:
    QQKirin:

    You damn youngsters with your Eyepods and your drugs and "the wrap"

    Get off my damn lawn. =|

     

     

    @OP: tl;dr 

    I know right, There "Hippy hop" I just can't take any more. 

    screw you old people with your polka music pants higher then steve urkle

    get off of my freakin web

    Back in the day, children would respect there elders, what went wrong? 

     

    We didn't beat them enough. 

    Mhm. 

    We dont respect you because you beated us.

    We gave you youngin's music, and this is the way you respect us.  


  •  11-05-2009, 5:50 PM 3637621 in reply to 3637601

    Re: NYC High schoolers these days

    thedifferent:
    Chaos+:
    thedifferent:
    QQKirin:
    thedifferent:
    Chaos+:
    thedifferent:
    QQKirin:

    You damn youngsters with your Eyepods and your drugs and "the wrap"

    Get off my damn lawn. =|

     

     

    @OP: tl;dr 

    I know right, There "Hippy hop" I just can't take any more. 

    screw you old people with your polka music pants higher then steve urkle

    get off of my freakin web

    Back in the day, children would respect there elders, what went wrong? 

     

    We didn't beat them enough. 

    Mhm. 

    We dont respect you because you beated us.

    We gave you youngin's music, and this is the way you respect us.  

    You also gave us burgers yet we still dont respect you either.
  •  11-05-2009, 5:53 PM 3637657 in reply to 3637621

    Re: NYC High schoolers these days

    Chaos+:
    thedifferent:
    Chaos+:
    thedifferent:
    QQKirin:
    thedifferent:
    Chaos+:
    thedifferent:
    QQKirin:

    You damn youngsters with your Eyepods and your drugs and "the wrap"

    Get off my damn lawn. =|

     

     

    @OP: tl;dr 

    I know right, There "Hippy hop" I just can't take any more. 

    screw you old people with your polka music pants higher then steve urkle

    get off of my freakin web

    Back in the day, children would respect there elders, what went wrong? 

     

    We didn't beat them enough. 

    Mhm. 

    We dont respect you because you beated us.

    We gave you youngin's music, and this is the way you respect us.  

    You also gave us burgers yet we still dont respect you either.

    Tsk, Tsk, Tsk, They really should have kept those paddles around.


  •  11-05-2009, 5:57 PM 3637703 in reply to 3636173

    Re: High schoolers these days

    oOZybezOo:
    There is hardly a more unpleasant experience in my typical work week (and most other people's that I've spoken to) than walking in the streets or riding train with NYC public high school students. They're the most impolite, aggressive, inconsiderate, and vulgar group of people I've ever come in contact with. (And this is coming from a guy that lives in a somewhat violent neighborhood in New York, a place where, interestingly, I've never run into a problem.)

    I feel for the old ladies sitting on the train who ride in fear of being run over or shoulder tackled by these students as they explode onto the trains or into the streets with shouting, bullying, violent posturing, and other outrageous behavior that I can not even come up with the words to describe.

    They're like a bacteria. And if this sounds like a sweeping generalization, so is the fact that less than 50% of these "students" graduate from high school on time. It's awful and depressing. I feel fortunate that I generally work in an environment far removed from them. And that I'm not one of these poor deli clerks, like the one man I just saw, being shouted at, bullied, and threatened... by a small crowd of fifteen or so of these young scholars. Because the "mutha f----er" didn't hear the girl say "lemme get that with no mayo.I said don't put any mayo on my sh-t."

    Disgusting. Vile. And entirely commonplace...

     Makes me glad I raised with a switch at my behind. o-o




    Its gone, but we keep the dream alive. <3
    ---
    Ace Retriever, Golden Retriever, at your service! :D
  •  11-05-2009, 7:06 PM 3638298 in reply to 3637152

    Re: NYC High schoolers these days

    thedifferent:
    Chaos+:
    thedifferent:
    QQKirin:

    You damn youngsters with your Eyepods and your drugs and "the wrap"

    Get off my damn lawn. =|

     

     

    @OP: tl;dr 

    I know right, There "Hippy hop" I just can't take any more. 

    screw you old people with your polka music pants higher then steve urkle

    get off of my freakin web

    Back in the day, children would respect their elders, what went wrong? 

    We young'uns don't respect elders who can't spell.


    And for the record: Rock > R.A.P.


    Go away, Fracture.

  •  11-05-2009, 8:44 PM 3639120 in reply to 3636411

    Re: NYC High schoolers these days

    Fracture:
    Title fixed. You can't judge all of us by a few dumb shits.

     

    HeHe,Yea.I'm not in high school,I'm homeschooled.So does that make me a drop out?I make A-B's :>




    ¬.¬ I'm not racist..I hate you all equally
  •  11-05-2009, 8:45 PM 3639128 in reply to 3637703

    Re: High schoolers these days

    ace112233:
    oOZybezOo:
    There is hardly a more unpleasant experience in my typical work week (and most other people's that I've spoken to) than walking in the streets or riding train with NYC public high school students. They're the most impolite, aggressive, inconsiderate, and vulgar group of people I've ever come in contact with. (And this is coming from a guy that lives in a somewhat violent neighborhood in New York, a place where, interestingly, I've never run into a problem.)

    I feel for the old ladies sitting on the train who ride in fear of being run over or shoulder tackled by these students as they explode onto the trains or into the streets with shouting, bullying, violent posturing, and other outrageous behavior that I can not even come up with the words to describe.

    They're like a bacteria. And if this sounds like a sweeping generalization, so is the fact that less than 50% of these "students" graduate from high school on time. It's awful and depressing. I feel fortunate that I generally work in an environment far removed from them. And that I'm not one of these poor deli clerks, like the one man I just saw, being shouted at, bullied, and threatened... by a small crowd of fifteen or so of these young scholars. Because the "mutha f----er" didn't hear the girl say "lemme get that with no mayo.I said don't put any mayo on my sh-t."

    Disgusting. Vile. And entirely commonplace...

     Makes me glad I raised with a switch at my behind. o-o

     

    I'm still being raised with a switch on my behind..o.e; and i'm 16...At least I know how to behave .__.; I think..




    ¬.¬ I'm not racist..I hate you all equally
  •  11-06-2009, 1:21 AM 3640498 in reply to 3636173

    Re: High schoolers these days

    oOZybezOo:
    There is hardly a more unpleasant experience in my typical work week (and most other people's that I've spoken to) than walking in the streets or riding train with NYC public high school students. They're the most impolite, aggressive, inconsiderate, and vulgar group of people I've ever come in contact with. (And this is coming from a guy that lives in a somewhat violent neighborhood in New York, a place where, interestingly, I've never run into a problem.)

    I feel for the old ladies sitting on the train who ride in fear of being run over or shoulder tackled by these students as they explode onto the trains or into the streets with shouting, bullying, violent posturing, and other outrageous behavior that I can not even come up with the words to describe.

    They're like a bacteria. And if this sounds like a sweeping generalization, so is the fact that less than 50% of these "students" graduate from high school on time. It's awful and depressing. I feel fortunate that I generally work in an environment far removed from them. And that I'm not one of these poor deli clerks, like the one man I just saw, being shouted at, bullied, and threatened... by a small crowd of fifteen or so of these young scholars. Because the "mutha f----er" didn't hear the girl say "lemme get that with no mayo.I said don't put any mayo on my sh-t."

    Disgusting. Vile. And entirely commonplace...

     

    I'd be more concerned with why this behavior is so commonplace, rather than with the behavior itself.  Being disgusted by the vileness of it all is reasonable, but disgust and aversion never went very far in terms of problem solving.  Also, like many others have pointed out, you're making a sweeping generalization here.  If I were to form a general opinion of highschoolers based solely on my experience where I live, I would say that a large amount of them believe that an individual's GPA is an influence of biblical proportions, dictating their fate in the fabric of society; basically the direct opposite of what you described.  The point I'm making is that blanket statements rarely cover the entirety of the matter, even if they do cover the single portion you're aware of.


  •  11-06-2009, 3:00 AM 3640757 in reply to 3637703

    Re: High schoolers these days

    ace112233:
    oOZybezOo:
    There is hardly a more unpleasant experience in my typical work week (and most other people's that I've spoken to) than walking in the streets or riding train with NYC public high school students. They're the most impolite, aggressive, inconsiderate, and vulgar group of people I've ever come in contact with. (And this is coming from a guy that lives in a somewhat violent neighborhood in New York, a place where, interestingly, I've never run into a problem.)

    I feel for the old ladies sitting on the train who ride in fear of being run over or shoulder tackled by these students as they explode onto the trains or into the streets with shouting, bullying, violent posturing, and other outrageous behavior that I can not even come up with the words to describe.

    They're like a bacteria. And if this sounds like a sweeping generalization, so is the fact that less than 50% of these "students" graduate from high school on time. It's awful and depressing. I feel fortunate that I generally work in an environment far removed from them. And that I'm not one of these poor deli clerks, like the one man I just saw, being shouted at, bullied, and threatened... by a small crowd of fifteen or so of these young scholars. Because the "mutha f----er" didn't hear the girl say "lemme get that with no mayo.I said don't put any mayo on my sh-t."

    Disgusting. Vile. And entirely commonplace...

     Makes me glad I raised with a switch at my behind. o-o

    Makes me glad I wasn't born and raised in New York. Cept, California is just as bad, if not worse, than New York in some regions. /cough Oakland


    **Edited by Tibaroo** Please refrain from spamming the forums.

    Yay <3 Tibaroo

  •  11-06-2009, 3:22 AM 3640789 in reply to 3640757

    Re: High schoolers these days

    Renzomi:
    ace112233:
    oOZybezOo:
    There is hardly a more unpleasant experience in my typical work week (and most other people's that I've spoken to) than walking in the streets or riding train with NYC public high school students. They're the most impolite, aggressive, inconsiderate, and vulgar group of people I've ever come in contact with. (And this is coming from a guy that lives in a somewhat violent neighborhood in New York, a place where, interestingly, I've never run into a problem.)

    I feel for the old ladies sitting on the train who ride in fear of being run over or shoulder tackled by these students as they explode onto the trains or into the streets with shouting, bullying, violent posturing, and other outrageous behavior that I can not even come up with the words to describe.

    They're like a bacteria. And if this sounds like a sweeping generalization, so is the fact that less than 50% of these "students" graduate from high school on time. It's awful and depressing. I feel fortunate that I generally work in an environment far removed from them. And that I'm not one of these poor deli clerks, like the one man I just saw, being shouted at, bullied, and threatened... by a small crowd of fifteen or so of these young scholars. Because the "mutha f----er" didn't hear the girl say "lemme get that with no mayo.I said don't put any mayo on my sh-t."

    Disgusting. Vile. And entirely commonplace...

     Makes me glad I raised with a switch at my behind. o-o

    Makes me glad I wasn't born and raised in New York. Cept, California is just as bad, if not worse, than New York in some regions. /cough Oakland

    My mother is a teacher, now retired, and a friend of hers had moved from New Jersey to (I think) Danville, CA in order to take a high school teaching job there. The kids were 10x worse in California than back east. The area is very affluent, and these rotten little jerks seemed to think that they honestly were better than their teachers because mommy and daddy could afford to give them a brand new BMW for their 16th birthdays when a teacher might drive around in an old Honda Civic. And of course, as far as the parents were concerned, their darling little angels could do no wrong.

    You don't have to get into a system as bad as Oakland's to see really rotten kids. At least in Oakland they have real, serious problems to deal with in their neighborhoods. Elsewhere, they're just spoiled brats.



    Sig art by Ryosuke01 . Avatar by Syncadia (Charly).
  •  11-06-2009, 3:42 AM 3640823 in reply to 3640789

    Re: High schoolers these days

    Chillian:
    Renzomi:
    ace112233:
    oOZybezOo:
    There is hardly a more unpleasant experience in my typical work week (and most other people's that I've spoken to) than walking in the streets or riding train with NYC public high school students. They're the most impolite, aggressive, inconsiderate, and vulgar group of people I've ever come in contact with. (And this is coming from a guy that lives in a somewhat violent neighborhood in New York, a place where, interestingly, I've never run into a problem.)

    I feel for the old ladies sitting on the train who ride in fear of being run over or shoulder tackled by these students as they explode onto the trains or into the streets with shouting, bullying, violent posturing, and other outrageous behavior that I can not even come up with the words to describe.

    They're like a bacteria. And if this sounds like a sweeping generalization, so is the fact that less than 50% of these "students" graduate from high school on time. It's awful and depressing. I feel fortunate that I generally work in an environment far removed from them. And that I'm not one of these poor deli clerks, like the one man I just saw, being shouted at, bullied, and threatened... by a small crowd of fifteen or so of these young scholars. Because the "mutha f----er" didn't hear the girl say "lemme get that with no mayo.I said don't put any mayo on my sh-t."

    Disgusting. Vile. And entirely commonplace...

     Makes me glad I raised with a switch at my behind. o-o

    Makes me glad I wasn't born and raised in New York. Cept, California is just as bad, if not worse, than New York in some regions. /cough Oakland

    My mother is a teacher, now retired, and a friend of hers had moved from New Jersey to (I think) Danville, CA in order to take a high school teaching job there. The kids were 10x worse in California than back east. The area is very affluent, and these rotten little jerks seemed to think that they honestly were better than their teachers because mommy and daddy could afford to give them a brand new BMW for their 16th birthdays when a teacher might drive around in an old Honda Civic. And of course, as far as the parents were concerned, their darling little angels could do no wrong.

    You don't have to get into a system as bad as Oakland's to see really rotten kids. At least in Oakland they have real, serious problems to deal with in their neighborhoods. Elsewhere, they're just spoiled brats.

    True, since Oakland has the ghetto and gang violence.

    Danville is a more or so a ritsy area as well, much of the wealth live their. And my parents have friends that live their. I used to baby-sit their kids last year, and those little brats were spoiled rotten. At the ages of Sven and three, they gave me more attitude than I give my own mother. And they debated with their own father for something. If they didn't get what they, they threw a temper trantrum. >:/ In which everytime they did that, so daddy didn't have to listen to it, he gave into their fits and gave them what they wanted.

    Yes Those kids are going to grow up to be just as immature as the High Schoolers your mother's friend has to deal with.


    **Edited by Tibaroo** Please refrain from spamming the forums.

    Yay <3 Tibaroo

  •  11-06-2009, 8:39 AM 3641573 in reply to 3639120

    Re: NYC High schoolers these days

    ~*renalire*~:

    Fracture:
    Title fixed. You can't judge all of us by a few dumb shits.

     

    HeHe,Yea.I'm not in high school,I'm homeschooled.So does that make me a drop out?I make A-B's :>

    You can still be in high school if you're home schooled. I'm home schooled as well.

    I don't like this topic, I find it degrading.



    "A swordsman has to be honest about his foe's skills and his own"
    "The essence of combat is to strike the vulnerabilities of the opponent. There is no 'fair' or 'unfair'"
  •  11-06-2009, 9:45 AM 3641814 in reply to 3638298

    Re: NYC High schoolers these days

    Fracture:
    Title fixed. You can't judge all of us by a few dumb shits.

    This.

     

    Fracture:

    We young'uns don't respect elders who can't spell.


    And for the record: Rock > R.A.P.

    And this. Fracture and I are more intelligent than most people, "grown-ups" included, and our English skills are far superior to all of the forumers I've encountered, not counting Chillian, the cool uncle of the forums.

    And Rock is better than rap. Rap is (mostly) bad, nonsensical poetry to a backbeat. At least most of the mainstream rap is. There is some decent rap out there. There's just more decent rock.


    **This member has been suspended for 7 days for inappropriate forum language.**

    That. . . that was just unnecessary. =.=
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