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Friday, August 08, 2008
Hipster: The Dead End of Western Civilization






by: Indy Media Tags: consumerism, culture Comments (3)

Comments
Posted by Gen X on Sunday, August 10, 2008

Slow news day?
Posted by U-know-who on Tuesday, August 12, 2008

I'm a little confused as to what this has to do with "action"? I hate to be so critical, but in some ways this essay feels a bit like the junk-food news that this website seems to be so against. At it's core, the post is basically a rant against a style (or possibly style itself) masquerading as a critique of a failing culture.
I guess I agree with what the article says to some degree, but it is a rather one-sided and sweepingly superficial view of hipsters.
Personally I've never been a fan of lumping people together as good or bad because they have similar clothes or like the same kind of art or music (though I have been guilty of it plenty of times).
The writer points out the hypocrisy of trying to act like you're not trying, but this isn't as deep a revelation as I think he wants it to be (nor is it unique to hipsters). Either way, it seems like wasted energy to single out this microcosm of human superficiality as if it wasn't prevalent throughout our entire culture and is in many ways a part of nature.
Quick reminder of more important things that everyone still needs to know about:
War in Iraq
Uniformed public (due to poor mainstream news coverage)
Peak Oil
Global Warming
Failing Economy
Election Fraud (there's a huge one coming up)
Corporate influence on Government
Posted by Tim Hjersted on Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Thanks for the comments. I was sure it would get some response one way or another when I posted this. To respond to some of your thoughts, U-Know-who (I actually have no idea :) I felt that the article's subject is relevant because it touches on the fact that a whole generation is growing up completely apathetic and uninterested in anything beyond individualistic desires and gratifications. It goes beyond hipsters but the recently emerged label is this generation's star mascot. I've always said that if the mainstream media is our countriy's number one problem, apathy is a close second, and it is the apathy of so much of our youth that makes this article relevant to how we can organize and take actions that will produce meaningful change.

Today's youth increasingly do not stand for anything. How many kids over 18 vote? How many do you see going to city commission meetings and participating in activist campaigns? Most activists that I know who actually show up to and organize events are in their 30's, 40's, 50's and up. How can we engage young people to give a damn? The individualistic impulse for self-fulfillment is killing our capacity to care for common goals and work for something greater than ourselves. Where is our shared stake in the future of our city, people as a whole, and the planet itself?

Anyway, good fuel for thought. Solving the west's apathy crisis is a big issue in and of itself. None of the important issues you mention can be solved until our culture's own apathy can be solved first.


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