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When Do You Anticipate Retiring?

 

Can money buy happiness

This website posts the results of an interesting poll conducted by Harris of 2000 adults.

This chart shows at what age a generation feels that a person can retire given the current economic environment.  The site compares the retirement age from the poll know compared to the retirement age from a poll taken a year ago.  Clearly, every generation feels the economic environment now is significantly worse than it was a year ago.  I’d be curious if this information exists for the year before the Covid shut down.

Gen Z (1996 to 2012) are very early in their careers, so may be in college or unsure about careers.  The survey was only people over 18, so kids in school didn’t count.  Perhaps they expect that in decades, the general trend is favorable.  I, and probably they, don’t know anyone who has retired at 49 or 54 years old.  It’s interesting that the year slipped 5 years.  That indicates a lack of confidence in the long-term trend.

As the generations get older, the change from a year ago is smaller.  That makes sense in that there are fewer uncertainties with few decades to go to retirement.

According to Gallup, in 2022, the average age to retire was 61 years old.  Boomers (1946 to 1964) are 59 to 77 years old.  Almost all of the Boomers should be retired.  It’s not at all clear why the expected year of retirement is so far off.  The survey doesn’t say, but perhaps only working people responded.  Any Boomer not currently retired may feel that retirement isn’t likely in the near future.

What Annual Salary is Necessary to be Happy?

Can money buy happiness

This website posts the results of an interesting poll conducted by Harris of 2000 adults.

It’s interesting that the generations agree on the required annual salary to be happy, with the exception of the Millennials.  Boomers (1946 to 1964) are at or nearing retirement, so may be making that much or stable in retirement.  Gen Z (1996 to 2012) are very early in their careers, so may be in college or unsure about careers.  The survey was only people over 18, so kids in school didn’t count.  Gen Z has an amazingly realistic annual salary requirement for people who may still be on their parent’s health insurance and cell phone plan.

What went wrong with the Millennials (1981 to 1996)?  They aren’t making anywhere near the salary they require to be happy.  Way off.  The oldest, at 42 years old are mid-career, and should have a good idea what is realistic.  The youngest, at 27 years old, should be early in a career, but haven’t bought a house.  They should be developing some sense of what’s coming up, but apparently not.  At that age, it’s difficult to imagine that something amazing will happen to significantly increase their financial situation.  Are they all resigned to never being happy?

That website has many other interesting results.

NYT: When They Means One

NYT: When They Means One

I have often been asked by people over 35 or so, “Are we supposed to say ‘they want’ or ‘they wants’?” I always answer that the proper form is “they want,” but must it be? Instead, we could say this, which would make perfect and intuitive grammatical sense:
Singular: I want, you want, he/she/they wants
Plural: we want, you want, they want

My proposal is that we agree that male, man and boy refers to a person born with a penis, and that female, woman and girl refers to a person born with a vagina.  For the exceedingly rare people born with neither or both, they can choose.  My proposal has the advantage of being consistent across cultures for thousands of years.

The pronoun thing is getting weird.   I occasionally read the teacher forum on Reddit.  Using “he” or “she” is starting to look antiquated.  Teachers avoid use “they” or “them”, even when the sex of the child is obvious or mentioned earlier in the post.   Here is an example:

He was one of the laziest, rudest students I’ve had in 8 years of teaching. I feel like throwing a party now that he’s gone. Sometimes I feel a tiny bit bad that I’m celebrating losing a kid, but that feeling is very much overshadowed by joy and relief from not having to deal with them anymore. I’m sure all of you can relate.

I added the bold font.  There are certainly more egregious examples, but this was the first post I clicked on.  Are teachers getting lazier or dumber?

Judd Apatow documentary about Bob Newhart and Don Rickles

Judd Apatow made a short documentary of the friendship between Bob Newhart and Don Rickles.  It doesn’t seem like they’d be friends, but seeing them together, it obviously works.

NewYorker: Bob Newhart and Don Rickles

NewYorker: Bob Newhart and Don Rickles

“I love that they became friends because they both played Vegas and neither wanted to cheat on their wives,” Apatow said.

Scavenger’s Reign is an amazing series. 9/10

Scavenger’s Reign is a lovely animated series.  The animation is visually stunning.  The music is creative, soothing and creepy, all at the same time.  The plants and animals are completely alien.  Nothing looks like anything on Earth, but it all looks like it could exist.

The plot is simple.  People get stranded on an alien planet.  Each person gets into some trouble while trying to get to the main spaceship.  The series is more about an alien planet than it is about the characters.  I found it very engaging.

WaPo: What Scientists Know About Aliens.

WaPo: What We Know About Aliens

It came from space, hurtling at tremendous speed: a mystery object, reddish, rocky, shaped like a cigar. Its velocity was so extreme it had to have come from somewhere far away, in the interstellar realm. The astronomers in Hawaii who spotted it in 2017 named it ‘Oumuamua, Hawaiian for “a messenger from afar arriving first.”

Don’t forget the unexplainable Wow! signal detected by Ohio State in 1977.

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Sparky Escapes from his Sweater

Like a magician, Sparky never reveals how he does his tricks.

The fire had burned down in the wood stove, so this morning it was 65o .  I put a sweater on him until the fire could be stoked back up.  By the time I’d taken my shower, he was out of it. 

Getting him into the sweater was like stuffing a sausage, I can’t imagine how he managed to take it off.

Sparky has a nice Thanksgiving.

Joanne got Sparky some gifts for Thanksgiving.  Here’s Sparky wearing the sweater he needed when we were camping in Fargo.

When we go on car rides, it’s pretty clear that Sparky wants to drive.  He knows that I’ve folded on most of the rules, so will probably let him drive eventually.  Sparky figures if I can do it, driving can’t be that difficult.

Sparky looks like an attentive driver, but now he understands that driving is harder than it looks.  He couldn’t even stand like this without me holding up his butt.  Sparky doesn’t know anything about the gas and brake pedals.

David Sedaris: Children now are like animals who have no natural predators left.

Free Press: David Sedaris Punching Down

Words, we are now regularly reminded, are violence. So too is silence. I read not long ago that capitalism is violence, as is misgendering someone. Ignoring someone is violence, but so too is paying them attention.

Sedaris is a cosmopolitan humorist, so he is describing coastal people and what is written by influencers on social media, but many young people don’t seem very resilient.

Who are these hothouse flowers, all so easily and consistently wounded? People whose parents never hit them, that’s who. People who don’t know what real pain is, but still want to throw the word around. When I was a child, a slap across the face was too minor to qualify as “casual violence.”

I’ve not raised children, but they do seem to benefit from some setbacks when they are young so they can handle setbacks when they get older.  Having more family around who don’t treat a child like a precious flower does seem to do them some good.

If our schools are a mess it’s in large part due to these parents who think their kids are special, who get mad if you contradict their brilliance, if you give them a bad grade or, God forbid, try to take their phones away. Had one of my teachers told my mother that I was acting up in class, she’d have said, “Thank you so much for letting me know.” Then she’d have come to wherever I was—in front of the TV, or at the side of the TV making my way to the front of it—and slapped my sister Gretchen so hard her eyes would have crossed.

Most teachers would agree with that sentiment, but any talk of corporal punishment in schools is viewed as giving a student an abusive beating.  Having gotten a swat in high school, I know it absolutely wasn’t that.

My swat was a miscarriage of justice, but I went along with it because I certainly deserved it for something.  At no point did I consider calling my parents.  They never mentioned it, so I’m not certain they knew that it happened.

It was after school.  The assistant principal and teacher were present.  The AP asked if you knew why you were getting a swat.  I told them why.  I got one swat, we shook hands, and it was over.  Say what you want about corporal punishment, but boys are having much worse outcomes in our current system.  Nobody has ever heard of a girl getting a swat. 

Children now are like animals who have no natural predators left. Had I arrived at my elementary school with a bleeding head wound, explaining that my father had just thrown me out of his moving car because I was teasing my sister, the teacher would have handed me a Band-Aid, saying, “Well, I hope you learned a lesson from it.” Now, even a scratch on the back of your hand could get your parents locked up for abuse. And children know this!

Every parent I know is aware of this, but most are indulge their children more than their parents did.

WSJ: Ohio State is Corrupted with DEI.

WSJ: DEI at Ohio State

WSJ: DEI at Ohio State

In February 2021, then-president Kristina Johnson launched an initiative to hire 50 professors whose work focused on race and “social equity” and “100 underrepresented and BIPOC hires” (the acronym stands for black, indigenous and people of color). These reports show what higher education’s outsize investment in “diversity, equity and inclusion” looks like in practice. Ohio State sacrificed both academic freedom and scholarly excellence for the sake of a narrowly construed vision of diversity.

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