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What Happens When a Whole Generation Never Grows Up?

by Rachel Wolfe (Wall Street Journal) 31 Dec 2024 - Americans in their 30s have never looked less like grown-ups.
Amid steep declines in homeownership, marriage and birth rates, economists have long been warning that young people are struggling to meet the milestones of adulthood. Although some 30-somethings are consciously choosing a less traditional path, many say these goals are simply out of reach.

“It feels like the instructions for how to live a good life don’t apply anymore,” says 38-year-old Cody Harding, who is single and lives with three roommates in Brooklyn. “And nobody has updated them.”

Now, as a mix of social and economic factors holds back an entire generation, what researchers once called a lag is starting to look more like a permanent state of arrested development.

“We’re moving from later to never,” says Richard Reeves, president of the American Institute for Boys and Men. He notes that the longer people take to launch into a more conventional adulthood, the less likely they are to do it at all.

A third of today’s young adults will never marry, projects conservative think tank the Institute for Family Studies, compared to less than a fifth of those born in previous decades. The share of childless adults under 50 who say they are unlikely to ever have kids, meanwhile, rose 10 percentage points between 2018 and 2023, from 37% to 47%, according to Pew Research Center.

“You can kick the can down the road, but only so far,” says Reeves.

The conventional explanation for what’s freezing young adults in place is that they can’t afford to grow up, given rising inflation and ballooning housing costs. Yet this doesn’t quite explain what’s going on.

It’s true that 30-somethings have had a run of tough economic luck. Many of them entered the job market during the Great Recession, rode out the pandemic by moving back in with their parents, and are now dealing with the worst housing market in 40 years. But the numbers paint a more complicated picture.

Median wages for full-time workers ages 35 to 44 are up 16% between 2000 and 2024, from $58,522 to $67,652 adjusted for inflation, according to the Labor Department. The overall wealth of 30-somethings, too, rose 66% between 1989 and 2022, according to the St. Louis Federal Reserve, from $62,000 to $103,000.

In many ways, this age group is in a better place financially, on average, than their parents were at this age. The problem is that they don’t seem to know it. Only 21% of adults in their 30s rated the overall economy as good or excellent last year, per the Federal Reserve, and economists say young adults are significantly more pessimistic about the future than prior generations were.

“They see the world they are going to live in 20 years from now as really screwed up,” says Brookings Institute economist Carol Graham, who studies well-being. She points to how climate change, political polarization, AI and a growing resentment of corporate power have made the future feel more uncertain.

Younger adults are far less likely than Americans over 50 to say achieving the American Dream of success from hard work is still a possibility, according to a Wall Street Journal/NORC poll in July. But here, too, the reality is more complicated. At least part of what’s stunting the growth of a generation of young people are outsized dreams of what a good life looks like.

“Our expectations are so much higher today,” says Melissa Kearney, an economist at the University of Maryland whose research focuses on children and family. “Generations before us didn’t expect to have large houses where every kid had a bedroom and there were multiple vacations.”

To be sure, financial averages are just that. A sizable share of this generation is worse-off than their parents were. Young men in particular are struggling in the labor market. And some of the traditional goals of adulthood really have become more difficult to achieve. Student debt has more than doubled over the past two decades, yet a college degree is no guarantee of a well-paying job. Rising interest rates and dwindling supply have also put homeownership out of reach for a growing share of Americans. The median age of first-time homebuyers hit a record high of 38 this year, according to the National Association of Realtors, up from 35 in 2023 and 29 in 1981.

Still, growing up with less pressure to follow the same narrow route to adulthood imposed on their parents and grandparents—a career, spouse, house and kids all by age 35—has raised the bar for what these milestones look like, if they choose to hit them at all.

Stymied by this mix of high expectations and challenging economic circumstances, many 30-somethings sound disoriented and unsure about what it means to be a successful adult now.

After watching his parents raise three kids and buy a house on his parents’ salaries in retail and manufacturing, Cody Harding assumed that being the first in his family to earn a Bachelor’s degree would grant him an even better quality of life. Although he now makes around double what his parents did at the height of their careers combined, he’s disappointed by what it affords him in New York City.

Harding says graduating college in 2008, just as companies across the country were hemorrhaging funds and laying off workers, was the first sign that he seemed destined for an economically precarious adulthood. When he couldn’t put his double major in English and history to use, he waited tables and worked in construction.

“I never caught up,” he says. Harding entered law school to wait out the sluggish labor market, but emerged with $180,000 in student-loan debt. He now owes over $200,000, after making only the minimum payments.

Instead of being able to support a family or at least live on his own as a full-time lawyer, he’s paying $1,700 in monthly rent to live with roommates in Brooklyn. When it became clear his dreams of homeownership were not achievable in New York, he recently got help from his parents to close on a fixer-upper in his hometown of Easton, Pa. Like many of his peers, he earns extra income from a side hustle: in his case running a vintage furniture store.

Harding still hopes to get married and have children, but has grown disenchanted with a dating culture that he feels prizes short-term flings over long-term commitment. He’d also rather stay single than compromise on the wrong fit. Most of his friends are in the same state of suspended adolescence, he says, which sometimes makes it feel like time is standing still.

“It’s fine trying to reinvent what a modern life looks like, but I’m a little disappointed by everything that it lacks,” Harding says. “I’m sick of partying. I did that already. I want to grow up.”

Just over half of Americans between the ages of 30 and 40 were married as of last year, according to an analysis of American Community Survey data by Aspen Economic Strategy Group economist Luke Pardue. This is down from more than two thirds in 1990, when those in the middle of the cohort were born. The share of women in this age range who had ever given birth fell 7 percentage points between 2012 and 2022 alone, Current Population Survey data show, from 78% to 71%.

“Part of this is social expectations, part of this is shifting priorities and part of this is economic realities,” says Kearney at the University of Maryland, who has looked at how the same dynamic is playing out in high-income countries around the world. “But all together they seem to be pushing in the same direction, which is increased rates of staying single and staying childless.”

Even leaving the nest—long considered a prerequisite to full-fledged adulthood in the U.S.—is proving harder to pull off.

By the time Renata Leo’s parents were 31, the age she is now, they had gotten married, purchased a home and had her. Yet she is still sleeping in her childhood bedroom, gazing at the same unicorn wallpaper put up before she was born.

“Redecorating would mean accepting that I’m not leaving,” says Leo, who has been back home in Glassboro, N.J., since graduating college in 2015 with $20,000 in student-loan debt.

She was close to moving out in 2020, but the pandemic’s surging home prices derailed plans to buy a starter house with her then-fiancé. (He moved into her childhood bedroom with her before they broke up this past summer.) Since losing her full-time job at a startup in 2021 she’s been working part-time and has felt stuck, unsure of what she wants to do next.

“I feel like a failure,” she says, adding that a recent chance meeting with the principal of her high school, where she graduated as valedictorian, left her scrambling for how to describe what she’s been up to for the past 13 years. “I let the fact that I published a book do a lot of the heavy lifting,” she jokes.

Nearly 9% of those aged 30 to 40 still live with their parents, according to Pardue’s analysis of Census data, up from nearly 6% in 1990.

Renata’s parents, Ed and Paula Leo, say they want their daughter to have the freedom to pursue the life she wants rather than feeling, like they did, that she should submit to any job as long as it pays something.

“There’s no longer one right, certain path,” says Paula, a 61-year-old retired math teacher, who admits that she never even thought about whether she wanted to get married or become a mother—she just assumed that she would. Yet Paula recognizes that operating in an atmosphere with less pressure to conform or settle comes with its own costs. Having more options, she says, “makes it harder to know what to do.”

Renata acknowledges that it’s a privilege to be able to wait for a job she loves rather than take whatever’s offered. But she admits that the longer she stands by, a seeming bystander in her own life, the more hopeless she feels about ever launching at all.

“I still feel like a little kid,” she says.

By the time Semira Fuller’s mom was her age, 39, she was a home owner and a single mother of two. But even though Fuller’s roughly $100,000 salary as a payroll manager is more than her mom ever made when Fuller was growing up, she’s been disappointed by how little it buys in Los Angeles, where she lives with a roommate. “Everything feels like a struggle,” she says.

She knows her salary would go farther in her hometown of Philadelphia, but she prefers to stay in L.A. Inflation has raised the price of small luxuries, such as her Spotify subscription, but she doesn’t want to give them up.

“There isn’t any part of my life that doesn’t feel more expensive than it did two years ago,” she says.

Fuller says she enjoys meeting friends and waking up when she wants, which makes the upheaval of children unappealing. Motherhood, she says, is a “nonstarter.”

“Kids become the first priority,” says Fuller. “I’m still figuring myself out as a priority.”

Rachel Wolfe is a reporter covering the economy for The Wall Street Journal.
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65 comments:
31
Zrupsloohg on scored.co
1 year ago 31 points (+0 / -0 / +31Score on mirror ) 5 children
>In many ways, this age group is in a better place financially, on average, than their parents were at this age. The problem is that they don’t seem to know it.

Tells me everything I need to know about the writer of this article!
16
Kopkot on scored.co
1 year ago 16 points (+0 / -0 / +16Score on mirror ) 1 child
Its so patently false. I suppose these articles are written for boomer consumption.

The reality is that regardless of GDP numbers (which are misleading anyway) the social fabric is torn apart and all its accompanying community resources are gone. Now the parks are filled with needles, the schools are like prisons, the roads filled with illegal drivers, families don't help each other with anything. All this forces more and more expenses onto people to somehow access quality resources like good schooling, healthcare, education, food. Even just having friends can be rare with how screwed up social interactions have become.
WeedleTLiar on scored.co
1 year ago 5 points (+0 / -0 / +5Score on mirror ) 2 children
How do you keep friends close when everyone lives in a shoebox? Do you all spend money at a bar? Do a bunch of thirty-somethings need to hang out at the local park, like a bunch of high school kids?

I used to host parties all the time but I haven't had excess space since I had kids. Where are the Christmas parties? The birthdays? The political meetings to try to stem the bleeding? Gone.
Kopkot on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
I also want to just live in a small commune-esque community where everyone's kids are playing together daily by default and all the adults just help out generally with everyone's kids.
Kopkot on scored.co
1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 2 children
I think the biggest issue is people chasing short dopamine rushes through tech instead of going outside. I do it as well, just not nearly as much as before. I still see most of my friends spend more and more time isolating like this.
Dfalt on scored.co
1 year ago 4 points (+0 / -0 / +4Score on mirror )
It's a chicken-and-egg problem that becomes a perpetual feedback loop. Modern society is so shitty that there's little worthwhile to do outside so people turn to escapism in something they can have a element of control over, which causes society to degrade further because fewer people are working to improve it.
removed 1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
14
bobdole96 on scored.co
1 year ago 14 points (+0 / -0 / +14Score on mirror ) 1 child
Shame author couldn't offer prices of groceries, average vehicle, or average home cost from either 1989 or 2000...
systemthrowaway on scored.co
1 year ago 7 points (+0 / -0 / +7Score on mirror ) 1 child
Just paid over $8 for two gallons of weimart milk. Reminder that there's nothing morally wrong with stealing from jewish companies.
deleted 1 year ago 3 points (+0 / -0 / +3Score on mirror ) 1 child
systemthrowaway on scored.co
1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
I tried raw milk, didn't seem to do anything special.
11
BlackPillBot on scored.co
1 year ago 11 points (+0 / -0 / +11Score on mirror )
Yup. It’s fucking comical.
deleted 1 year ago 11 points (+0 / -0 / +11Score on mirror )
bobbacringo on scored.co
1 year ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror )
It reminds me of how writers were talking about how much richer everyone was because of Biden. Full on 1984 thought control.
24
Brannvesen on scored.co
1 year ago 24 points (+0 / -0 / +24Score on mirror ) 1 child
Every problem leads back to the jew, it always does. But keep in mind that normies are programmed since the age of 5 to not make this connection at all. Which is why it's so important to also identify all these problems individually and break them down into talking points which the normie can understand.

Here we see the housing crisis first, homes are getting unaffordable, why? Because of (((bank loans))) allowing people to spend more money than they have, and when they can't pay, taxmoney bails out the (((bankers))). Regulations and poor city planning causes a huge waste of land use as well, forcing more people to live cramped.

Now, high home prices is part of the reason why a man can no longer feed a family on just one wage. (((They))) did this intentional, together with the government to get women to work, more on that within the (((feminist revolution))). As women work, house prices can continue to go up further and you basically need two wages to afford even a basic home. But because of (((feminism))) and (((strong independent women))) and the (((porn industry))) less marriages happens, which is why in some of the worst cities on earth people actually has to have room mates just to afford the rent.

While not everyone fall for these coomer and consumerist (((tricks))), by design, the commers and consoomerists are pulling everyone else down with them, because even if you do find a wife, you couldn't afford a home anyway. Which means you'll live cramped somewhere temporary. This isn't good for family dynamics. Look into (((RV families))) for instance, a whole new rabbit hole, but it shows the consequences of families living under cramped conditions.

Not to mention that when both parents are working, we can forget everything about home schooling as the kids will need a daycare or school to "care" for and "foster" them into good shapps goys during the day. Instead of letting the kids stay home and learn from their mother.

The (((banker))) is the biggest and one of the most evil jews out there. Perhaps a lot of the problems in society could be solved by getting rid of (((banks))). Then we'll have to put pressure on our governments to change much of the building and city planning laws to make it easier and cheaper to build new affordable homes of decent size. That's how we get the prices down and allow more people to start a family.
20
TallestSkil on scored.co
1 year ago 20 points (+0 / -0 / +20Score on mirror ) 3 children
Don’t forget infinity nonwhite invaders necessitating housing for 60,000,000 that otherwise wouldn’t be here.
10
BlackPillBot on scored.co
1 year ago 10 points (+0 / -0 / +10Score on mirror )
It all comes down to some form of usury, and Kalergiry.
WeedleTLiar on scored.co
1 year ago 4 points (+0 / -0 / +4Score on mirror )
Even then, the justification is (((economic))).
systemthrowaway on scored.co
1 year ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror )
Crazy to think that with actual immigration laws cities could've stayed a similar size to when our parents were young.
18
bobbacringo on scored.co
1 year ago 18 points (+0 / -0 / +18Score on mirror ) 1 child
This kind of stuff is a bit demoralizing but the West IS collapsing. These are the symptoms.
BlackPillBot on scored.co
1 year ago 3 points (+0 / -0 / +3Score on mirror )
It’s weird you just posted this, and then I ran across this video.

https://youtu.be/XKBjI76jS5U?si=tWAcrFVZMMFGXO_0
deleted 1 year ago 12 points (+0 / -0 / +12Score on mirror ) 4 children
11
Jarilo on scored.co
1 year ago 11 points (+0 / -0 / +11Score on mirror ) 2 children
This one is interesting. They say that all programmers are going to be replaced by AI within the next few years, but they also need to import Indian programmers to resolve the shortage in software development.
deleted 1 year ago 7 points (+0 / -0 / +7Score on mirror )
deleted 1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
11
TallestSkil on scored.co
1 year ago 11 points (+0 / -0 / +11Score on mirror ) 1 child
Just get some brown body paint and you’ll be set for life.
12
BlackPillBot on scored.co
1 year ago 12 points (+0 / -0 / +12Score on mirror )
Why waste money on brown paint. Just shit in your hand, and smear it all over yourself. You’ll kill two birds with one stone. Not only will you look like an Indian, you’ll smell like one too. 😎
WeedleTLiar on scored.co
1 year ago 5 points (+0 / -0 / +5Score on mirror ) 1 child
Yeah, because everyone is doing it and a society only really needs one in five hundred people to be programmers because someone invented the Copy and Paste functions.

At least with trades, if there's low demand you can do something similar. But these high education specialist careers? If you get laid off, could you become a doctor? A lawyer? Could you even just switch over to the hardware side? No, you need another half decade at school so you're stuck as just part of the desperate labour pool that keeps wages low.

Unless you know **exactly** what you're going to do for the next ten years, stay away from post secondary.
deleted 1 year ago 5 points (+0 / -0 / +5Score on mirror )
Fabius on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
Unless you plan to go into business for yourself, essentially.

White men have no place in the corporate world. Good luck.
11
rentfREEEE_since2016 on scored.co
1 year ago 11 points (+0 / -0 / +11Score on mirror )
Bootstraps: the WSJ article.


What a joke. Boomers will take it to the grave.
10
TallestSkil on scored.co
1 year ago 10 points (+0 / -0 / +10Score on mirror ) 2 children
1. Kill every federal reserve employee.
2. Kill every higher education professor.

That’s basically it. Oh, kill anyone who attempts to enforce “no fault divorce” laws. Instantaneously the culture fixes itself.
deleted 1 year ago 8 points (+0 / -0 / +8Score on mirror )
bobbacringo on scored.co
1 year ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror ) 1 child
Listen, the solution to every single one of our problems cannot be kill all of our enemies and then their children.
TallestSkil on scored.co
1 year ago 4 points (+0 / -0 / +4Score on mirror )
I’m not sure we have any peer reviewed studies on that matter. Let’s run one and see what happens.
PurestEvil on scored.co
1 year ago 9 points (+0 / -0 / +9Score on mirror )
> The conventional explanation for what’s freezing young adults in place is that they can’t afford to grow up, given rising inflation and ballooning housing costs. Yet this doesn’t quite explain what’s going on.

If you can't afford shit even after many years of continuous work, things are fucked. What provider is a man who can't even manage to acquire a house, or the money to buy one? Can you really afford to have kids and a wife, which also costs money, making the uphill battle even steeper?

> rode out the pandemic

The level of insanity that went over a flu is astonishing. That jews, governments and media went nuts is understandable, because they want to destroy us and it's the ideal vehicle for that, but that common people went ballistic over it is inexcusable.

> In many ways, this age group is in a better place financially, on average, than their parents were at this age.

What the fuck is that display of pure idiocy? Oh, you got a little more money than decades ago, but prices went up by a multitude. And you cannot afford to buy houses unless you are literally rich or some nigger who gets it handed to him for being a subhuman invader.

> Only 21% of adults in their 30s rated the overall economy as good or excellent last year

Yes, and they were wrong. The economy is fucked and continues to get worse. The covid hysteria caused a massive boost to the decline.

> Younger adults are far less likely than Americans over 50 to say achieving the American Dream of success from hard work is still a possibility

The fuck is this guy about polls and subjective opinions? Bring up facts instead of fucking opinions and polls.
WeedleTLiar on scored.co
1 year ago 8 points (+0 / -0 / +8Score on mirror )
>She points to how climate change, political polarization, AI and a growing resentment of corporate power have made the future feel more uncertain.

Love how they still keep on asking the "experts" that got us here in the first place.

None of this is true. Nobody is losing their homes due to climate change, they're losing them due to climate taxes and regulations. Corporations didn't arbitrarily shut the economy down (although they still have a piper or two to pay), that was the governments. AI just means that school is completely pointless as you can just access any knowledge you need instantaneously so the only value in a worker is the practices skills they can actually perform, which schools never taught in the first place.

As for political polarization; that will keep getting worse so long as people like this keep trying to maintain that anything we're seeing now is not part of a deliberate plan, because more people are waking up every day and there's no room for compromise.
deleted 1 year ago 8 points (+0 / -0 / +8Score on mirror ) 2 children
systemthrowaway on scored.co
1 year ago 3 points (+0 / -0 / +3Score on mirror ) 1 child
My wife and I started early. By the end of the year we'll have three kids in our 20s, and while we're in moderate debt for it there are really no regrets.

We have been lucky to live with family up until now but we're starting to look at apartments because both of our families are retarded boomers. I was apprehensive about renting until I realized that no matter how hard we work we will never own a house.
deleted 1 year ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror )
removed 1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
BlackPillBot on scored.co
1 year ago 7 points (+0 / -0 / +7Score on mirror ) 1 child
“Our expectations are so much higher today,” says Melissa Kearney, an economist at the University of Maryland whose research focuses on children and family. “Generations before us didn’t expect to have large houses where every kid had a bedroom and there were multiple vacations.”

👆🏻👆🏻👆🏻

This is complete bullshit overall, but especially as it pertains to white men. I am one, and know a bunch, and we are very easy to please, and most of our hobbies are extremely cheap in comparison to women’s “hobbies”. The most expensive “hobby” a man can participate in today, is getting, and keeping a women happy/content.

👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻She’s 39 years old.

“Fuller says she enjoys meeting friends and waking up when she wants, which makes the upheaval of children unappealing. Motherhood, she says, is a “nonstarter.”
“Kids become the first priority,” says Fuller. “I’m still figuring myself out as a priority.”

WeedleTLiar on scored.co
1 year ago 7 points (+0 / -0 / +7Score on mirror ) 1 child
Between my parents, I have 10 aunts and uncles and every single one of them bought a house, including the ones who never have kids (2).

Most of my cousins on one side are much older than me, but on the side where we're all close in age (right where this article is aiming), only 3 of the 14 cousins have houses and only 3 have had kids with only one who did both.

Yes, generations before us could absolutely buy big houses with a room for each kid and guess what? They're still in those houses while we rent their basements.
systemthrowaway on scored.co
1 year ago 6 points (+0 / -0 / +6Score on mirror )
Yep and when they're too old and disabled to live alone in those houses they will simply sell them to the first jewish company that bids high.
Jarilo on scored.co
1 year ago 6 points (+0 / -0 / +6Score on mirror ) 6 children
>Yet Paula recognizes that operating in an atmosphere with less pressure to conform or settle comes with its own costs. Having more options, she says, “makes it harder to know what to do.”

This is pretty much it. Money and security are secondary. The real problem is the total lack of discipline and direction among young people and the total unwillingness of older generations / parents to enforce any direction for their children.
18
TallestSkil on scored.co
1 year ago 18 points (+0 / -0 / +18Score on mirror ) 1 child
A pile of shoes exists in Poland, therefore you’re not allowed to have a direction.
Jarilo on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror ) 1 child
Sure, but answer me this - If the devil makes you do something, do you have no responsibility for your actions?
TallestSkil on scored.co
1 year ago 4 points (+0 / -0 / +4Score on mirror ) 1 child
>makes

Nice victim blaming.
Jarilo on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror ) 1 child
Huh? Do you not understand the question?
TallestSkil on scored.co
1 year ago 3 points (+0 / -0 / +3Score on mirror ) 1 child
If the devil enslaved you four generations before you were born and made it psychologically and economically impossible to so much as conceive of disobeying…

No, you’re still a victim and not responsible for the crimes committed against you.
WeedleTLiar on scored.co
1 year ago 6 points (+0 / -0 / +6Score on mirror ) 1 child
I've got money and at least stability, if not security, but I find my self asking "what is there to sacrifice for?"

I've got the discipline to work, to raise kids, to better myself, but what is the goal? I live in a country that is intentially trying to replace people who look like me and my kids, where 85% of my countrymen took a mystery drug because of fear and then attacked the rest of us and tried to force it into us and our children, and are absolutely opposed to any sort of accountability because it might hurt feelings.

Anything I do to make my situation better just makes their situation better as well. Why should I sacrifice anything just for the benefit of people who hate me and my kids?

Basically, I'm standing by while they collapse so that, hopefully, we can intervene once they run screaming from the mess they've made and fix these systems before total collapse. Judging by this article, we're still a ways out.
Fabius on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
>to raise kids

This is the biological imperative for everything. Once you wipe away the childish veneer of "I want to be an astronaut", this is all that remains, and ultimately all that matters.

If you want kids, just fucking have them. It's easy for a reason.
BlackPillBot on scored.co
1 year ago 5 points (+0 / -0 / +5Score on mirror ) 1 child
We live in a kike kingdom of short attention spans and GIGiggers(grass is always greener). They always think the grass is greener on the other side without even stopping to touch the grass they have right in front of them. I see this in so many facets of peoples lives today it’s fucking infuriating. This is really apparent in young women today. I honestly have no idea how anyone can please, and keep a women happy/content today without making it a full time job that drains the life energy out of you consistently.
removed 1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
TallestSkil on scored.co
1 year ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror )
A pile of shoes exists in Poland, therefore you’re not allowed to have a direction.
bobbacringo on scored.co
1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
I didn't have any direction when I turned 18. I turned out alright. I do not live near a city though.
removed 1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
systemthrowaway on scored.co
1 year ago 4 points (+0 / -0 / +4Score on mirror )
I'm just glad I never went into college debt.
removed 1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
covok48 on scored.co
1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
This is the most kikiest thing I’ve read in 2025 so far.
bobbacringo on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror )
Well, it's written by someone at the Wallstreet Journal. So probably a kike.
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