>>76493783 (OP)
Generation cohort culture as a whole is cringe.
Whenever I see a person on the internet use terms like "millennial," "zoomer"/"gen z", "gen x," I immediately assume I'm reading the drool of a retard. When I actually hear someone speak these terms in real life, I know for a fact that I'm dealing with a legit mongoloid.
"Boomer" is more forgivable, because it has become kind of a catch-all term for an older person who is mentally stuck in the 20th century "boom" times and doesn't understand what life is like for people who came of age after the 2000s.
I'm just struck by how I can say "millenials do ___ and gen z does ____" and normies will nod along stupidly in agreement, but if I say "black people are more likely to commit random acts of violence" suddenly I'm persona non grata. All we hear is "don't generalize, don't stereotype," but suddenly this new, rigid classification system emerges around 2015, it spreads like wildfire and everyone starts lapping it up and assuming it as some tribal identity...
Just seems odd.