>>126471740Why do millennials hate themselves and want to project their idealized selves on a somewhat similar fictional characters that need to exist or they feel like they personally themselves are being murdered?
Why is it that previous generations used idealized fictional characters as inspiration to motivate them and strive to be similar to, instead of what we have now?
Growing up in the 1990's I didn't need a gay black version of Indiana Jones to want to be like Indiana Jones.
I went hiking and horse back riding. I studied history and...and...got a fedora and leather jacket (look, I didn't know fedora's would be ruined by atheists, like the Charlie Chaplin moustache was ruined by Hitler) and I like revolvers and machetes.
I believe art belongs in museums instead of being destroyed by rioters and that you should try reading books, instead of burning them...
Maybe it's because I'm an old millennial that is more of a Gen X