We’ve become a society of spoiled children who cry when we aren’t handed what we want. Not everyone, of course. But the trend is clear enough — and the number of people overcome by it big enough — that it saddens and frightens me.
When Christmas came and went over the weekend, not everyone got the gifts they were hoping for. Many of them took to Twitter to whine to their friends about what they didn’t get. It seems that a lot of poor spoiled children didn’t get the iPhones and iPads they wanted. One abused young woman said, “Was i the only person who didn’t get an ipad? i mean i got a car but thats a different story all together.”
There’s an entire series of these pathetic rants, many of them filled with angry profanity that I won’t quote here. Read them and weep at what we’re becoming.
Living in a wealthy society is a good thing, because it allows us to have a standard of living that was unheard of in the rest of human history. It gives us material comfort and health and many other things. But it’s blinding people to what really matters, it seems. It’s taking away their perspective. It keeps them from realizing that their “First World problems” are things that average people in some societies only wish they had the chance to cope with.

Of all the world’s contradictions, our own actions confuse us most
Without hope for a better future, depression grabs us by the throat
Trying to force others to be like us is arrogant and destroys relationships
Lennon had ‘wrong ambitions,’ but became cultural icon anyway
Why waste time on Ukraine war? Focus on your own future instead
Happy birthday to the monkeys; we’re marking two years today
Dishonesty runs rampant when partisanship matters more than truth
Anarchist vs. minarchist debate misses the shift to post-statist world