Descartes wrote:
I see nothing wrong with people looking back on their childhood years in fondness. However, when people start to think of the years during which they grew up as some kind of "golden age" and take up any opportunity to bash absolutely anything that came out in the past ten years or so, then I begin to think that there's some kind of mass delusion going on.
These days, it seems quite fashionable for Millennials to espouse their questionable "'90s Kid" credentials and subsequently label anything having anything to do with the '00s as bad, sub-par, inferior, etc. I was born in 1991, and while I do have very fond memories of growing up in the '90s and early '00s, that doesn't mean that I'm blind to any bad things that also defined the '90s, nor am I willfully ignorant of any positive things that may have defined the most recent decade.
It's the same thing with elders who reminisce over the '50s, and for that matter, anything pre-sexual revolution. There may have been some good things about the '50s, but there were also many bad things going on then (rampant racism, sexism, extreme prudishness, and other sociological issues).
I'm quite old for a millenial and I guess I am a 90s child...but if a song from that era comes on, I get nostalgic for 30 seconds and then it passes. I don't like everything 90s. It's usually the cheesy/crappy stuff that trigger the nostalgia...especially 90s Dance music and Europop.
You get people my age, who were born in the 80s, pretending to remember the 80s. That is, usually, pathetic. My partner has half decent excuse in that he was born in 1980 and actually watched He-Man and Transformers the first time they aired (I watched the reruns as a TODDLER, therefore they shouldn't, and don't, make me too nostalgic). If you're my age though, you don't remember the 80s sufficiently to be nostalgic.
That said, most of the music I listen to was recorded 1958-1990, simply out of preference, rather than nostalgia.
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