Friday, June 6, 2008

kitsch of the generation x

Nowadays, the unfettered acceptance of technology and its affiliated modernization already brought a dramatic transition and immeasurable breakthroughs. The things that are already influenced by technology are all bound to progress and further exploration of untapped knowledge is always at hand. But all things in life has distinctly negative ethical paradigm, and I am afraid of the fact that it will hamstring the bare essentials of cognition and understanding (but not at all). Our country is already beset with this negativity I am talking about, take for example the eminence of cellular phones and the internet as a form of communication. Youth these days were too much hooked on the vast gossamer of social and cyber networks and virtual microcosms, the appealing genre of modern-age junks, the deviation from the social, philosophical and intellectual norms. The inveterate usage of short-cut words, the debauched sentence structures, compositions and grammar, the grave and deliberate misspellings, the unintelligible vernacular, - they all consider these as appealing, appropriate and naturally all right, rather than mawkish and incomprehensible. The sense of someone's thought is sometimes lost due to the indiscriminate way of expressing it. There's really nothing wrong how tacky and insubstantial someone's expression is if it is the only way he could only express it, but the problem is that he conformed to the showy, nonsensical kitsch rather than delivering it with practicality and conventionalism.

-,.:;"deEh'kwickque'braUwn'focks'jumpZz'uber'deeh'LaZzie'dawgG.. (+_^)

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