Life Ex

Yes! I do think that’s a large part of it. A very large part.

Many Gen Z types in their 20s remind me emotionally and maturity-wise of where earlier gens were at when age 10-13 or so. They have no life experience, don’t know how to do anything, have never been through an aversive event even once, and have relied on helicopter and snowplow parents even into their mid-20s.

So, of course, unlike previous generations even if 26 they are basically still children. Not all of Gen Z, of course. But certainly the ones most likely to write oddball crap like a 22-year-old dating a 30-year-old is child abuse. When you look at claims like that in the light of just how little actual life experience much of Gen Z has, it makes a whole lot more sense.

Because many of them are mentally children compared to past generations, no matter their chronological age.

Oz

I can’t remember where I saw it, but yesterday I read some crazy clown crap about how people who’ve worked hard to be fit and slim would be mad about Ozempic. Supposedly, fit people would be devastated that others could now just take a pill and achieve the same results.

As a person who has worked hard to be fit and slim, I think that people can do the same with a pill is great! I hope everyone who wants Ozempic gets it and it works very well for them. We’ve needed something like it for a long time. And that it pisses the Fat Acceptance movement off is also a nice side benefit, too.

So no, most likely no one is angry that Ozempic is helping people. Well, except the Fat Acceptance movement. Then again, they get upset about being told things like that weighing 500 pounds isn’t healthy and that eating 5,000 calories per meal isn’t actually very balanced nutrition-wise. So who really cares?