- Joined
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All that said I am an old guy and yea some of the current tech is crazy overwhelming and most of it I do not understand.
If under the impossible for some reason humans from the age of 45 on up all died suddenly and the electronics went out for good I don't know that humans would survive.
Most under the age of 45 have no idea how to dig a hole or use simple hand tools.
ROTFL. If it aint on YouTube they could never make it, maintain it, nor fix it.
LOL I figure you said that in Jest but just in case you did not. I think you should clarify that statement and say maybe 80% of Americans under 45 and an equal amount from some other wealthy countries may not be able to use simple tools but out of the 8 billion people on this planet very few are privileged to stay at home and watch YouTube and play video games. Most kids wake up at 5am and take care of the animals and help with the tiny property farms that their parents have before going to school. Unfortunately many do not get to go to school and work daily along side their parents doing labor intensive jobs. I have a video I shot while I was abroad of a 12 Year old boy driving an 18 wheeler with a crane attached to the back and he single handedly hooked up all of the load onto the crane and pulled it up, restrained it and then drove the truck to the drop zone and then hoisted it into position right to the alignment holes. I sat there in awe as he did the work and his father who is the owner of the truck said to me that he lets the Kid do all the difficult jobs because he has better coordination. I asked the kid how does he do it and he said it's hard driving the truck but operating the Crane is easy because he got use to it from video games. He then told me he has a PS4 and a big screen TV plus listed a bunch of other expensive toys. Ends up dad gives him 25% of the profits on every job he does. The Father only drives the truck on the public roads but the son handles the equipment once they get to the property. I suspect the same thing happens on many American owned family farms.
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Not going to lie.

