onnuh
onnuh
i n n i t ?
3K posts
Where the schuyler meets the sea~
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
onnuh · 8 years ago
Text
A Critique on George Monbiot’s Article on: Aspirational Parents Condemn Their Children to A Desperate, Joyless Life
George Monbiot’s article talks about how children in the modern world face the pressures of complying with qualifications and acquiring skills as early as their toddler years. Parents often push their children to attend academic enrichment classes, ballet classes, sports training, or musical lessons. While this develops talents at a young age and benefits both the parents and the child, the effects resulting from the process may be disastrous for the young child. First, the author opens up about the decline in life conditions which ultimately pressures the young generation to be better than average to be able to live decently. Monbiot moves on to explain that society perpetuates into each and everyone’s minds that one must strive to be an elite. Society influences individuals to aspire to become part of the elite community. According to society, true success is to become one of them. This also puts a heavy burden since becoming part of the elite is truly no menial task to be done. Parents try to ensure their children’s success by letting them start as early as possible in life which brings the author to his next point. According to Monbiot, childhood must be a time for innocence and play. However the trend nowadays is to let children start working hard early. It is as if there is no more time for play in their childhoods. This in turn affects the mental health of the youth. Many have become more depressed and prone to anxiety. George Monbiot ties his entire piece of text together by saying that perhaps by being hardworking all throughout childhood would ensure an elite lifestyle, but at what cost exactly? Childhood has become an exhausting and life-denying era instead of the once happy and best years in a person’s life.
The author aims to persuade readers, especially the parents of millennials and even millennials themselves, that chasing aspirations of becoming elite at the cost of one’s childhood is not worth it. George Monbiot is a British writer known for being an activist in both politics and environmental issues. He voices out every week in a column for The Guardian. He took jobs at the BBC in the past, working in current affairs or as an investigative journalist where he encountered many unfortunate complications in obtaining a story. Among his best-known works are his description of an encounter with a police torturer in Brazil entitled Hunting the Beast and a book published in 2000 entitled Captive State: The Corporate Takeover of Britain. 
The text shows information that proves his point, mostly utilizing logos and pathos in his claims. To support the idea that there is a decline in children’s mental health over the years, statistical data is introduced. It was shown that the number of children admitted to the hospital because of self-harm has risen by 68% in 10 years. Many other statistical data were shown as well. The many reliable statistical data really backed up Monbiot’s point about the sad reality of the mental health of children. In fact there was at least three of more statistical data mentioned. It gave hard evidence and proof which makes it difficult for naysayers to disagree upon. Furthermore, pathos was also used but not as much as logos. The author states lines such as “But to what are we aspiring? A life that is better than our own, or worse?” and “From infancy to employment, this is a life-denying, love-denying mindset.” Both of these lines are not only rhetorical questions but also an appeal to the readers’ emotions. It sounded so sad to me when I read the latter. Life-denying and love-denying mindset just sounds so miserable. It clearly worked because I was convinced that this phenomenon is not good for the society. The author did not make use of ethos since he did mention anything regarding his credibility in the text itself.  
The claims made by the author mostly included claims of value. Majority of the article is persuading readers to believe that parents with high aspirations will only yield overly pressured children with no chance of a proper and happy childhood. It is even mentioned in the title itself. The author would want readers to believe that this phenomenon of pressuring the youth is not good. It answers a question of morality. Moreover, the article gives supporting details to his claim. It gave the negative effects of overworking children such as mental health issues, lack of playtime during childhood, and the huge burden of pressures. Upon reading these claims, I did not find many fallacies in the author’s reasoning. However, the author implies that the reason behind parents letting their children work hard at an early age is because their goal is to ensure their children’s chance of becoming successful in life. This is an oversimplification. Parents nowadays do want their children to become more successful in life, however it is not the only reason that they let their children go to enrichment classes or other classes. Parents may simply want their children to learn a skill. Parents may also want their children to develop their innate talents. True, the prime reason is for guarantee of success but it is not the only one.
Monbiot highlights the drastic measures parents are taking in order to guarantee a chance of success. Intertextuality is very evident in this work because Monbiot cites other works in this piece of text. One of these works is an article featured in the Financial Times about a new career called the nursery consultant. The nursery consultant is basically where parents go to ask for advice in choosing a nursery that would be better suited for their child’s development. It is to put their children on the right track. The same article also spoke of parents who let their two-year old daughter go to tutor for maths, literacy, reading, drama, piano, beginner French, and swimming. This article from Financial Times clearly gives examples which support the topic. In the second to the last paragraph, Monbiot also makes use of Izaak Walton’s Compleat Angler (1653) by mentioning a description found in the book. Walton states that the fate of poor-rich men is that they “spend all their time first in getting, and next in anxious care to keep it; men that are condemned to be rich and then always busy or discontented.” This of course applies to the modern problem of everyone aspiring to be one of the richest elites. It even further backs up his point regarding the cost of being rich and if it is worth it in the end. The creative words lifted from the Compleat Angler aids a reader in understanding the main idea of the article even more so.       
This article by George Monbiot is a strong and reliable article. Overall, it is a well-written article with strong evidence supporting each and every one of the claims made by the author. There were examples to help the readers visualize the idea. There were also many statistical data mentioned in the text. Moreover, it also mentioned other issues surrounding the topic. There is however one error found in the piece of text which is an oversimplification fallacy regarding the cause of parents pushing their children to work hard in their early stages. The rest of the article gave strong points and strong supporting details with regards to the main idea. Overall, this article is well-written and definitely would persuade a reader. I salute the author for this comprehensive work.    
4 notes · View notes
onnuh · 8 years ago
Text
trump: *becomes president*
nasa: ok so we found 7 new earth sized planets, 3 of which are habitable
178K notes · View notes
onnuh · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
23K notes · View notes
onnuh · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Basically, Beelock.
499 notes · View notes
onnuh · 9 years ago
Text
I button mashed on tumblr and found something?
Keyboard shortcuts
NAVIGATION
Move forward through posts J
Move backward through posts K
Return to the top .
Like current post L
View current post’s notes N
View blog of current post enter
Follow a recommended blog F
Reject a recommended blog X
Search Tumblr tab
Switch between blogs Z + tab
POSTING
Compose a new post Z + C
Fast reblog a post alt + R
Add a post to your queue alt + E
Bold ctrl + B
Italic ctrl + I
Headline ctrl + shift + 2
Link ctrl + K
Strikethrough ctrl + shift + 6
Ordered list ctrl + shift + 7
Unordered list ctrl + shift + 8
Blockquote ctrl + shift + 9
Remove formatting ctrl + shift + 0
Preformatted text ctrl + shift + X
Superscript ctrl + .
Subscript ctrl + ,
Small ctrl + -
Insert photo ctrl + shift + P
Insert video ctrl + shift + M
Insert horizontal line ctrl + shift + L
Insert read-more link ctrl + shift + K
I can never return to this but??? this is such a great random find
886 notes · View notes
onnuh · 9 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
US Weekly - Unknown date
It’s all about style choices. Everything’s fine when you’re a dude, but if you’re Black Widow then obviously you must be going grey because why else would anyone dye their hair?
This is a direct parody of this hilarious(ly awful) segment from US Weekly (seriously click it there’s some glory moments like ‘they mail back Neflix’ and ‘they carry their cords’)
MediAvengers is an MCU media blog.  Magazine spreads and newspaper articles made by fans, for the fans of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
Facebook |  DeviantArt  |  Pinterest  |  Twitter 
2K notes · View notes
onnuh · 9 years ago
Video
tumblr
When people can’t pronounce your name. 😒
326 notes · View notes
onnuh · 9 years ago
Text
Support an aspiring cosplayer
Just please vote for him in this cosplay battle contest he joined! 
https://channelfix.com/battle/cosplay-battle-tournament-epic-cosplayers-compete-for-15000-pesos-in-prizes/
0 notes
onnuh · 9 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
New Campaign for Cutler & Gross.
Photo: Mehdi Lacoste | Styling: Alexandra Carl | HMU: Anne Sophie Costa | Model: Lydia Graham @ Models 1
1K notes · View notes
onnuh · 9 years ago
Conversation
aaron burr, sir
hamilton: i wanna graduate in 2 years how did you do it???
burr: my parents tragically passed away
hamilton: omg me too!! that's awesome, orphanz broz for LYFE god i wish we could MURDER THE GOVERNMENT
17K notes · View notes
onnuh · 9 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
#same
3K notes · View notes
onnuh · 9 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
164K notes · View notes
onnuh · 9 years ago
Text
HELP OUT A FELLOW NERD
Hey guys! My friend, Lance Lerin recently joined a cosplay contest and he needs all the help he can get. Let’s pour out our support for aspiring cosplayers! It only takes a few clicks and a little of your time.
Please vote for him in the link below!
https://channelfix.com/battle/cosplay-battle-tournament-epic-cosplayers-compete-for-15000-pesos-in-prizes/?match=212
2 notes · View notes
onnuh · 9 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
“Right now, shows that are accused of being too whitewashed have this defensive tactic in which they respond with, ‘I didn’t even think about that; it didn’t even occur to me.’ So, instead of using your intelligence to escape culpability, use it to consider the framework from which you speak. I could talk about this all day; it really pisses me off. It’s not an easy topic to talk about. You have to take ego out of it to talk about it in an intelligent way, and that’s hard to do about anything.” Constance Wu, from an interview by Alex Wong for GQ.
Photo by Maarten de Boer/Getty Images.
122K notes · View notes
onnuh · 9 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
420 notes · View notes
onnuh · 9 years ago
Conversation
a. ham texting
hamilton: hey, I just wanted to say that I'm sorry for everything. I promise you'll never feel so helpless ever again. I'll do anything to make it up to you.
king george iii: I'm listening...
hamilton: shit wrong number
280 notes · View notes
onnuh · 9 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Hamilton in act 2 like
23K notes · View notes