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Satans Mark/Cashless Title: Hamster-Pellet Alert: A Sad Look At How Smartphones Condition And Control The Lives of 3 Girls (Age 11-17) From Bye Bye Birdie to The Baby-Sitters Club to Mean Girls and everything in between, the cultural history of teen and tween girls and the telephone is long and storied. But how do the girls of today use the phone when it is no longer a landline but rather a back-pocket accessory? Generation Z, the first generation of digital natives, has a relationship with phones and the internet like no other generation before. Notably, it is the first generation to learn to navigate an iPhone at the same age they learn to walk. While many say the proliferation of loneliness and unhappiness among this rising generation is phone-related, its safe to say the phone is not going away and if anything, its becoming a stronger staple of modern life. To take a look into the contemporary relationship between teen girls and their phones, Yahoo Lifestyle asked three girls from across the country to track their phone usage for a day. Gone are the days of phone booths, and hamburger phones in bedrooms; but more than ever, a phone is a young girls connection to her world. Fred Giron is an 11th grader in Manhattan. She loves soccer and The Handmaids Tale. On average, she spends two or more hours a day on her phone. I get so sick of being on my phone sometimes, she says. This is her day in screenshots. Photos: Courtesy of Fredrike Giron; Artwork by Quinn Lemmers for Yahoo Lifestyle 7:10 a.m.: When I first wake up, I usually just like to see what notifications Ive gotten since falling asleep. I hate immediately going on my phone, so Ill quickly check the time and see if there are any urgent messages. 12 p.m.: I checked my email, mostly just to delete junk. I dont check my email too often unless there is someone I have to respond to. 3 p.m.: I went to the dance parade! The dancers were fabulously dressed, so of course I had to take a picture. 6:07 p.m.: As the day is winding down, Ill check Twitter because thats one of my sources of news. I love to see others reactions to huge events. Twitter definitely isnt my favorite social media app, purely because I cant bring myself to check it enough, but its a great way to snoop. 8:59 p.m.: I texted my friend to check in on her birthday party. 10:11 p.m.: And finally, when I lay down to go to bed, I had to delete Instagram. I felt sick after a day of constant checking, and suddenly felt a swarm of anxiety. It helps me to sleep better knowing its no longer on my phone, even though Ill end up re-downloading it the next day. Audrey Farmer is a sixth grader in Kansas City, Mo., and a proud Little Sister in the Big Brothers Big Sisters of America program. On average, she spends three hours a day on her phone. I can only download apps with my parents permission, and we usually arent allowed to use [our phones] in school, she explains. This is her day in screenshots. Photos: Courtesy of Audrey Farmer; Artwork by Quinn Lemmers for Yahoo Lifestyle Wake up: Just watched some YouTube for 15 minutes. 12 p.m.: Played around on Snapchat for a bit. 3 p.m.: Took a pic of my family while playing Clue. 6:09 p.m.: Just checked YouTube for notifications. 9 p.m.: Snapchat!!!! Just checking friends stories. 9:53 p.m.: Just checked YouTube one last time before bed. Ina Bhoopalam is 17 years old and lives in Lincoln, Neb., the Cornhusker State!! She is an activist, and the president of Girl Up Lincoln Public Schools a United Nations campaign helping girls take action to change the world. Ina says she typically spends two to three hours a day on her phone, and that its a key tool in her activism work, whether thats organizing meetings with state representatives or fighting for refugee education. This is her day in screenshots. Photos: Courtesy of Ina Bhoopalam; Artwork by Quinn Lemmers for Yahoo Lifestyle Poster Comment: I changed the title to something more truthful. This protocol and routine is likely very typical. Be sure to CHECK OUT THOSE PHONE SCREEN SHOTS. As you can see, these little future p***y-hat wearing, man-hater fascists awaken immediately to fake political "news" and "Lifestyle news" which promote and normalize everything homo, "trans", freaky, and sexual. And predictably, to be hateful of everything Trump, traditional or conservatism. This coming generation (referred to as the "Z-Gen") is being groomed to become Dem-Leftist social activists and crusaders. Their daily incoming smartphone informs/condition them with daily "notifications" of select "news" from G00gle Propaganda Inc, Yahoo Propaganda Inc, YouBoob, and Twitter. THE usual Dem agenda and talking points are being fed here like rat poison pellets as you can plainly see. What does it remind you of? MAYBE... Adolph Hitler, Nov. 6, 1933: Karl Marx: Hitlery Clinton: (Or also consider Hitlery's, 'It Takes A [Marxist] Village'). Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 2.
#1. To: Liberator (#0)
There's something wrong with kids who "love soccer", the most boring turdworld 'entertainment' ever conceived.
Actually its fun to play horrendous to watch. To me its a lot like watching Basketball. Truth is I really don't like watching sports. To me its like watching porn. Why? Would you rather not have sex than watch someone else having sex!
#8. To: Justified (#2)
(Edited)
Me neither. I watch zero sports; none at all - there are few things more boring to me than watching other people play games. It's one of the reasons I didn't miss cable TV for five minutes since I killed it four years ago - I really resented my money going to mouth-breathers I wasn't interested in supporting. Life has too many possibilities to waste it watching sports. Formula 1 was pretty good for about 20 minutes, I'll admit, and it's fun on my PS3. I get playing them, but unless it's your kid on the field ..... watching? Uh, no. Even then, I'd have my Kindle at hand.
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