Ask The Staff!

Wat ish it liek 2 be mud?
I don't know what it's like to be "mud", but if you're referring to "mod", then I can say that as a former Moderator, you tend to sense a certain responsibility has been placed on your shoulders. Allow to me to illustrate:

You are a daycare teacher. You are surrounded by younglings who are still new to the world and what it has to offer. You are there to instruct them how to perform certain worldly tasks properly, how to act around people, and most importantly, you are there to discipline them should one or two of them fall out of line. In essence, you are the key component that prevents the community from descending into chaos.

Mod me pretty please
If you mean to request to be a Moderator, I'm sorry but we're currently not seeking out potential candidates at this time. If you mean you want me to fire a warning point your way, I need a reason to first.

What do you moderators think of millennials?
Being an "on-the-end" Millenial (I was born at the very end of the Millenial generation), I think the stereotypical Millenial is fairly out of touch with reality (being that many think they'll become the next Bill Gates in computing). In all fairness, I'm partly ashamed to be identified as one, since the culture of Millennials is very, how do I say, easily offended (need I really say more?)
 
What do you moderators think of millennials?

More-or-less, I share the opinion with GoldMan that "they think they'll be some fantastic person that will change the world for the better" or "someone that knows all about the world". In reality, they're really just a product of a "feel good" society that taints them into thinking such; only to get slapped square in the face by reality when they actually graduate or come face-to-face with the actual world, not little safe zones they keep themselves within.

They think their opinions matter, they think they hold some kind of special-ness to them or they're above the others in thought process/ideas. It's pretty funny, since they're just setting themselves up for a hard fall when reality comes to strike them in the face. "My Evil Parents"/High School/University is a cakewalk compared to actually working; as nobody cares how you feel, if you get offended or if you think it's not fair. Say no? Lose your job, your internet (which most millenials need to "express my oh-so important" opinion) and your house. You'd end up the reverse of what you previously claimed or hoped to be; you'd lose your sense of pride - as in the end, you'd having nothing around you and you, yourself, become nothing.

Not a rant though, just observation. x3
 
More-or-less, I share the opinion with GoldMan that "they think they'll be some fantastic person that will change the world for the better" or "someone that knows all about the world". In reality, they're really just a product of a "feel good" society that taints them into thinking such; only to get slapped square in the face by reality when they actually graduate or come face-to-face with the actual world, not little safe zones they keep themselves within.

They think their opinions matter, they think they hold some kind of special-ness to them or they're above the others in thought process/ideas. It's pretty funny, since they're just setting themselves up for a hard fall when reality comes to strike them in the face. "My Evil Parents"/High School/University is a cakewalk compared to actually working; as nobody cares how you feel, if you get offended or if you think it's not fair. Say no? Lose your job, your internet (which most millenials need to "express my oh-so important" opinion) and your house. You'd end up the reverse of what you previously claimed or hoped to be; you'd lose your sense of pride - as in the end, you'd having nothing around you and you, yourself, become nothing.

Not a rant though, just observation. x3
Are you telling me that it is wrong to believe and dream they can do something good with their lives?

What is this "feel good society" you speak of?

Are you telling me a person's opinion does not matter?
 
what do you think of 8 year-olds from 2011 and 8 year-olds from 2016?

Minecraft fans. > _>

Are you telling me that it is wrong to believe and dream they can do something good with their lives?

What is this "feel good society" you speak of?

Are you telling me a person's opinion does not matter?

No, it's wrong to set your dreams too high to the point that you won't ever reach them and keep trying to shoot for it when you obviously can't. It's alright to dream, but it's necessary to know when to wake up. You'll understand when you start working, trust me. > >

The modern age with anti-bullying, no bias, only sugarcoated words, political correctness and "fair" rules (the general gist of it, you geddit right?). I mean, it's great and all and I love it. But it makes entering the working world so much more painful for teens/kids (I sound so old, I'm not even in my 20s yet...). Like, when you start working, all that goes out of the window. Your boss doesn't care about how you feel, what you believe in or what you think is acceptable, you do your job or you get fired. It's harsh, but that's reality..

And opinions are opinions! It's okay to have one, but don't shove it down someone else's throat or declare it as the only acceptable opinion EVER! Which a lot of millenials do. x3
 
do you guys like deep fried fillet sandwiches with pickles, american cheese lectus, and fries?
without the pickles then yes please
What is you guys' favourite paradigm so far?
what
Can you guyz ship ich other?
DUN IGNORE THIS ONE!1!1!!
images
 
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