Nobody has seen it; it can not be imagined, unpredictable, and it is impossible to prevent. Still, there is nothing to raise what happened on Tuesday, 11th September 2001. Life changed, families were torn apart, and the country was united. Life is priceless, when suddenly 3000 innocent and brave souls were killed, we suddenly remembered this truth. In the tenth anniversary of the September 11 attack, we lose the past and remember those who remembered. Because this is because our country and patriotism work together to protect the freedom and brave house.
The Z generation is quite different from the lives of parents and the millennium. They are generations and in many cases they can not recall life without a smartphone in their hands - and they do not remember the 9/11 attack outside the classroom. Therefore, companies that are adopting and maintaining them may need to adjust strategies. "Since these Z generations are watching parents are economically frustrated, parents talk with their children about finance, money, and debt issues faster so they can talk to the really old generation "Denise Villa, founder of Dynamics for Center, said.
They are generations since September 11 and they grew up in an era of economic and national concerns. They never knew that terrorism and school shooting were not common. When they grow, they see their parents through a tough recession, and perhaps most importantly they enter adolescence as technology and social media are changing society. Jannis Whitlock, Director of Cornell Self Injury and Rehabilitation Research Program, said: "If you want to make a real living environment, we did it." Factor, but Whitlock does not think that these are the main factors of this epidemic. "This is because they are in an exciting cauldron, they can not get rid of it or they do not want to leave or know how to get rid of it," she said.
Many parents think that they will not post without children's consent. But, of course, children can not give consent, and they can not imagine how their future will see their parents' current embarrassment. As a matter of fact, as their parents, we can not. We may decide to withstand any future results of our own adjustment, but it is fair to ask our children to do the same? The bigger, perhaps more subtle, problem is that by narrating their lives online, we are creating their public image. We talk to the world who the children are, and their records will never be deleted, so their view will freeze in time. Is this pretty? Is it unfair to draw them as a sullen child or a sullen young teenager? As we did before, I think that our children need to have the opportunity to create their own role without lagging behind the legacy of their parents' views.