It is Okay to Put Up With Some Injustice

It is Okay to Put Up With Some Injustice

After much thought, I have concluded that young people should be more willing to put up with tyranny. Before the howls to cancel me for this outrageous statement start, let me clarify. I am not talking about physical, sexual, emotional, or even financial abuse. I am talking about that other stuff that we used to call ‘life,’ such as uncomfortable or inconvenient situations.

There was a time when you might not have liked certain things about your parents, but they were your parents and you owed them something, so you put up with it. Your boss might have had atrocious people skills, but they were the boss. You did what you were told. In school, your teachers were perhaps not to your liking, but they were in charge. You lived with it. In all of these situations, you might not have liked a great number of things about the older folks, but they had done things for you. You owed them. They probably knew things that you did not know. You were willing to shut up and learn.

Somewhere between the Millennials and Generation Z, parents became? more enlightened and showed more respect, and even deference, to their children. Those children expected more respect from their parents, teachers, and employers. We Baby? Boomers used to mock the first Millennials who joined our law firm. I remember a joke that went, “but we have been working here for a week already, how come no one is asking for our opinions about how this place is being run?”

I am not sure exactly how it came to pass, but I think that a generation of Baby Boomer and Generation X parents and psychologists are to blame for our present predicament.? Whatever the cause, there has developed an idea that apparently most Millennials and Generation Z have bought into, which is that nobody should have to put up with any type of oppression. According to this doctrine, if you find yourself being maltreated, you owe it to yourself to exit the situation.? If your parents are the perpetrators, draw strict boundaries for what you will put up with and if they do not comply, cut them off. If it is a teacher, write a bad review on ratemyprofessors.com, organize a protest or go over their head.? If it is your employer, just quit.

All of that is fine and good, but at the same time, the definition of unacceptable treatment seems to have expanded to the point where what used to be considered aggravations or challenges are now considered to be horrific. I have seen children who turn on their parents because their parents prove to be humans who are not perfect, and nieces and nephews who discover after years of being loved and supported by their aunts and uncles, that they no longer like them much and just stop talking to them. And or course, we all know employees who jump from firm to firm looking for the perfect situation, often claiming a toxic work culture as a reason.

According to a survey conducted by Cornell University in 2024, 40% of adult children in the United States have been estranged from their parents or a significant family figure at some point. Anecdotally, it is shocking how many families I am aware of where a child is estranged from a parent who I know and respect.

Now, I am perfectly aware that there is nothing new under the sun about parents thinking that the younger generation are disrespectful. Over 2,400 years ago, Socrates said, ““Our youth now love luxury, they have bad manners, contempt for authority; they show disrespect for elders, and they love to chatter instead of exercise. Children are now tyrants not servants of their household. They no longer rise when elders enter the room. They contradict their parents, chatter before company, gobble up their food and tyrannize their teachers.”

However, what seems to me to be new is that it is the young people who now pronounce their dissatisfaction with their parents, educators, and bosses, and are quick to sever relationships.

Janet Jackson is credited with being the first to have asked, “what have you done for me lately?” back in 1985.? That sure seems to have been taken up as a war cry by the Millennials and Generation Z.

To them, this old-fogey Baby Boomer says the following:

  1. Your parents sacrificed their time, money, and? health to bring you up. They were not perfect. They made mistakes. You owe them a lot, whether you like them or not. Cutting them off for not being to your liking is heartless. By the time that you figure that out, they may not be around to apologize to. You will have to live with that.
  2. Your employers gave you an opportunity.? If you were lucky, they may have trained you and mentored you. You? may not like everything that they do or how they communicate. But not everything that perturbs you constitutes abuse.
  3. Have some gratitude. Show some respect. The world does not, in fact, revolve around you.
  4. In the context of business, eventually jumping from company to company looking for a work environment which is delightful might get tiresome. Give some thought to opening your? mind and heart to other people who may have their own challenges and may be doing the best that they can. Maybe with a different attitude you might just like it where you are.

This article was originally published by Law360 Canada, part of LexisNexis Canada Inc.

Bryan O'Keefe

Partner | Corporate | Reps and Warranties Insurers | Private Equity | Human Capital Counseling | Legal Innovation

2 个月

Murray Gottheil I largely agree with your post and think that some of the issues with #1 and #4 relate to the decline of religion which emphasized forgiveness, giving people a second chance, trying to see everyone as made in the image of God, and looking past people’s faults to try to find their humanity. We often say that there are “no rules” today but that’s not true. There are a lot of rules about what you can say, what you can’t say, etc. — but there is very little forgiveness, compassion, or putting yourself in someone else’s shoes. That’s a form of “moralism” that is pervasive today. I used to be guilty of this myself. My spiritual awakening changed this and now I look at the world very differently.

Paul Mann

Trial Lawyer for Plaintiffs - medical malpractice

2 个月

Inheritance shld not be a lottery win, . Work( good work) is the "trick the kids now have NO idea about.

回复
Dr. Andrew Hudson

Musician, gourmet, translator.

2 个月

Lots of truth here.

Paul Mann

Trial Lawyer for Plaintiffs - medical malpractice

2 个月

Good article. Teach the kids more.They will follow. Law is a Field of dreams. It is plainly good hard work for those who care for clients and not so much for the almighty BUCK.

Paul Mann

Trial Lawyer for Plaintiffs - medical malpractice

2 个月

It is NOT OK to "put up with some injustice" .......plain and simple. if that attitude carries on what is the endgame.."forget Justice"? I do believe that in this life one gets Law; in the next life one gets Justice. I emailed Morawitz( Chief J of the Superior Court( what is it superior to??) and advised him to get the correct signs up.."Courts of Law".

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Murray Gottheil的更多文章

  • Verily a Man May be Known by his Attorney

    Verily a Man May be Known by his Attorney

    “The sharp employ the sharp; verily, a man may be known by his attorney.” Douglas William Jerrold Criminal lawyers are…

    24 条评论
  • Partnership – Not the Holy Grail, Part Seven – One Size Does Not Fit All

    Partnership – Not the Holy Grail, Part Seven – One Size Does Not Fit All

    We all know people in a wonderful marriage. We also know people in terrible marriages.

    8 条评论
  • Worrying in the Legal Profession

    Worrying in the Legal Profession

    In my first four years of practicing law, I learned how to be a lawyer through the “sink or swim” approach. I did this…

    51 条评论
  • What Have You Done For Me Lately?

    What Have You Done For Me Lately?

    In the summer of 1976, I worked for the largest law firm in Montreal, which was Ogilvy, Cope, Porteous, Montgomery…

    22 条评论
  • Lawyers: Understand the Math

    Lawyers: Understand the Math

    I sometimes hear from young (and sometimes not so young) lawyers who do not understand the math that supports their…

    27 条评论
  • Tough Love - U.S. Style

    Tough Love - U.S. Style

    They say that the Americans are tougher than we are when it comes to business. I think that it is probably true.

    10 条评论
  • Got Ya!

    Got Ya!

    Quite some time ago in Toronto, there was a major retail landlord who had some very desirable space in the downtown…

    13 条评论
  • Let the Games Begin

    Let the Games Begin

    An important element of a law firm’s culture is the manner in which it designates ‘client lawyer’ status, or ‘client…

    9 条评论
  • Bullies in the Boardroom

    Bullies in the Boardroom

    In my 6th year of practice, I represented an insolvent client in his negotiations with his Bank. The retainer came upon…

    36 条评论
  • My Brilliant Marketing Mind

    My Brilliant Marketing Mind

    Young lawyers often think that there is some magic secret to building a client base, and that marketing is a mysterious…

    18 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了