2/ "I just want to live in a big house with my mom and dad and let them have de facto veto power over my entire life" - things very grown up, independent people say
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2/ the best decision I made was leaving HS early / moving out to go to college at 17 I only regret that my birthday wasn't a few weeks later so that I could say that I did it at 16
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The stigma of living at home past 18 only developed as recently as the 1980s, when house prices were on average 3-4x one's yearly salary as opposed to 10x. Prior to the 70s multi-generational households were the norm.
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And here I am feeling like a god because I still don't pay rent at 30 in mom's basement. So fucking based.pic.twitter.com/nFRw0rmHiv
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2/ no, they were not "the norm"https://twitter.com/meta_nomad/status/1443631181321363456 …
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3/ Your own data shows that it was very uncommon (80% of people did NOT, even at the peak). Also, note that there's something tricky about the way that this data is counted >>>https://twitter.com/meta_nomad/status/1443712129928941575 …
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People don't seem to understand the whole "nuclear family existed centuries before *Protestantism*". Blaming Protestantism, the industrial revolution, the 1950s, and the modern world are wrong in progressing orders of magnitude.
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What’s wrong with doing both? De-stigmatize multi-generational living without adding stigma to those who don’t want to live that way.
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This is specifically an English, Dutch, and Danish habit. The French, Norwegians, and Germans don't do it traditionally.pic.twitter.com/ajVpF4d779
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and in England it probably started a couple generations before Chaucer
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