I saw this behavior growing up in a working class neighborhood. But once I moved out and started making upper class income, this wasn't the norm at all. If anything, the kids go to school and then to tutoring afterwards. The tutoring is to make the kids even more competitive than what schools are teaching and reading is the norm. I definitely think it's a class thing.I'm a 63-year-old Canadian, and I don't remember a time in my life when there weren't a lot of men who saw reading as a complete waste of time, if not downright effeminate or nerdy. I've known people who read nonfiction but just couldn't wrap their heads around the concept of fiction. Why waste time on things that aren't real? I knew a commerce student at university who was proud that he never read anything that wasn't required reading for one of his classes. Smartphones have changed things a bit, but airport waiting lounges, airplanes, buses, and similar places were full of men just staring into space. Women seemed more likely to be reading. I've read whole books in airport terminals and in pubs.
Now, men are more likely to read non-fiction than fiction in general, but the quantity read is still low.
The problem with AI now is that it's not replacing work so much as changing it. Those that don't have the analytical skills to vet what AI is kicking out are going to fall behind. And prompting properly requires being able to write well.
What you're going to see is more guys out of the workforce since they won't have the skills. And how manly is a guy that can't provide? There is physical labor, but these jobs start to take a tool on folks by time they're fifty. And there are fewer ones available since a lot of them were moved off shore.
The librarians working at the library might not want to censor, but they can't carry books in their libraries that their local governments don't approve of. So those going to the libraries to get books that they can't afford are limited by what the libraries has in stock. That's what I meant.Sorry, what? Professional librarians are generally opposed to censorship. In Canada, what's been happening is conservative provincial governments telling public and school libraries to get rid of certain books.
It's limiting what lower income people can read assuming they read at all. It's a great way to control the population.
