Teenagers no longer treasure their cultural heritage.prepared speech
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Answer:
Many teens don't treasure what is their heritage's culture because for one reason or another that culture does not mesh with the culture they are currently surrounded by. That or they and even their parents have no ties to their heritage and those cultures, besides shared ancestors and maybe skin color.
Explanation:
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Speech on teenagers no longer treasure their cultural heritage
It’s a problem that solves itself, so I wouldn’t worry about it. Their entire cultural heritage was created by generations of people who were once teenagers just like they are.
The defining conservative view that young people of the present day are uniquely horrible by comparison to every new generation in the past is false.
Culture isn’t a museum. It’s a living thing that grows like a tree, modulated by every generation born into it. Each and every one of them leaves it a bit different from the way it was when they came in. It’s common for kids to begin by rejecting the values and traditions of their community wholesale, and almost universal for them to assimilate them by the time they reach adulthood …with modifications and adaptations that they’ll elaborate as they advance toward old age. Their contribution will become a part of their culture’s history, the trunk of the tree and its branches; its heritage.
Treasuring one’s cultural heritage doesn’t mean freezing it as it is, or was. The only culture that doesn’t change is a dead one.
Conversely, we couldn’t reject our culture if we wanted to. We’re permeated by it almost from the time we’re born. Teenagers do treasure it; a lot of them just don’t know it yet, while others do but want to make changes. Some of those changes will take hold.