
"Children don't perform": Millennial mother settles scores with Boomer parenting
"They learn that they are loved just as they are," she writes. "Sounds dangerous: a whole generation that questions, reflects, and can't be bothered..."
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1 agency rewrite / co-publication detected
Summary
According to an analysis by the international weekly newspaper The Economist of data from the American Heritage Time Use Study (1975 to 2018), millennial parents today spend more time with their children than their Boomer parents did with them in the past. Between 1980 and the 1990s, children in society were considered “psychically resilient”, says Margrit Stamm of the Frankfurter Rundschau of Ippen.Media.
Cross-referenced from 2 sources.
Factual coreconfirmed by several independent voices
Insufficient core: not enough independent confirmations to retain a shared fact.
Reported detailssecondary facts, each attributed to its source
According to an analysis by the international weekly newspaper The Economist of data from the American Heritage Time Use Study (1975 to 2018), millennial parents today spend more time with their children than their Boomer parents did with them in the past.
according to Frankfurter Rundschau +1Between 1980 and the 1990s, children in society were considered “psychically resilient”, says Margrit Stamm of the Frankfurter Rundschau of Ippen.Media.
according to Frankfurter Rundschau +1
Disputedincompatible versions — to verify
No factual contradiction detected between sources.
Framing by sidesame fact, different words — loaded terms highlighted
No notable framing divergence.
Blind spotwhat one side keeps silent
No blind spot detected: every side covers the same facts.
Sources2 sources cross-checked
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