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The old man was tricked by lying asleep in IKEA. What do you think of this group of old people who occupy IKEA?

In fact, if we look at Japanese newspapers in the 1981s, we will find that news such as "Fukuoka old people occupy the hospital" often appears in the front page. What is reported is nothing more than a group of old people gathered in a hospital for a long time in the front hall of the hospital and in the clinic to chat, rest and drink free drinks from the hospital.

Japanese journalists at that time also commented: Is it right or wrong for the elderly to occupy public medical resources like this?

do we seem to be familiar with these contents today? It's just that Japanese old people have been replaced by China old people, and hospitals have been replaced by IKEA. Actually, put aside the cliche that "the bad guys in China are getting old" which is common on the Internet.

We should see more objectively that the elderly are the same all over the world. They have strong social needs, realistic economic difficulties and face the shortage of public resources. However, in a populous country like China, most elderly people have less public resources, and it is even more difficult to meet their social needs.

Therefore, it is not difficult to see that in China, not only IKEA, but also major supermarkets gather a lot of left-behind elderly people in midsummer afternoons to get together in twos and threes to enjoy the cool and chat. The more secondary counties and cities, the more prominent this phenomenon is.

Therefore, I personally disagree with the special group of "the old people who occupy IKEA", but I can understand it emotionally. Therefore, I do not advocate that young people ridicule these old people with emotions. It should be noted that personal factors account for a limited proportion of the emergence of a class of social phenomena, and there are more problems in the supply and demand of resources.

What we should really consider is: Where shall we go for recreation when we are old? Just like Japan 31 years ago, as soon as it was discovered that a huge group of elderly people was forming, it immediately began to lay out public resources, which led to the polite and friendly image of Japanese elderly people we can see today.

think about our old people, that is, think about us in the future.