I think I first noticed something "wrong" with the way school was done way when I was about 8 years old; some things just didn't make sense.* It grew in me.* At 14, I wrote a letter to the school newspaper about it.* at 17 I revisited it and wrote a letter to my local newspaper.* but by then, online existed and I was on it.* I took the fight there. At 18, back in 1990, I started, "The Children's Rights List" out of my college home account.* There was no WWW yet; there was e-mail (and mailing lists), chat rooms, and Usenet - public discussion groups that were pretty much identical to google+, facebook etc; (you could download pictures but not view them with the message - this was a long time ago :P ) Anyway, I gathered a few hundred people rather quickly; and appealed to System Admins at different Universities to get it hosted; it was exhausting constantly forwarding messages I received to the whole group.* Finally, I found one and he set me up, even though I didn't go to his University. So I founded Y-RIGHTS; Youth Rights; where we discussed everything from academic rights, to bullying, gay rights, the law, parenting, education, etc.* My only rule was that nobody talked too 'acadmically" on the list; a few members left because of that; but it was important that what you say could be understood by younger members with lesser vocabularies. Here I am - 18 year old, telling 40-50 yr old college professors what to do; but they listened.* We had members from age 11-80 at least; all around the world, all walks of life; and ended up with over 3000 members within a few months; and this is with no website (Tim didn't start the WWW thingie yet); but there were other ways to get the word out that worked perfectly well. I ran it from when I was about 18-24 yrs old; then I passed it on to a teenage activist in California and a University professor working in Australia; they had the right "temperment" to run a huge list of people discussing all sorts of topics.** And they ran it for about 4 more years without me until at some point, it closed. I had moved on to other things. Anyway; I'm 42 yrs old now. The issue never left me; and it blows my mind that education hasn't been fixed yet. But the problem with this is all too common; a) You don't have the power to have a decent voice before you're legally an adult.* b) Once you are legally adult, the issues of kids and teens don't matter as much to you because, they're not your problems anymore. That happens so commonly; and I think it keeps good change from happening. I never forgot.* It never left me.* I mean, it was nice to legally drink and vote and drive, sign documents and have it mean something, get credit cards, a mortgage, earn money, be respected. But I never felt like I earned any of it.* I'm still that 8 yr old kid looking around going, "Something is wrong with the world", the 14 year old who is writing about it, the 18 year old who is encouraging people to talk about it. So far it's been the best I can do; help ppl cope with the shitty system they're stuck inside of.* I'd dream of a world of Minecraft; where you could just punch holes through systems and reconstruct them;* I have the greatest hope for the generation you're in , and the generation younger than you especially; because they really grew up online; and if the systems don't suck their creativity away from them, you and they have the greatest chance of making the world better for the generations to come. And, even if you can't make the world better; at least make your world better.* I never want someone to "feel trapped"; there's always a way to stay positive and succeed; finding the route may not be easy; but it's there, somewhere, buried just behind a block of dirt, or hiding in a forgotten corner of a dusty room.