long gone is the era "we" mended, or even took and interest in the repair of most things, that generation is passing
I think that very often this sounds like a putdown of young people. It's the kind of thing someone who grumbles about them buying expensive coffee or avocado on toast or whatever, as if not buying them would mean any of them could afford to buy a house or retire at a decent age.
Let's not forget that we live in an age of items that aren't designed to be repaired - people aren't happy about that but it's where we are.
I had a conversation with someone in their thirties a couple of months ago. An old Beetle drove past and it was obviously running very rich. I said it was always the problem with cars that had automatic choke. This led to me explaining how a carburettor worked. No-one who learns how to drive knows how to operate the choke on a car anymore, because there hasn't been a car with a choke produced for the best part of 30 years. Nowadays, cars are sealed units. If your car develops a fault, you take it to a garage with a technician (not really a mechanic) who plugs a proprietary fault reader into it to diagnose the fault.
You can't blame people for not learning how to fix things that need specialist, proprietary equipment to be able to fix them. It's not a good use of their time.
And frankly, 20 year old me who seemed to spend most weekends trying to fix something on his car to get to work the next morning would have been delighted to have bought an old car that just worked, like even old cars do now. Our current car has a service interval of 25,000 miles! Unbelievable - it's ten years old now. Ten year old cars when I learned to drive were absolutely dreadful.