"Everyone [in the United States] born after 1945 is a boomer. The only difference is that, over time, precarity increases and technological sophistication also increases."

-- Matt Christman, Hell of Presidents Ep. 10

This is it. This is the one good take on yankeedom's generational politics. The generation we traditionally define as "boomer", people born within the first twenty years after the end of WWII; that generation has far more in common with subsequent generations than any of us do with any generation before. In the broad view of history, we're the same.

The early boomers were the first to attend a nationally standardized schooling system -- what is, by and large, still the same system we have today. The early boomers were the first generation to grow up with television -- with audio/visual mass media dominating not just the public consciousness, but also the early developmental phases of children. I'm gonna go out on a limb and say they were probably also the first generation of US citizens where the majority reach adulthood without knowing chronic hunger. Hell, the first generation in which the majority have not seen the unadulterated night sky.

We have all these things in common with them. Getting mad at them for being how they are is an understandable response. But, I also think it's kind of silly. Those first boomers had to navigate all that without the benefit of older adults who had grown up in similar conditions.

  • daisy
    ·
    edit-2
    11 months ago

    Hell yeah. No war but the class war. Fomenting intergenerational war is a tool of the ruling class. I have no common cause with wealthy millennials, and I have a lot of common cause with boomers living in poverty.

    That said, I do wish that the boomer generation in general would be more open-minded on queer issues.

    • Pluto [he/him, he/him]
      ·
      11 months ago

      "I have no common cause with wealthy millennials, and I have a lot of common cause with boomers living in poverty."

      Yeah, I'm the same with Latinos in my community (I'm Latino myself).