by theluckycountry » Thu 08 May 2025, 06:18:03
Well no one liked the message of "Generations", or the latter book, "The fourth turning". Not surprising since it predicted a period of upheaval during the latter part of the Winter cycle (20 odd years) which according to the authors was to begin in the mid 00's. But history doesn't care for the failures does it.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')hursday, May 08, 2025
History tells us that civilizations and societies boom, bust and rise anew to repeat the pattern - a pattern that demographer Neil Howe says is surprisingly predictable in both its timing and trajectory. Howe refers to these "seasons" of societal change as "turnings", and has famously has declared America is now well into a Fourth Turning, the "bust" part of its cycle - where the status quo falls apart - often chaotically - and is replaced by a brand new order.
Well, in its first 100 days, the Trump administration has certainly made big - and some would say disruptive or even chaotic - strides in its attempt to replace the previous status quo with a new playbook, both domestically and internationally. Is this the kind of textbook Fourth Turning upheaval that Howe expected?
Neil Howe affirms that the global shift from globalization to nationalism, driven by Trump’s America First policies and parallel movements (e.g., Meloni in Italy, Modi in India), is a hallmark of the fourth turning. This trend, accelerating since the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, reflects a rejection of the U.S.-subsidized world order, with Trump criticizing globalization as a “bad deal” for America.
Howe notes widespread support for re-industrialization and immigration control, aligning with populist demands for economic sovereignty and cultural identity, a classic fourth turning dismantling of established systems. Howe explains that this bust phase, characterized by the collapse of the status quo and the rise of a new order, is not limited to the United States but is synchronized globally, with populist, nationalist, and authoritarian movements emerging worldwide.
"The trend in the west certainly, and now the rest of the world has been we've seen a synchronization of these turnings… it's global. It's now global." He highlights the Trump administration’s disruptive policies - such as tariffs, immigration crackdowns, and deregulation - as emblematic of Fourth Turning chaos... "Trump is a necessary figure… unleashing something pretty primal. Where it goes though, I don’t think even Trump understands."
Howe predicts increased volatility, legal battles, and potential crises (economic, political, or geopolitical) that could catalyze major institutional reshaping by the 2030s, when a new "First Turning" might emerge. "History also suggests we need some sort of conflict… We need something that would really ensure that people actually reshape institutions for a reason." He advises investors to focus on absolute returns, hedge against volatility, and prioritize assets like commodities, gold, defense, and infrastructure, while emphasizing personal resilience to navigate the turbulent period ahead.
https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/ ... one-globalhttps://adamtaggart.substack.com/p/neil ... ing-is-nowThose two demographers spent the eighties researching their first seminal work and then built on it with the fourth turning book. Many have plagiarized their work, altered dates etc, but theirs is still the goto if you want to understand the 4 different generation types and the 4 cycles of history that begin with their coming of age. For example as the Boomers ( born between 1943 and 1960 ) were coming of age they led a spiritual revolution and threw off the shackles of their silent generation parents. They didn't want conformity, they wanted long hair, drugs and free sex. When the next 'cohort', Gen-X came of age in the 80's they rejected the long hair and mini skirts, the Gold sleepers in the ears and all the other Boomer traits.
They also rejected the moralistic mindset that the boomers and their previous "prophet" generations clave to throughout history and became the do it yourself generation of pragmatists. I am of that generation, I have no interest in politics and what 'they' should or should not be doing. The generation after mine, the Millennials are completely different too. Most can't even change the bladeds on a lawn mower, though they have the ability to start them. They are not a do-it-yourself generation, they band together with their peers on the internet and the mobile phone and outsource all the household tasks my generation is happy to do. I'll wager most all of the people on this forum who disagree with my posts are of the old Boomer generation. We simply see the world differently. It's the boomers, the Prophet archetype, who are the world leaders guiding the nations into the current crisis, as they have with every other fourth turning crisis going all the way back to the boston tea party. It just is what it is. In their youth they lead the world into a spiritual revolution -the age of Aquarius this time- and in old age they lead it into the Winter cycle crisis. In their last iteration they led the west into a religious revival and prohibition, always a spiritual revolution of some kind.
From the book generations (1990 - 35 years ago)$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f you are a BOOMER, you know yours is, beyond doubt, an authentic
generation. You will recognize the generational boundaries separating you from others (and, if born from 1943 through 1945, you are probably delighted that someone finally put you where you always knew you belonged). Unlike the G.I.s, you have no trouble recognizing how other generations have personalities
very different from your own. Unlike the Silent, you have never imagined being
anything other than what you are. But the great comfort you derive from your
own identity is precisely what makes your generation troubling in the eyes of
others. Like the peers of John Winthrop or Ralph Waldo Emerson, you perceive
that within your circle lies a unique vision, a transcendent principle, a moral
acuity more wondrous and extensive than anything ever sensed in the history of
mankind. True, like a Herman Melville or an H. L. Mencken, you often loathe
the narcissism and self-satisfaction of your peers. But that too is an important
trait of your “Idealist” generational type. Possessing unyielding opinions about
all issues, you judge your own peers no less harshly than you judge your elders
and juniors. Either way, you may well appreciate that the time has come to
move the Boomer discussion beyond the hippie-turned-yuppie, Boomer-as-
hypocrite theme. Stripped to its fundamentals, your generation of rising adults
is no more hypocritical than Thoreau at Walden Pond, or Jefferson Davis during
his seven-year retreat into the Mississippi woods.
You may feel some disappointment in the Dan Quayles and Donald Trumps
who have been among your first age-mates to climb life’s pyramid, along with
some danger in the prospect of Boomer Presidents and Boomer-led Congresses
farther down the road. Watching Franklin Pierce and Stephen Douglas, the peers
of Lincoln and Lee felt much the same trepidation about their own generation —
with reason, as history soon demonstrated. You may see in your peers a capacity
for great wisdom, terrible tragedy, or perhaps just an insufferable pomposity.
Over the centuries, Idealist generations like yours have produced more than their
share of all three. Having lived just half a lifecycle, you probably find it hard
to imagine that your generation may someday produce strong-willed leaders on
a par with a Sam Adams or a Benjamin Franklin, a Douglas Mac Arthur or a
Franklin Roosevelt. That’s not surprising. Idealist generations — quite the reverse
of Civic generations — typically exert their most decisive influence on history
late in life. To understand how this happens, you need to step outside your inner-
absorption, take a look at like-minded ancestors, and understand the fateful
connection between the Idealist lifecycle and the larger flow of events. Perhaps
you already sense that your Boomer peers, for all their narcissism and parallel
play, will someday leave a decisive mark on civilization quite unlike anything
they have done up to now. Your intuition is correct. History suggests they will.
Both authors were boomers.