by Zardoz » Sat 22 Apr 2006, 10:57:03
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PolestaR', '.')..The fact is your generation had it the best, and why? Because you were lucky enough to be born in a period where you can live like a 19th century king or queen on an average wage?
Yes.
And it really was just a matter of luck. We earned none of it. It fell on our heads.
I, in particular, was one of the luckiest of the lucky: A white male American boomer with a good education (provided at virtually no cost to me by the State of California). I've lived my entire life on cruise control, and everything has come to me in spite of my lack of effort.
Think about this: You know how Tom Brokaw named the Great Depression and World War II veterans "The Greatest Generation", right? Well, those people were
our parents!. Take my word for it: Brokaw is absolutely right. They really were great. They were tough, stoic, no-nonsense hard workers who really did save the world from a monstrous threat, then, for good measure, built the economic foundation for us boomers to thrive on.
I won't go into any more details, because it would break your heart. Let me just assure you that we knew how good we had it when we were very young, we had a nagging feeling that it might be too good to last and that succeeding generations might not have it quite like we did, but we had no idea how fast things would go south for those who would come after us.
None of us imagined this. None of us thought that our children, and especially our grandchildren, would be faced with the daunting issues young people of today will be grappling with in the near future. Who knew? A few tried to warn us (Jimmy Carter, for one) but we didn't take them seriously, and enough of us got sucked in by Reagan's cornucopian "Morning In America" bullshit to turn the country away from environmentalism and send us down the road to runaway consumerism instead.
But don't think all of us dumb boomers are not aware of what we've done, and what we've left behind. I can't think of anybody my age who does not think as I do. We all talk about it. We all fear for our kids and grandkids. Nobody can deny the profound difference in what a 20-year-old of today faces compared to what the world looked like to us at that age.
All we can do is apologize. With the apology and five bucks you can buy a fancy coffee drink at Starbucks. That's about all it's worth.