by seven » Sat 20 May 2006, 01:22:16
Boomers did spearhead many important changes in society and government - federal worker safety laws, anti-discrimination laws, creation of pollution standards, women's rights, social acceptance of sex before/outside marriage, children outside of marriage, and unmarried cohabitation, student loan programs, protection of land, natural resources and wildlife, affirmative action for minorities and handicapped, etc. - most of the 'good' things about living in our society that we younger people take for granted because we were born into this better society, instead of having to fight for its creation.
That said, sadly, the sheer numbers of the boomer generation, caused by the same charmed era that spawned the wealth that boomers squandered, will be a huge burden on society. However, considering that PO, climate change, global instability and the decline of our economy will probably gut our finances long before most of the boomers get to collect the bulk of their Social Security, I wouldn't worry about it too much.
It is tempting to resent the boomers for their time of plenty, and be angry that we don't get the same cushy job/college/housing/blah deal they did - and that they weren't 'wise' with 'our' inheritance - but it's kind of pointless and unproductive. Very few humans, when given tremendous wealth and ease, will take the high road and be smart about using it, preserving it - it's just human nature...average human nature.
Poor people who win large amounts of money in the lottery often end up broke, simply because they had the same 'jackpot' attitude that the boomers did. Not being used to wealth/resources, they don't know how to hang on to it, or make it grow. So, they spend, use, and suck the resources dry in an orgy of excess. Ease begets laziness, which begets overuse of resources and a tendency to deny that there is reason to constrain one's consumption. Expand, overshoot, collapse. Rome did the same thing - and we delude ourselves if we think that we are so different from those who have made the same mistakes throughout history. Easter Island, anyone?
Knowledge and technology marches forward, but human nature remains the same. Could we be so sure that we wouldn't have done the same thing, were we in the boomer's place in history?
I doubt it. People usually need disaster or serious hardship before they willingly curtail or modify a comfortable, easy existence.
At least they made a start - pollution laws, conservation, acceptance of women in the workforce, fair wages, etc. Like humans throughout history, wealth and ease seduced them (or, most of them) into indolence and wastefulness. Each generation thinks that it is better and smarter than all those who came before...it's just our bad luck to be born at a time when western society humans will have to learn to do with much less - when they are used to having, or were promised, much more.
If PO and climate shifts cause drastic changes over a fairly short period of time, I wouldn't be surprised to see rage at boomers translate into widespread violence by pissed off youth who don't get to have anything but an increasingly hard life - we shall see.