Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess I am a member of the Boomer generation, although I hate that term. When we were starting out, we bought a tiny house in a close-in suburb, and financed it with a 30-year 12% mortgage. There are many similar houses in our neighborhood. When they come on the market they are snapped up, torn down, and replaced by mega-mansions with three-car garages, Great Rooms, etc. No young couple starting out can afford them, even at low interest rates. Not only is the house over-priced, but the taxes and utility costs are higher too. And the houses are so big that there is no back yard for kids to play in. This is not the fault of my generation.
I mean, it kind of is. Because who do you think is buying those starter homes and replacing them with giant mansions that will cost three times as much? Developers, who are mostly Gen X and Boomers.
Also, Boomers have controlled our political structures for decades, and could have instituted policies that would have addressed skyrocketing housing costs. But they were not incentivized to do so because Boomers, who already owned homes, benefitted from rising home values. They had no interest in keeping housing costs down. Well now millennials are mad because they can't afford homes. Boomers could have made choices that would have made it easier for millennials to buy into the housing market, but chose not to in order to enrich themselves.
When millennials get older, they, too, will support policies that help them, and not other generations.
Anonymous wrote:It just seems wrong that we live in a society where people think twice about taking their child to the doctor or emergency room because they are worried about copays and prescription costs, and meanwhile my hypochondriac older relatives seem to have made 'going to the doctor' into a lifestyle. I pay a lot of taxes and yet there's not maternity leave, no childcare. That's apparently a "you problem" whereas senseless wars and viagra for old men are an 'us problem'. Makes no sense.
Anonymous wrote:It just seems wrong that we live in a society where people think twice about taking their child to the doctor or emergency room because they are worried about copays and prescription costs, and meanwhile my hypochondriac older relatives seem to have made 'going to the doctor' into a lifestyle. I pay a lot of taxes and yet there's not maternity leave, no childcare. That's apparently a "you problem" whereas senseless wars and viagra for old men are an 'us problem'. Makes no sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess I am a member of the Boomer generation, although I hate that term. When we were starting out, we bought a tiny house in a close-in suburb, and financed it with a 30-year 12% mortgage. There are many similar houses in our neighborhood. When they come on the market they are snapped up, torn down, and replaced by mega-mansions with three-car garages, Great Rooms, etc. No young couple starting out can afford them, even at low interest rates. Not only is the house over-priced, but the taxes and utility costs are higher too. And the houses are so big that there is no back yard for kids to play in. This is not the fault of my generation.
I mean, it kind of is. Because who do you think is buying those starter homes and replacing them with giant mansions that will cost three times as much? Developers, who are mostly Gen X and Boomers.
Also, Boomers have controlled our political structures for decades, and could have instituted policies that would have addressed skyrocketing housing costs. But they were not incentivized to do so because Boomers, who already owned homes, benefitted from rising home values. They had no interest in keeping housing costs down. Well now millennials are mad because they can't afford homes. Boomers could have made choices that would have made it easier for millennials to buy into the housing market, but chose not to in order to enrich themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am tired of all this whining about boomers.
My daughter is a millennial. My daughter has enough cash saved that she could buy a house with cash if she wanted to.
My other daughter is in her second house. they had to take a current rate, not ideal, but hopefully they will be able to refinance at a lower rate not too far into the future.
Young people going to college and borrowing a lot for it is dumb. Getting a low paying major is dumb. Lots of people complaining have done both of these things.
The government is not going to take care of you.
pretttty sure the whole article was about how the government has in FACT taken care of boomers at the expense of everyone else.
Anonymous wrote:I am tired of all this whining about boomers.
My daughter is a millennial. My daughter has enough cash saved that she could buy a house with cash if she wanted to.
My other daughter is in her second house. they had to take a current rate, not ideal, but hopefully they will be able to refinance at a lower rate not too far into the future.
Young people going to college and borrowing a lot for it is dumb. Getting a low paying major is dumb. Lots of people complaining have done both of these things.
The government is not going to take care of you.
Anonymous wrote:I am tired of all this whining about boomers.
My daughter is a millennial. My daughter has enough cash saved that she could buy a house with cash if she wanted to.
My other daughter is in her second house. they had to take a current rate, not ideal, but hopefully they will be able to refinance at a lower rate not too far into the future.
Young people going to college and borrowing a lot for it is dumb. Getting a low paying major is dumb. Lots of people complaining have done both of these things.
The government is not going to take care of you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I say to Millennials, move on. It maybe true or not true that some Boomers got the bonanza.
Just do you! Make your own money and hope that you don't get vilified by your children & the grand kids.
Millenials are not having kids because they can't afford to buy homes. They won't be vilified because there is no one to vilify them.
Anonymous wrote:I say to Millennials, move on. It maybe true or not true that some Boomers got the bonanza.
Just do you! Make your own money and hope that you don't get vilified by your children & the grand kids.