Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Easy - We drank Diet Coke.
Tab!
Anonymous wrote:Easy - We drank Diet Coke.
Anonymous wrote:Did a lot of backpacking in my youth. I would never drink water from a creek unless I treated it first. Hope you were treating that creekwater before drinking it.Anonymous wrote:GenX and I didn't grow up in the city. I drank water from the nearest creek when hiking. You kids and your city water.
Anonymous wrote:Original pp here. Yeah, this is pretty much what I was talking about. My intent was to defend young people and I'm sorry to see that it's being followed up by attacks on boomers as a generation. I know it's tempting to blame everything on a generation you don't belong to - boomers claim millennials are spoiled and weak - millennials blame boomers for trashing the environment - but we really should work on these problems together. Wasting your energy stereotyping an entire generation isn't going to address the real problems we as a community are facing.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look, obviously all this use of plastic these days is a concern but why do you have to couch it in terms of baby boomer superiority? That's annoying. We're not superior. We just lived through different times. You can raise issues about waste of resources without making it a generational issue. But the way you framed this just makes it more fuel for inter-generational attacks.
It is annoying. It's also pretty rich it's a Boomer griping about this one thing when ithe Boomer generation as a whole pretty much trashed the environment and was one of the largest contributors to climate change. But I guess you can feel virtuous about the water fountain thing? All the young people I know use reausable plastic or aluminum bottles.
+1. The boomer generation was the one who created plastic bottles and marketed it to us in the 1990s, first for soda and then for water. Drinking water is a good thing, so why can’t we promote drinking out of reusable bottles? Oh that’s right, because it hurts Coke and Pepsi’s bottom lines.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, yeah, yeah... and we lived without bike helmets and child safety seats; we slept on our stomachs in drop-rail cribs, etc. etc. etc. and most of us survived - but not all.
I am a 64 yr old boomer and I love that we keep learning and growing - doing things better and better for children.
So, OP, get over it. Water is a good thing.
Did a lot of backpacking in my youth. I would never drink water from a creek unless I treated it first. Hope you were treating that creekwater before drinking it.Anonymous wrote:GenX and I didn't grow up in the city. I drank water from the nearest creek when hiking. You kids and your city water.
Original pp here. Yeah, this is pretty much what I was talking about. My intent was to defend young people and I'm sorry to see that it's being followed up by attacks on boomers as a generation. I know it's tempting to blame everything on a generation you don't belong to - boomers claim millennials are spoiled and weak - millennials blame boomers for trashing the environment - but we really should work on these problems together. Wasting your energy stereotyping an entire generation isn't going to address the real problems we as a community are facing.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look, obviously all this use of plastic these days is a concern but why do you have to couch it in terms of baby boomer superiority? That's annoying. We're not superior. We just lived through different times. You can raise issues about waste of resources without making it a generational issue. But the way you framed this just makes it more fuel for inter-generational attacks.
It is annoying. It's also pretty rich it's a Boomer griping about this one thing when ithe Boomer generation as a whole pretty much trashed the environment and was one of the largest contributors to climate change. But I guess you can feel virtuous about the water fountain thing? All the young people I know use reausable plastic or aluminum bottles.
+1. The boomer generation was the one who created plastic bottles and marketed it to us in the 1990s, first for soda and then for water. Drinking water is a good thing, so why can’t we promote drinking out of reusable bottles? Oh that’s right, because it hurts Coke and Pepsi’s bottom lines.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look, obviously all this use of plastic these days is a concern but why do you have to couch it in terms of baby boomer superiority? That's annoying. We're not superior. We just lived through different times. You can raise issues about waste of resources without making it a generational issue. But the way you framed this just makes it more fuel for inter-generational attacks.
It is annoying. It's also pretty rich it's a Boomer griping about this one thing when ithe Boomer generation as a whole pretty much trashed the environment and was one of the largest contributors to climate change. But I guess you can feel virtuous about the water fountain thing? All the young people I know use reausable plastic or aluminum bottles.
Anonymous wrote:Look, obviously all this use of plastic these days is a concern but why do you have to couch it in terms of baby boomer superiority? That's annoying. We're not superior. We just lived through different times. You can raise issues about waste of resources without making it a generational issue. But the way you framed this just makes it more fuel for inter-generational attacks.