.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a member of Gerneration X, I am tired of having to pay for debts created by baby boomers to pay for benefits for baby boomers. If you were born between 1943 and 1960, I'm talking to you. And it is only getting worse. The changes to Medicare being dicussed will have the greatest effect not on the baby boomers but on those of us who follow in their wake. Just because you wasted all you money to buy a micro bus in the 60s, bell bottoms in the 70s, power suits in the 80s and pad thai in the 90s, doesn't mean that I want to bail you out. Let me talk to you in language you can understand, "Why don't you all just fff...fade away, I'm talkin' about [your] generation."
Another thing, The Beatles are over rated.
Wow, everything is about you, isn't it? I know many fine members of your generation and none of them is absorbed with self-pity the way you are.
And, btw, honey, you won't be bailing me out because I have worked hard and spent wisely. You'd best save your money and spend it on your therapist bills so you can figure out why you're blaming whole generations of people you don't even know for your personal failures.
Anonymous wrote:They'll be dead soon.
Anonymous wrote:They'll be dead soon.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a Gen Yer and I think Gen Xers sound like entitled whiners who cry because things aren't fair. Life isn't fair. Get over it. Things have changed and bitching about how much easier it was for baby boomers isn't going to change things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WHY don't you boomers understand that the rules have changed?
My father, the lawyer got:
-a BA
-a JD
-a job in a respected firm making tens of thousands of dollars in bonuses every year
-a nice, cushy life
I graduated law school 30 years later and I got:
-a BA
-a JD (from the same school as dad! And graduated higher in my class than him! And worked my ass off in prestigious internships every semester from 2L on)
-an LLM
-a job at a respected firm making shit bonuses
-laid off for economic reasons
-bills that I can't afford to pay
HOW did I not work as hard as him?
I--and tons of others in my position--played by the old rules. But THE RULES HAVE CHANGED. And the baby boomers had a big part in the why of that.
Oh lord, I have neighbors who are security guards, cashiers, or who are too disabled to work. Why should I feel sorry for you when I know kids who work hard but are still reading years below their grade and will have a hard time getting anything besides a job at McDonalds? Since when did the world owe you so damn much? Talk about feeling entitled!
Yeah, we bought in 2002 and paid $145k for a house in what my daughter describes as the ghetto (lots of public housing next door) at a time when we were making far less than 180k because we were careful with our money and we didn't feel entitled to buy your so-called "equivalent sized boomer house." Yes, we were lucky that we bought before 2005. Yes we were lucky that the neighborhood gentrified around us. But we only bought what we could afford. Why don't you go live in a poor neighborhood first before you start whining about your "equivalent sized boomer house." You might appreciate what you have when you live next to folks who sweep floors for a living. It certainly made me count my blessings when I saw how my neighbor who is a security guard works seven days a week to get by.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a severely underemployed Boomer. I may never work in the profession I trained for again because I'm competing with all the entitled Gen Xers and Millenials.
How is this entitled
2 Bachelors in Computers Science / IS, 2 Masters in Software and IS, worked since i was 19 while I was in college, now I am 30 and make 180k and can't afford to buy a the equivillent sized boomer house because I bought after 2005 and can't sell my current small one. When I say equivillient I am saying people within my same income bracket and education who are boomers.
Anonymous wrote:WHY don't you boomers understand that the rules have changed?
My father, the lawyer got:
-a BA
-a JD
-a job in a respected firm making tens of thousands of dollars in bonuses every year
-a nice, cushy life
I graduated law school 30 years later and I got:
-a BA
-a JD (from the same school as dad! And graduated higher in my class than him! And worked my ass off in prestigious internships every semester from 2L on)
-an LLM
-a job at a respected firm making shit bonuses
-laid off for economic reasons
-bills that I can't afford to pay
HOW did I not work as hard as him?
I--and tons of others in my position--played by the old rules. But THE RULES HAVE CHANGED. And the baby boomers had a big part in the why of that.
Anonymous wrote:As a member of Gerneration X, I am tired of having to pay for debts created by baby boomers to pay for benefits for baby boomers. If you were born between 1943 and 1960, I'm talking to you. And it is only getting worse. The changes to Medicare being dicussed will have the greatest effect not on the baby boomers but on those of us who follow in their wake. Just because you wasted all you money to buy a micro bus in the 60s, bell bottoms in the 70s, power suits in the 80s and pad thai in the 90s, doesn't mean that I want to bail you out. Let me talk to you in language you can understand, "Why don't you all just fff...fade away, I'm talkin' about [your] generation."
Another thing, The Beatles are over rated.
Anonymous wrote:WHY don't you boomers understand that the rules have changed?
My father, the lawyer got:
-a BA
-a JD
-a job in a respected firm making tens of thousands of dollars in bonuses every year
-a nice, cushy life
I graduated law school 30 years later and I got:
-a BA
-a JD (from the same school as dad! And graduated higher in my class than him! And worked my ass off in prestigious internships every semester from 2L on)
-an LLM
-a job at a respected firm making shit bonuses
-laid off for economic reasons
-bills that I can't afford to pay
HOW did I not work as hard as him?
I--and tons of others in my position--played by the old rules. But THE RULES HAVE CHANGED. And the baby boomers had a big part in the why of that.