Anonymous wrote:That's right, our evil plot to deliberately deprive you of a happy life succeeded! (BTW that's sarcasm in case you can't tell.)Anonymous wrote:They took relative prosperity and crested laws that protected their wealth but screwed over everyone after them: pensions, laws, taxpayer dollars for elderly services instead of education, raising age of social security. On and on. They also benefited greatly from the housing boom and cheap colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I was in my 20-30's, I paid student loans, drove a beater car, I lived with roommates, bought a condo, then a TH then a SFH. It took years of saving to be able to afford an nice SFH in a good neighborhood.
It seems like younger people think that baby boomers had wealth drop out of the sky. Boomers have wealth from decades of working and investing. If you are young you will have wealth, it will take time, just stick with it. Also, if your parents are boomers you will likely inherit from them. We got nothing from our parents estates, because there was nothing left.
Stop whining.
What are you doing NOW to ensure that the younger generation has the same opportunities that you had? How are you going to address the shrinking middle class, loss of unions, lag in wages compared in growth of GDP, unaffordable college, concentration of wealth in the hands of a few, loss of pensions, tax cuts for the rich, looming bankruptcy of social security, failing publice schools, unaffordable health care, poisoned environment, etc. etc?
I would turn this question back onto you and your generation. My generation is transitioning out of power and yours in power now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Boomers are the locust generation.
They spent all their grandparents money, all their parents money, all their own money, all their kids money, and are now running up debts to steal their grandchildren's money.
All of this to fuel their own pointless hedonism.
They inherited utopia and bequeathed us a hell-hole.
Fck you, Boomers.
Sincerely,
Generation X
You can't be serious. You are so wrong. We inherited nothing from our parents or grandparents. In fact we had financially support them in old age and take care of them physically as they were dying while raising our own kids. Our parents never paid for our college, cars, vacations, weddings. We didn't resent it, in fact it made us work hard and value a dollar.
No. False. You were the first generation to NOT have to support your parents because Social Security was there. Your parents supported their parents. The government supported yours.
And you didn't work hard. You worked 9-5, went home and didn't think about work until 8:59 the next day. I have to answer emails and calls at 1 am.
Anonymous wrote:They took relative prosperity and crested laws that protected their wealth but screwed over everyone after them: pensions, laws, taxpayer dollars for elderly services instead of education, raising age of social security. On and on. They also benefited greatly from the housing boom and cheap colleges.
I'm sorry that their parents suck. They deserve better parents. But I and other people my age did not make their parents bad people. They accomplished that entirely on their own.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The constant sh#$ talking of millenials and the economic ruin you've left to us mostly.
But mostly the first one, ya'll are mean selfish bullies
Whaaat?
Millennial here - I don't hate you but that's because I got mine. Two properties in DC. However my friends all across the U.S. can't stand boomers. They see their parents and ILs sitting on valuable SFHs they can no longer use but no one else the millenials age can afford. They've heard the stories of homes bought in Seattle for $14,000 in the 70s and 80s now worth more than $1M. Homes in DC bought for $200,000 now worth the same. They know they're priced out and to them it's incredibly unfair.
That's right, our evil plot to deliberately deprive you of a happy life succeeded! (BTW that's sarcasm in case you can't tell.)Anonymous wrote:They took relative prosperity and crested laws that protected their wealth but screwed over everyone after them: pensions, laws, taxpayer dollars for elderly services instead of education, raising age of social security. On and on. They also benefited greatly from the housing boom and cheap colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Boomers are the locust generation.
They spent all their grandparents money, all their parents money, all their own money, all their kids money, and are now running up debts to steal their grandchildren's money.
All of this to fuel their own pointless hedonism.
They inherited utopia and bequeathed us a hell-hole.
Fck you, Boomers.
Sincerely,
Generation X
You can't be serious. You are so wrong. We inherited nothing from our parents or grandparents. In fact we had financially support them in old age and take care of them physically as they were dying while raising our own kids. Our parents never paid for our college, cars, vacations, weddings. We didn't resent it, in fact it made us work hard and value a dollar.
Here we go. The inter-generational war starting up again. People, don't do it! Please refrain from making sweeping generalizations about other generations.Anonymous wrote:The constant sh#$ talking of millenials and the economic ruin you've left to us mostly.
But mostly the first one, ya'll are mean selfish bullies
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I was in my 20-30's, I paid student loans, drove a beater car, I lived with roommates, bought a condo, then a TH then a SFH. It took years of saving to be able to afford an nice SFH in a good neighborhood.
It seems like younger people think that baby boomers had wealth drop out of the sky. Boomers have wealth from decades of working and investing. If you are young you will have wealth, it will take time, just stick with it. Also, if your parents are boomers you will likely inherit from them. We got nothing from our parents estates, because there was nothing left.
Stop whining.
What are you doing NOW to ensure that the younger generation has the same opportunities that you had? How are you going to address the shrinking middle class, loss of unions, lag in wages compared in growth of GDP, unaffordable college, concentration of wealth in the hands of a few, loss of pensions, tax cuts for the rich, looming bankruptcy of social security, failing publice schools, unaffordable health care, poisoned environment, etc. etc?
I would turn this question back onto you and your generation. My generation is transitioning out of power and yours in power now.
Your generation literally just elected Trump. And therefore Pruitt eliminating environmental protections one at a time. We will happily reclaim the wheel in November.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I was in my 20-30's, I paid student loans, drove a beater car, I lived with roommates, bought a condo, then a TH then a SFH. It took years of saving to be able to afford an nice SFH in a good neighborhood.
It seems like younger people think that baby boomers had wealth drop out of the sky. Boomers have wealth from decades of working and investing. If you are young you will have wealth, it will take time, just stick with it. Also, if your parents are boomers you will likely inherit from them. We got nothing from our parents estates, because there was nothing left.
Stop whining.
What are you doing NOW to ensure that the younger generation has the same opportunities that you had? How are you going to address the shrinking middle class, loss of unions, lag in wages compared in growth of GDP, unaffordable college, concentration of wealth in the hands of a few, loss of pensions, tax cuts for the rich, looming bankruptcy of social security, failing publice schools, unaffordable health care, poisoned environment, etc. etc?
I would turn this question back onto you and your generation. My generation is transitioning out of power and yours in power now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I was in my 20-30's, I paid student loans, drove a beater car, I lived with roommates, bought a condo, then a TH then a SFH. It took years of saving to be able to afford an nice SFH in a good neighborhood.
It seems like younger people think that baby boomers had wealth drop out of the sky. Boomers have wealth from decades of working and investing. If you are young you will have wealth, it will take time, just stick with it. Also, if your parents are boomers you will likely inherit from them. We got nothing from our parents estates, because there was nothing left.
Stop whining.
What are you doing NOW to ensure that the younger generation has the same opportunities that you had? How are you going to address the shrinking middle class, loss of unions, lag in wages compared in growth of GDP, unaffordable college, concentration of wealth in the hands of a few, loss of pensions, tax cuts for the rich, looming bankruptcy of social security, failing publice schools, unaffordable health care, poisoned environment, etc. etc?
I would turn this question back onto you and your generation. My generation is transitioning out of power and yours in power now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I was in my 20-30's, I paid student loans, drove a beater car, I lived with roommates, bought a condo, then a TH then a SFH. It took years of saving to be able to afford an nice SFH in a good neighborhood.
It seems like younger people think that baby boomers had wealth drop out of the sky. Boomers have wealth from decades of working and investing. If you are young you will have wealth, it will take time, just stick with it. Also, if your parents are boomers you will likely inherit from them. We got nothing from our parents estates, because there was nothing left.
Stop whining.
What are you doing NOW to ensure that the younger generation has the same opportunities that you had? How are you going to address the shrinking middle class, loss of unions, lag in wages compared in growth of GDP, unaffordable college, concentration of wealth in the hands of a few, loss of pensions, tax cuts for the rich, looming bankruptcy of social security, failing publice schools, unaffordable health care, poisoned environment, etc. etc?
Anonymous wrote:When I was in my 20-30's, I paid student loans, drove a beater car, I lived with roommates, bought a condo, then a TH then a SFH. It took years of saving to be able to afford an nice SFH in a good neighborhood.
It seems like younger people think that baby boomers had wealth drop out of the sky. Boomers have wealth from decades of working and investing. If you are young you will have wealth, it will take time, just stick with it. Also, if your parents are boomers you will likely inherit from them. We got nothing from our parents estates, because there was nothing left.
Stop whining.