Because, as the problem was presenting itself and aggravating, they were the most powerful voting block. The inflection point literally occurred as they were leaving school and starting work and has only gotten worse. Look, if there's a problem on your watch, and it gets worse when you're capable of stopping it (and you don't) then we ascribe blame*. It's not individual wealth concentration that matters, it's the greater trend of wealth concentrating upwards. I've written that more than once in this thread. In Canada, with $1,000,000, I can permanently retire. With $11,000,000 I can permanently retire and have my income grow faster than wages grow. I am not complaining that someone can earn enough to retire. I am not even complaining that someone can permanently retire (that's our longterm goal for everyone). I'm not even terrifically 'anti-Boomer' on this topic, and I have written that more than once. I'm not even blaming the person who tries to accumulate over $11 million. It's not the accumulation that really matters, it's the creation and perpetuation of the system that is the problem. Are you not believing me? Should I write it more often? Use block capitals? The problem is if an 'elite' get richer as the workers and citizens get poorer.How did the boomers fail to prevent the wealth disparity more than the people before and after them. You are concentrating wealth yourself.
BJ points out that Boomers weren't capable of being politically dominant until now. Okay, then I guess I can start the clock on the above issue now. And then while Rah says "have you considered voting???", we will see if BJ confronts him or likes his posts.
When the boomers were growing up and having children climate change was not a widely known thing.
'We' found out about Climate Change in 1992 and for the less-informed subset it was 1997. (well-past when Boomers did most of their child-bearing, btw) At the time, the Boomers were the most powerful economic and political block. They outnumbered me, and were vastly more wealthy than I was in 1997. There was nothing economically that I could do to reverse the trendline of Boomer's having their footprint grow during that period. And, part of the blame is mine, because I failed to convince people more powerful than me that they were aggravating a problem. But I cannot help but notice that I was capable of having a lower footprint than the average Boomer the entire time I knew about the problem. And they were richer than I.
*Think about the Bystander Effect. No individual person is 'to blame', but 'the group' is to blame for responding less quickly than an alone-person would. It's not so much a moral damnation as an observation. But we shouldn't call the Bystander Effect 'acceptable'. We try to prevent it through innoculation-by-exposure. But if people are crowding around a pool when a child is drowning, the person who has to physically shove through the crowd in order to jump in can blame the crowd for aggravating the issue.