Patine
Deity
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2011
- Messages
- 12,042
economic data is mathematics. economic theories are social sciences.
hh
It's not that simple or cut and dried. You've declared another inappropriate black and white absolute.
economic data is mathematics. economic theories are social sciences.
hh
I'm just enjoying seeing several people who usually enjoy vilifying other demographics with broad stereotypes getting the same treatment here and realising how annoying it is. I wonder if anyone "feels bullied" yet.
You know what else boomers did? They reproduced. You owe your existence to the fact that at least two (possibly four; you give the impression of being fairly young) boomers opted to have children. At least acknowledge that.
It's pretty close to peak Boomer to demand acknowledgment and thanks from us for satisfying your own selfish desire to reproduce, exactly as every species on Earth has been doing since the first prokaryotes emerged from the primordial ooze.
Well played.
A disgustingly large chunk of that wealth is going straight to the capitalists that run our health care system.Interesting. The boomers are now aged 55 to 73. Most are still working. We are the wealthiest seniors in history and a pretty big group to boot. Estimates put the collective wealth of US boomers at $30 trillion. As we die off in the next couple of decades, what do you think will happen to all that money? Some of it it will go to taking care of ourselves in nursing homes. But all the rest gets passed on. Nobody is taking it with them. The children and grandchildren of the boomers will get it. Maybe your parents are boomers.
I see that you are new here. Certainly one way to establish your identity is to show up and toss Molotov cocktails into discussions and wait to see what happens. It is not a great strategy though. Mostly because such posts are usually a demonstration of ignorance. If you want to criticize the boomers, please do so, but really you should try to be more thoughtful and at least make a half hearted effort to support your thinking with something other than whining. You might try reading some of the posts in this thread that talk directly about boomers and what has happened since they took the reigns of power in the 90s.
I'm curious how we have squandered all our riches.
EDIT: Here is a different take on Millenials: https://qz.com/1491389/millennials-are-getting-richer/
are you really suggesting that data such as,It's not that simple or cut and dried. You've declared another inappropriate black and white absolute.
andmillennials have a much lower net worth compared to boomers when they were the same age.
isnt an absolute? now youre just being contrarian. i hate to break it to you but the jurys been out on this for awhile.millennials are financially much worse off than their parents although they are far more educated.
You know what else boomers did? They reproduced. You owe your existence to the fact that at least two (possibly four; you give the impression of being fairly young) boomers opted to have children.
I'm just enjoying seeing several people who usually enjoy vilifying other demographics with broad stereotypes getting the same treatment here and realising how annoying it is. I wonder if anyone "feels bullied" yet.
The 20 years raising the next generation deserves at least a head nod.
@Hamid.H Why do you always speak in absolutes and as though your stereotypes are 100% correct without exception, and then become highly defensive - even hostile - when others speak the same way? How do you justify such constant hypocrisy and the moral self-righteousness you take in it? I'm just curious here.
The social sciences are NEVER black and white. They are NEVER binary. Anyone who views them as such walks a dangerous path to either extremism to ruin, in all likelihood.
I'm afraid to think what will happen to written English (and whatever other languages may be relevant at the time).
Okay, so my biases on the table. I will sometimes frame my blame around 'the Boomers'. But that's just because I am referring to a collective group of people who just (mostly) didn't do good well enough to satisfy me. But this is from retrospect, and I have high standards for others! (It's hard to type 'people should eat healthy' while I eat ice-cream. But you know what? I manage. Because I care.)Interesting. The boomers are now aged 55 to 73. Most are still working. We are the wealthiest seniors in history and a pretty big group to boot. Estimates put the collective wealth of US boomers at $30 trillion. As we die off in the next couple of decades, what do you think will happen to all that money? Some of it it will go to taking care of ourselves in nursing homes. But all the rest gets passed on. Nobody is taking it with them. The children and grandchildren of the boomers will get it. Maybe your parents are boomers.
The 20 years raising the next generation deserves at least a head nod.
Okay, so my biases on the table. I will sometimes frame my blame around 'the Boomers'. But that's just because I am referring to a collective group of people who just (mostly) didn't do good well enough to satisfy me. But this is from retrospect, and I have high standards for others! (It's hard to type 'people should eat healthy' while I eat ice-cream. But you know what? I manage. Because I care.)
But this little bit that you wrote here needs a bit of a reframing.
The Boomers have wealth. They're going to dispose of that wealth in order to buy things. And (as you know) wealth is paper. So, they're going to spend in order to boost their quality of life. They're going to spend paper to get stuff. This means that those who collect paper are forgoing 'stuff' to get it. So, as Boomers retire, my ability to buy things for myself will go down but my ability to 'get paper' will go up. Materially, I will be worse off. Financially, I will be better off. This is just the normal economy, it's just going to be a bit more imbalanced, because the Boomers will get the 'stuff' and we're going to notice. We should actually get real-world economic growth of the working economy during that period as well, so my quality of life should improve even as Boomers are outcompeting me for the leisure goods I'd like to buy.
Remember, production doesn't move forward in time. Just because you had $5 last year and can buy a loaf of bread this year doesn't mean that you're just eating the loaf of bread that already exists. It's being produced now, and you're just capable of eating it while someone else cannot. We treat money as if its production moves forward in time, but it doesn't. It actually mostly works as a concept ... until it doesn't. The Boomers didn't 'store bread'. They just created the situation where they had a better claim on today's bread.
The Problem: is that the Boomers are going to spend their wealth into the system they created. So, the 'paper wealth' that they spend in order to outcompete me will not be distributed equally. It's going to increasingly go to the top 0.1%. So, it's not like we can look at that $30 trillion (call it $1 million per capita) and think we're going to get it. Or even have a shot at getting it. As the money is being spent, the top 0.1% are going to own even more of the economy than they did previously. So, as the Boomers die and move out of their houses ... those houses will be occupied (obviously). But the people moving in are going to be renting them, not owning them.
The Boomers thought that lower taxes would lead to higher growth and thus it would be easier to afford their retirement. "No Mr. wage-earner, you should let 'the rich' own the money, they'll created faster growth so that there's more loaves of bread in the future". It might even be true. But then at the end of the day, we're told that we don't own that bread. We get the privilege of borrowing to buy it. Even Boomers got screwed. Poorer Boomers were promised 'faster growth', and then later told that 'we cannot afford you, because that would involve more taxes now. And don't you prefer faster growth (that you don't own?)'
Similarly, anti-climate change policies are being bankrolled by the wealthy donors and corporate interests and can't be blamed on boomers entirely. Recycling movements did pick up steam with them and they are responsible for the genesis of a lot of the individual environmental movements.
Having said all of that, it is still true that by and large the boomers have voted for politicians over the last 20 years that have taken extremely regressive stances on these issues. There is also in my opinion a pretty wide lack of empathy toward younger generations from the boomers. This may be my bias speaking but there seems to be more than a bit of denial that the problems we're facing are in fact problems and that economic circumstances for younger generations have changed in many ways for the worst.
My frustration caused by my own personal experience with that lack of empathy here and in real life have fed back into my negative biases and created a lot of hostility on the subject that I hope to leave behind me going forward.
I'll stay off your lawn if you stop griping about my goddamn avocado toast.
Marxism is one way to look at the world. It's underpinnings of class struggle and the unsustainability of capitalism are appealing to many. It is an intellectual and philosophical approach most suitable for the classroom. What history has clearly demonstrated is that attempts to carry out a classless society at a meaningful scale haven't worked. Are there any success stories? I actually don't think that people want such a society. What they do want is to not feel left out, to have a chance for something better. The 80s moved capitalism into a mode of "we can be super rich" and and amass huge piles of excess capital that surpass anything we have ever seen. That has been unchecked and enhanced by the boom in technology. I think the solutions lie in taxing wealth, limiting the accumulation of excess wealth and constraining income or redirecting it to beneficial paths.That is a rather ignorant claim. Or perhaps, more accurately, it's an ill-informed and unexamined belief that can only be held by people who equate Marxism with Soviet-style systems or something.
It's a broad brush, and I don't like it. But I think that putting the blame on other generations is too much. There was a period of time when the Boomers were the most significant and powerful political cohort. And there was an opportunity to fix things. Now, obviously, the 'failure to fix' is the outcome and not a statement on any individual effort. Waaaaay earlier, I don't really ascribe much blame. A series of people were doing what they thought was a mixture of acting in their own best interests and acting in a way that created a good outcome.But it isn't a system that we built, it's a system that was built on us and not for us. The fact that our children are also caught in the collapse of that system is saddening, and maddening...but perhaps the most irritating part is that they blame us for creating it.
I was reminding the poster that he owes his personal existence to the fact that at least two boomers had sex, one of them got pregnant, carried the pregnancy to its conclusion, and presto! there he was. Presumably they also raised him (or he might have been adopted by other boomers or boomers' children, depending on his age) and had him taught to read, write, and type so he could post all that whining ranty <stuff>.wow thanks for overpopulating the planet, much appreciated. can't believe how much worse life would be if there were less human beings around![]()
Actually, it's the "go forth and multiply" that's the problem. Some of us prefer not to multiply and are chastised and financially penalized for it.this whole raising the finger and saying "I made you in my image!" shtick is becoming boring. if there truly was a god I'm sure he'd be in a constant state of shock and seeking PTSD treatment in order to cope with his "children".
As long as it's understood that I personally am not part of the overpopulation problem except in having been born, and as you say, I didn't ask to be born. In fact, there are times when I think that my mother was irresponsible to have let this happen given the family medical history, but then I remind myself that she was a teenager who never finished high school, got married mostly to escape an abusive home (her father - the man I knew as "Grandpa" - was physically abusive to her, a fact I only found out after she died and my aunt told me some of the dirty family laundry), and it was the early '60s when society would have looked down on her if she did not have children.it was your (I don't mean You valka, pls don't take this the wrong way) selfish decision to have kids and no kid owes anything to his parents. no one gets to chose where, to whom and in what environment to be born. and as good as most boomer intentions probably were when having kids, turned out it wasn't that great of an idea.
Yes, as explained above. But I still get asked about children by the home care nurses who have been coming to help me with some things after my hospitalization a couple of months ago and post-surgery. Most of the time it's not a problem, but the agency they're from is Catholic Social Services, so of course they look at everything from a Catholic point of view. They've referred to "heaven" when talking about my dad, and think it's really sad that I don't have siblings or children (both my dad and I were "only" children).in case I'm not being clear enough: I'm saying that mine (and many other peoples') existence is a fluke. looking at it "big picture style" we'd definitely, definitely be better off if there were less people like me around.
I'm very glad more people are deciding not to make kids now. I'm also glad the social pressuring of women is less acute now than it was decades ago, and I'm sure you would agree?
Have you ever asked your parents about this?I wouldn't want to burden anyone with raising.. or teaching me. What a horror that musta been.
It's getting dangerous to do it in the streets, now that cops are turning out armed for a war zone, against unarmed women, children, and disabled people (still thinking of the shameful overreaction they had toward the G20 protesters in Canada).much of the world is too comfy, too sedated, too introverted, too obsessed with their own lives, their self, career, fulfillment, worst offender: "happiness". too satisfied. much of our outrage is now done online, in echo chambers or in places like here, instead of in the streets. if we can't be radical here, then how are we going to be radical at all?
Yes, I know what that means, but it explains nothing about why or what can be done about it. In this case a picture is not worth anything remotely in the neighborhood of 1000 words.
So you don't use plastic at all? You've never littered, never thrown anything away that could still be used or repurposed?I can point fingers all day, but it's utterly useless. In two or three decades there wont be (m)any boomers around and me and my hypothetical kids have to deal with this (literal) garbage. This makes boomer condescension even worse imho. It gives me zero statisfaction to say "but well, it wasn't my fault at least!"
I’ve thought about your points above regarding the state. The auto discussion is interesting, but not dealt with here. Maybe later. I see that you are taking a philosophical approach to the discussion and that we should divorce the discussion from reality and dwell in the more nebulous realm of philosophical argument. Is that a fair assessment? You want to talk about whether a world without states is possible. I don’t find the rigorous rationality of non-evidence based discussion particularly stimulating. The fact that one can create an argument for a non-state world is pretty so what for me. Such arguments can, however, make interesting fiction if the character development goes well.In general I think you just simply don't understand the critique that is being offered. It is in some ways a direct critique of the actual reality of those developments included in the narrative of progress-- agriculture, industrialism, capitalism, urbanization, the state-- but the primary critique is against the way that the narrative is developed and used. This whole argument began because somebody claimed that the state was an inevitable development of human society. This is patently false but when this narrative was questioned the evidence provided essentially amounted to "Well we all live in states right now, don't we?"
Yes, we all live in states, but that is completely unrelated to the argument that was brought up. It didn't even originally involve any volume of moral evaluation of the state, but rather a skeptic rejection of the baseless assertion that the state is inevitable. Rather than analyzing in ANY way the development of the state, or the conditions involved, the argument became one of the value of living in states-- a question of their function. This is called teleology, analysis of developments that ignores their conditions but retroactively makes assumptions based on the current function of those developments. It is generally considered poor reason. Whenever history, or the material conditions of development, or the processes by which those developments occurred, were mentioned at all, they were moralized by the invocation of the functions of the modern state.
"I don't like the state, and I believe we should live in a society without one."
"You're out of luck, because the state is an inevitable development of human society."
"I disagree. There were many specific conditions that states developed as a result of, and a lot of history that led to the development of modern statehood."
"Well, modern statehood is actually a good thing."
"What makes it so good?"
"Well it must be pretty great since everybody lives in one."
I have no interest in arguing that the state is somehow a “good thing”. I will argue that it is what we have to deal with. I am certainly not a blatant advocate of the status quo, but I do accept that the status quo is where we are now. As I see things, if you cannot accept where we are now, there is no way you will be able steer change to move us in a different direction. If you don’t know and understand where you are, you can never chart a path to where you want to be.These points are almost completely unrelated. The entire question and critique of "progress" does no more than point this out. If you wanted to simply argue that the state is a good thing then you could have directly done that, but instead you have framed the existence of the state as something inevitable to human society that could never go away.
I will give you credit for at least openly transitioning your argument from one of advocacy of the narrative of progress to just blatant advocacy for the modern status quo. But the problem is that there are essentially two completely different points at hand, both of which are then used circularly to prove one another.
If you wanted to simply argue that the state is a good thing then you could have directly done that, but instead you have framed the existence of the state as something inevitable to human society that could never go away.
(1) The history of human society can be seen as a linear series of inevitable developments.
(2) The history of human society has generally occurred in a way that benefits the majority of individuals living in it.
Both are contentious; both also implicitly support the status quo, despite the fact that neither directly defends it.
Have you ever asked your parents about this?
It's getting dangerous to do it in the streets, now that cops are turning out armed for a war zone, against unarmed women, children, and disabled people (still thinking of the shameful overreaction they had toward the G20 protesters in Canada).
That said, I've gone to protest rallies, done a peace march, and now that I'm no longer very mobile, I do my thing online and over the phone (had my say to a representative for my incumbent MLA who is seeking re-election, and to the Conservative who wants to be MLA; guess which one I'm voting for - anyone who has paid attention to my political posts over the years should find that easy). There are a couple of all-candidates' forums coming up next month and I intend to go to at least one of them.
Yes, I know what that means, but it explains nothing about why or what can be done about it. In this case a picture is not worth anything remotely in the neighborhood of 1000 words.
So you don't use plastic at all? You've never littered, never thrown anything away that could still be used or repurposed?
I still have crossword puzzle books that are 40 years old, because I haven't finished all the puzzles yet (I used to take them to school with me and do them during the breaks when we had 2-hour classes; depending on how I felt that day I would either take a short catnap or do a puzzle).
Recycling movements are cool and all, but who led the corporations that introduced plastic bags, plastic cups, plastic everything and made them a normal part of our life? Who are the people that made a huge profit off of trash? Who are the people responsible for us being irresponsible with trash, and who benefitted? Who are the people responsible for those new and revolutionary ways of packaging, that ensure better food security, but are currently transforming the planet into a giant trash heap?
Similiarly, the boomers were the ones who started both the anti-nuclear movement and climate change awareness. But they were, at the same time, the ones who built and operated nuclear plants. The people who founded aluminum factories in Africa. The people who came up with fracking. The people who came up with a new system of industrializing meat production (and methane, as a byproduct) at levels we have never, ever, seen before.
I can point fingers all day, but it's utterly useless. In two or three decades there wont be (m)any boomers around and me and my hypothetical kids have to deal with this (literal) garbage. This makes boomer condescension even worse imho. It gives me zero statisfaction to say "but well, it wasn't my fault at least!"
And it also gives me no satisfaction to say that these problems are not inherent to boomers in any way, shape or form. The opposite is the case. Half of the world's history can be neatly summed up by "We came, we screwed things up, we left other to deal with it".