This Boomer Isn't Going to Apologize: Excellent Editorial WSJ
By STEPHEN MOORE
Last weekend I attended my niece's high-school graduation from an upscale prep school in Washington, D.C. These are supposed to be events filled with joy, optimism and anticipation of great achievements. But nearly all the kids who stepped to the podium dutifully moaned about how terrified they are of America's future -- yes, even though Barack Obama, whom they all worship and adore, has brought "change they can believe in." A federal judge gave the commencement address and proceeded to denounce the sorry state of the nation that will be handed off to them. The enemy, he said, is the collective narcissism of their parents' generation -- my generation. The judge said that we baby boomers have bequeathed to the "echo boomers," "millennials," or whatever they are to be called, a legacy of "greed, global warming, and growing income inequality."
And everyone of all age groups seemed to nod in agreement. One affluent 40-something woman with lots of jewelry told me she can barely look her teenagers in the eyes, so overcome is she with shame over the miseries we have bestowed upon our children.
The Wall Street Journal reported last week that graduation ceremonies have become collective airings of guilt and grief. It's now chic for boomers to apologize for their generation's crimes. It's the only thing conservatives and liberals seem to agree on. Mitch Daniels, the Republican governor of Indiana, told Butler University grads that our generation is "just plain selfish." At Grinnell College in Iowa, author Thomas Friedman compared boomers to "hungry locusts . . . eating through just about everything." Film maker Ken Burns told this year's Boston College grads that those born between 1946 and 1960 have "squandered the legacy handed to them by the generation from World War II."
I could go on, but you get the point. We partied like it was 1999, paid for it with Ponzi schemes and left the mess for our kids and grandkids to clean up. We're sorry -- so sorry.
Well, I'm not. I have two teenagers and an 8-year-old, and I can say firsthand that if boomer parents have anything for which to be sorry it's for rearing a generation of pampered kids who've been chauffeured around to soccer leagues since they were 6. This is a generation that has come to regard rising affluence as a basic human right, because that is all it has ever known -- until now. Today's high-school and college students think of iPods, designer cellphones and $599 lap tops as entitlements. They think their future should be as mapped out as unambiguously as the GPS system in their cars.
CBS News reported recently that echo boomers spend $170 billion a year -- more than most nations' GDPs -- and nearly every penny of that comes from the wallets of the very parents they now resent. My parents' generation lived in fear of getting polio; many boomers lived in fear of getting sent to the Vietnam War; this generation's notion of hardship is TiVo breaking down.
How bad can the legacy of the baby boomers really be? Let's see: We're the generation that spawned Microsoft, Intel, Apple, Google, ATMs and Gatorade. We defeated the evils of communism and delivered the world from the brink of global thermonuclear war. Now youngsters are telling pollsters that they think socialism may be better than capitalism after all. Do they expect us to apologize for winning the Cold War next?
College students gripe about the price of tuition, and it does cost way too much. But who do these 22-year-old scholars think has been footing the bill for their courses in transgender studies and Che Guevara? The echo boomers complain, rightly, that we have left them holding the federal government's $8 trillion national IOU. But try to cut government aid to colleges or raise tuitions and they act as if they have been forced to actually work for a living.
Yes, the members of this generation will inherit a lot of debts, but a much bigger storehouse of wealth will be theirs in the coming years. When I graduated from college in 1982, the net worth of America -- all our nation's assets minus all our liabilities -- was $16 trillion, according to the Federal Reserve. Today, even after the meltdown in housing and stocks, the net worth of the country is $45 trillion -- a doubling after inflation. The boomers' children and their children will inherit more wealth and assets than any other in the history of the planet -- that is, unless Mr. Obama taxes it all away. So how about a little gratitude from these trust-fund babies for our multitrillion-dollar going-away gifts?
My generation is accused of being environmental criminals -- of having polluted the water and air and ruined the climate. But no generation in history has done more to clean the environment than mine. Since 1970 pollutants in the air and water have fallen sharply. Since 1960, Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles and Pittsburgh have cut in half the number of days with unsafe levels of smog. The number of Americans who get sick or die from contaminants in our drinking water has plunged for 50 years straight.
Whenever kids ask me why we didn't do more to combat global warming, I explain that when I was young the "scientific consensus" warned of global cooling. Today's teenagers drive around in cars more than any previous generation. My kids have never once handed back the car keys because of some moral problem with their carbon footprint -- and I think they are fairly typical.
The most absurd complaint of all is that the health-care system has been ruined by our generation. Oh, really? Thanks to massive medical progress in the past 30 years, the chances of dying from heart disease and many types of cancer have been cut in half. We found effective treatments for AIDS within a decade. Life expectancy has risen and infant mortality fallen. That doesn't sound so "selfish" to me.
Yes, we are in a deep economic crisis today -- but it's no worse than what we boomers faced in the late 1970s after years of hyperinflation, sky-high tax rates and runaway government spending. We cursed our parents, too. But then we grew up and produced a big leap forward in health, wealth and scientific progress. Let's see what this next generation of over-educated ingrates can do.
Mr. Moore is senior economics writer for The Wall Street Journal's editorial page.





















Amazing
I can't believe they are blaming the boomers for the world's woes. Give me a break. I remember when we were younger we blamed the WWII generation for all of the woes of the world. Stupid. What we are all guilty of is falling asleep while the devil took the wheel.
And, I agree that those in their 20s and 30s did their share to create the mess. They gave into the myth of you can have it now and pay for it later. They lived by instant gratification so they were perfect pawns for the Federal Reserve and the banksters. Learning to say Not Now but Later by saving for the new house and car, etc. is not in their vocabulary. When our generation and the WWII generation bought their first house, it was a starter home. After scraping together a down payment, we moved into an 1100 sq foot home in the not-so-nice part of town. Then we moved up. This isn't happening now. The young people think they deserve the brand new 3000 sq foot house with the granite counters and swimming pool. They don't want to have to put anything down or work for anything.
No, of course, it is not ALL the young people but too many of them have this mindset. Yes, boomers may have contributed to the monster by giving them too much and having a comfortable life.
Wow.
Healthnut4freedom
"Trust in the Lord with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct thy paths." Proverbs 3:5,6
Healthnut4freedom
The lip of truth shall be established forever: but a lying tongue is but for a moment...Lying lips are abomination to the LORD: but they that deal truly are His delight. Prov 12:19,22
They should feel bad for electing criminals who ignore US law..
If you wont fight for the right when you can easily win...you may...have to fight with all the odds against you and only a precarious chance for survival [or] when there is no chance of victory...it's better to perish than to live as slaves.
W.Churchill
Mathew 5:9 Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God.
Who's fault is it really?
I graduated from college with a BA in Environmental Studies and was laid off shortly thereafter from a job I had for around two and a half years. I've been looking for employment ever since.
This is certainly not what I planned and hoped for, but neither was it what my parents or grandparents planned for. It was their hard work that got me to where I am today and their hard work and sacrifices that will keep me afloat until I can do so myself. I wouldn't DREAM of blaming them for their selfishness or greed.
I don't blame the boomer generation for today's woe's - I point my fingers at the government and banking officials who have control over fiscal, domestic, foreign, and monetary policies of which we have very little to no say. I'm also very ashamed of those in my generation for their utter lack of respect for their elders. It makes me very sad when I do something as simple as open a door for someone, they look at me like my face is melting.
As someone who grew up in the '80's and '90's I'd be blind not to recognize it as a portion of history where I was blessed with a sense of peace and prosperity that few throughout history have been able to experience. I felt so safe that I can recall hearing stories from my grandfather about fighting on Iwo Jima, Saipan, and the Marshall Islands - and then pondering whether or not war would exist when I turned 18. Of course, one had been conjured up for me at that point. But to be able to think something like that as a possibility is not something many throughout history have been blessed enough to do.
I thought about Environmental Studies in the 80s
When I was going to college, USL, I was a home ec major, but I was really attracted to the possibility of environmental science, which I took one class as an elective. I didn't make it through the first test.
Ironically, at the time, and what spurred my interest in the subject, I had been named New Orleans Conservationist Dream Girl 1977, and that was my problem, the school, an oil engineering school/computer robotics, Environmental Science was what was replacing Conservation.
First test, the instructor claimed carbon dioxide was "poision". That was it for me... and yet, I see, that's where element by element we seem to be headed. Earth = good, Human = bad.
WE ARE GOING TO WIN!
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And we did all this while
And we did all this while paying for the past & future...I never got to catch my breath ...I have been used & abused & sent to war..I'm not worth much, who am I.. And by the way, my retirement funds went, by the way.
you-no
btw
my retirement fund went btw, too...but we can't take it with us, now can we?
Look at all my trials and tribulations
sinking in a gentle pool of wine.
Don't worry! Now I can see the answer...
Till this evening is this morning - life is fine!
Please don't forget to drink in moderation...
and
Always remember to trust the Lord God with all your heart, with all your soul and with all your mind.
. @ @ . Power to the People!
@ O @ -----> PEOPLE
. @ @ . NOT Corporate Entities!
I hear you but...
just as some background I am 25 divorced and drive a 1995 (paid for) minivan, had to quit college because I couldn't afford it and do good to clear $25,000 before taxes. I also do not believe in global warming, universal/commie health care etc etc and am a die hard RP supporter.
Most ppl my age are mindless idiots that just live to get laid and get paid, and its pretty pathetic but I see how they have gotten that way with a large number growing up in divorced homes where they are pushed to the side while each parent is too busy chasing cash & @$$.
now there are really good freedom loving & constitutionalist boomers out there (so they dont count in the following rant) but many of them I have met that were born in the early 50's back to the late 40's are snot nosed impatient children that get pissed off anytime they have wait in a line or use literacy in conjunction with their telephone at the same time.....as a side note I used to work at an auto parts store (I DID know my stuff and always went way above and beyond & bent over backwards to help every customer) but these snot noses were the worst a-holes I have ever encountered.
even in my own extended family all my baby boomer relatives keep smarting off about how cool it is that I am paying for their socialist security >:( I have almost smarted off back to them but I do try to show respect to my elders.
as far as the workplace and economy goes.....this crap of treating us all like we are their kids and thinking we should kiss their @$$ and brown nose them for minimum wage is BS (granted I do have a REALLY good job for my age and location...yea when did you ever hear someone say that 25K was awesome but that's the reality when you live in my part of the country).
Bottom line...I saw this recession coming almost 3 years ago and the thing that kept me from freaking out about it was that I knew the spoiled snots were going to lose their @$$ when it came down.....so at least I get a little satisfaction. :)
Meanwhile, the "Greatest Generation" plots global chaos
Hear, hear!
My parents fought HARD for Goldwater, and I am learning more about them now from my brother. Seems this nut did not fall far from the tree, but I never knew. Sad.
At any rate, the "Greatest Generation" watched the Kennedy assassination, the Nixon debacle, Bretton Woods... how much of the current chaos actually began long before we were born? A LOT.
My kids are a lot smarter than that, but any kid who thinks my libertarian lifestyle is the reason they are inheriting a crappy nation needed slapped upside the head long ago.
Truth exists, and it deserves to be cherished.
I agree!
Actually this rant sounds a lot like an e-mail that I could easily have received from my "greatest generation" dad! Wouldn't it be better if we would all stop pointing the fickle finger of blame at each other and start to realize that we are ONE? Everything we are, right or wrong, we are TOGETHER.
. @ @ . Power to the People!
@ O @ -----> PEOPLE
. @ @ . NOT Corporate Entities!