Your logic is faulty as fuck. It's not that they didn't care about the future generations. It's that they didn't care about anything but themselves. Including other boomers. You guys really don't think through what you post lmao.
Well I'm seeing crappy companies run by millennial's, who don't know their arses from a hole in the ground, who refuse to hire boomers with decades of experience.
They refuse to listen as well and repeat the same old tired mistakes. Nothing worse than ESG trained bean counters in the C-suite.
Yes, that's a very dominant thought. My friend and I considered back in the 70's we would need to frame 1-1,000s.f. house to buy a new truck and frame 10-1,000 s.f. houses to buy a house. Today, you need to frame 8-1,000 s.f. houses to buy a truck and about 100-1,000 s.f houses to buy a house. Building codes and vehicle minimum safety standards add something to those price increases, but not proportional to the increased cost. Those of us at the tail end of the boomers ( 1960-1964) didn't have it near as easy as the early boomers. We saw this coming and sounded the alarm. We were called whiny little bitches. It's only become worse
The ME Generation
Thus the Beatles song, I me me mine
Beat me to it. The proudly selfish generation.
Your logic is faulty as fuck. It's not that they didn't care about the future generations. It's that they didn't care about anything but themselves. Including other boomers. You guys really don't think through what you post lmao.
Well I'm seeing crappy companies run by millennial's, who don't know their arses from a hole in the ground, who refuse to hire boomers with decades of experience.
They refuse to listen as well and repeat the same old tired mistakes. Nothing worse than ESG trained bean counters in the C-suite.
I'm a boomer and I can confirm this message. Very few of us actually care about the next generation
I had a conversation with a Boomer yesterday about how housing is unaffordable for people that don't already own houses.
His response is that he owns his house without a mortgage, and he only expects to live another 10-15 years anyway, so what does he care.
Yes, that's a very dominant thought. My friend and I considered back in the 70's we would need to frame 1-1,000s.f. house to buy a new truck and frame 10-1,000 s.f. houses to buy a house. Today, you need to frame 8-1,000 s.f. houses to buy a truck and about 100-1,000 s.f houses to buy a house. Building codes and vehicle minimum safety standards add something to those price increases, but not proportional to the increased cost. Those of us at the tail end of the boomers ( 1960-1964) didn't have it near as easy as the early boomers. We saw this coming and sounded the alarm. We were called whiny little bitches. It's only become worse
They want us divided!