this post was submitted on 28 Nov 2023
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Yes, but how society responds to those challenges is really what matters, and that's not consistent.
I've always been told that, but I don't really believe it. The older I've gotten the more empathetic I've become, and this seems to run true with all of my aging friends.
Eh, that may be true for your grandparents. But most of my geriatric patients tend to be highly influenced by conservative fear mongering.
I think that is a highly reductive way to describe it.... The older generation has consistently voted away their rights, electing the people making "all the decisions". The older generations have held more influence for longer than any other generation in American history.
Who do you think empowered the rich and the political class? Who do you think voted for and continues to vote for the people making all our lives miserable? How about you go and ask the average Medicare patient who made their lives so hard, I bet they won't agree with your theory.....
The difference is that they had the opportunity to elect people to make their own lives worse, and everyone after has had that choice made for them by people who should have retired decades ago.
It’s fucking terrifying to hear someone so opinionated about huge groups of people, say the words “my patients”.
What do you do?
One of the key ways American society changed its response to those challenges is it stopped enslaving young men to fight wars involuntarily.
Ahh if only it was someone's responsibility to educate younger generations on the importance of voting......
Right, but you're pretending that all this occurred in a vacuum? Did the corporations vote to elect the people who led the attacks on unions? Did corporations vote to elect the politicians who allowed taking away our rights?
These didn't all happen at once, that generation decided these were ideas that would benefit themselves. And it did, they lived through the most economically prosperous times in America and got to retire before all their greed came crashing down around them.
And who owns and operates those corporations?
You are operating under a false dichotomy, it's not an either or situation. Yes corporations are negatively impacting our society, but that doesn't negate the fact that the lion's share of the profit created by those companies are going directly into a boomers pocket.
We are arguing about the cultural and ethical beliefs of generations. Bringing up corporations doesn't inherently mean anything without context, and with context it doesn't really improve your argument.
The elderly inherently share more blame for the status quo because they've had the most time to influence the status quo.