“I always voted for the worst people on the ballot, and somehow my life isn’t great now.”
(I know this is widely generalizing, but still.)
A community for discussing and documenting the second great housing bubble.
“I always voted for the worst people on the ballot, and somehow my life isn’t great now.”
(I know this is widely generalizing, but still.)
Sad thing is you're spot on for at least a significant minority of the electorate.
Majority. Most seniors vote Republican
Did they vote republican when they were younger, though? As I understand it, more of their generation vote republican now than when they were younger.
I thought i was dead before it turns into my problem 🥲
Better check up on your Reganomics, Boomers, your options are work or die.
Hambrick had a long career in the manufacturing and hospitality industries but retired in the early 2010s with limited savings. Her husband has been caring for sick relatives for the past several years and doesn't have an income. Additionally, he's 57, and his Social Security check won't kick in until he's at least 62.
So they retired when he was 45ish, and now we're supposed to feel sorry for their poor choices? Out of all the bad stories in this article these two can go fuck themselves.
This is America. The guy could be broken from those jobs but can't qualify for assistance.
Maybe he's just lazy. Maybe you're not creative enough to come up with a plausible reason for his actions. Both seem equally likely to me.
I get what you’re saying, but retirement is a number in your bank account, not an age. Also, if you cannot work due to disability, you’re on disability, not retired. They are completely different animals. If they are disabled they need to push for disability. It’s not easy to get, but it’s better than wallowing in financial limbo.
If people literally retire with insufficient finances it’s a bad decision.
You’re right, we don’t know their health circumstances, but at face value these folks don’t seem like the best decision makers.
I agree. But I also wish disability was as sensible as you say. Plenty of people fall through the cracks.
Are there even 57 year old boomers? 57 years old means born ~1967. Wouldn't that be Gen X? I know generational divides aren't rigid but I feel like 22 years after ww2 ended is not part of the post-war baby boom.
Poor gen x, forgotten again.
Getting overlooked and lumped in with their parent's generation in a discussion about poor fiscal/political decisions, is the most gen-x thing ever.
Then maybe she shouldn't have retired?
I'm not under any illusion that I'm going to retire, there's actually a pretty good chance I'll be dead before hitting that age.
The smarter ones already know this and won't leave. It's putting even more pressure on the younger generations who can't get promoted into better positions, which will further compound, screwing their opportunity at retirement too. This shit is not sustainable.
Sounds like me waiting for an 80 year old to retire so that I can get a full time position at my job instead of just a "part time" one working 40hours a week
Just bump into them on the stairs.
The people in the first story are on a single SS payment, because the husband is 57. But the guy retired when he was 45.
Seriously, this is their own damn fault.