1 year ago18 points(+0/-0/+18Score on mirror)1 child
Most of America looked like this before the goyest gen handed it to the boomers they failed to raise, now its all strip malls, fast food joints, and pavement, and pointless housing because they kept on kicking their kids out and atomizing their communities so they could "pull themselves up by their bootstraps".
1 year ago2 points(+0/-0/+2Score on mirror)2 children
My parents are boomers, so I know the difference between both gens, a lot of the subversion was already set in stone by the goyest Gen before the boomers were even born. My parents were born only like 4 years before the 1965 (((Immigration Act))), and the *oldest* boomers wouldnt have even been able to vote because the voting age wasnt lowered till 71. Ive also seen the younger boomers like my parents beginning to turn on zionism and liberalism, while the goyest gen supported those till their death beds.
1 year ago15 points(+0/-0/+15Score on mirror)1 child
um, that's called lombard street in SF, and in the spring it still looks like that because those are all extremely expensive homes and they take care of that shit.
but go a block in any direction and it's a fucking third world country, with street shitting and rampant robberies.
Grandma grew up with a dirt floor. Took care of the family as her mom died young. Grandpa grew up watching sheep year round. His dad handed him some cash told him to start his own life at 18. They met in the US marines. She was a code breaker and he was a guard after coming back from the pacific theater. They built a life, raised their kids not to be weak losers and all succeeded. My dad raised his kids the same. I'm trying to bring my family back to the farm and get them to build a tribe so we can be stronger together.
Just because they were part of the generation doesn't mean they had anything to do with it. Get to know your parents and grandparents. Some of them were super based.
Grew up in Northern Cali in the 80's (Santa Clara). We rarely went to San Fran because outside a few places it wasn't all that great. We went to Monterey, Half Moon Bay on the weekends. My Dad moved to the midwest in the 90's because he didn't like what Cali was becoming, but I still love Northern California as far as the ocean towns.
The real rich areas of Northern Cali were Carmel to the South of San Fran and Sausalito which is to the north of San Fran. My Dad was a carpenter and worked on some really expensive homes there. Both places made San Fran look like a shithole.
I would much rather spend a day just going up the Northern Cali coast than spending anytime in San Fran, even when it was nicer. I remember a little town called Trinidad that was closer to Oregon than San Fran that looked like it could be out of a painting.
Cali has probably become too commercialized other than the farther northern coastal cities but I would still love to retire there or Oregon. I don't mind the cold, especially after living in the midwest.
A lot figured out what was really going on and swore an oath not to let the government control them ever again.