All that being said we shouldn't let the jews win by abandoning close family who are boomers. Many are too old to change their ways of thinking, there was heavy brainwashing they went through from childhood.
Many will soon need our help as their minds will start to fade and they lose agency. Always take care of family.
Family boomers I honor, it's the "boomer generation" and individuals like Kemmett who double down we mock as there needs to be public consensus on what went wrong.
https://xcancel.com/iamaethelwulf/status/1921635743396725135
Many will soon need our help as their minds will start to fade and they lose agency. Always take care of family.
Family boomers I honor, it's the "boomer generation" and individuals like Kemmett who double down we mock as there needs to be public consensus on what went wrong.
https://xcancel.com/iamaethelwulf/status/1921635743396725135
I remember the first real Christmas present I got in 1984 - a transformer. My dad was able to finally buy us kids gifts for Christmas. He said something like he finally felt like we might not grow up poor.
Again - you guys think life sucks because 2016-2020 was so good. Go back in time and 2020-2024 wasn't that bad.
One other note: my dad told me he had been working in his engineer career for years before he felt comfortable buying a Diet Coke every lunch. He has been saving every penny until he finally felt like he could afford such a luxury.
Diet Coke. A luxury.
You're also delusional. I don't think the economy is bad now because "2016-2020 was so good". I think it's bad because it seemed comparatively good throughout my childhood, teens, and early 20s (so I'm talking 90s, 2000s, early 2010s). And sure you could say as a kid I didn't have a good grasp on the economy. But I grew up in a four bedroom house in the suburbs with a stay at home mom and a dad making slightly above the average American salary, and dozens of families in the same neighborhood in the same situation. We always had birthday gifts, Christmas gifts, parties, ate out periodically, went on vacations, etc. And when younger families would move into the neighborhood, with couples that were only maybe 10 years older than me, they were living that exact same life. But by the mid 2010s it wasn't really happening anymore. I skipped college, but many of my peers who went came back without good job prospects. The ones who did get "good" jobs could barely afford to move out. I was only able to afford to move out because I worked my ass off doing overtime and avoided spending money on anything. I saved for nearly 10 years hoping to be able to buy a house, but ended up ditching a quarter of my savings on a minimalist wedding. I could have easily spent half of my savings if I wanted the kind of wedding our families expected us to have. That was a few years ago and since then, inflation has gotten so bad and wages have been so stagnant that I haven't even been able to re-save that money. My savings have been stagnant for over 3 years. I have a son now and we still can't afford to buy a house, any house, even if my wife is working, because the cost of homes has gone up so much and the few affordable homes have 20 offers over asking that outbid us. I simply don't understand how you can be so blind as to not see how fucked the job market and cost of living is now.
Boomers think the food they are buying today are the same quality as their time. Not even close, it’s expensive to avoid the tainted goyslop.
At one point they were using brominated vegetable oil because of the government subsidies making it actually profitable rather than costing money to use just water.
Did boomers have to pay $5 every time they wanted to go to a park? Or a hiking trail? What about parking fees? Not that $5 is worth anything, I'm just illustrating that simply existing today costs money.
Gas was so cheap when boomers were in their prime that driving was practically free, hence cruising. There have been times I wasn't sure if I could make it into town the whole week because of how expensive gas is.
"We had one car" because it was legal for you to cram all your kids into a bench seat. We're only on our third kid and when we have another we'll literally have to buy a second car because every kid legally needs a car seat.
"We bought furniture from garage sales" yeah me too, except the used furniture I'm buying now is the same price new furniture was back then.
"Muh youngsters and their computers" a reliable computer is cheaper than a family's bi-weekly grocery bill these days.
And as you pointed out there are many, many non-monetary stresses today that boomers didn't experience. Literally every time I'm outside with my kids I need to be hyper-vigilant about the million retarded dog walkers or darkies we pass by. Did boomers need to focus like they were in mountain lion territory every time they were in town? No. Did they need to do a month worth of background checks and paperwork just to get a shitty apartment? No. Did grocery stores feel like prisons? No. Did they need to give up all their personal information just for the *chance* of getting hired at pointless jobs? Fuck no.
The (((data))) doesn’t show that.
And, food quality has absolutely nose dived over the decades. The good, unprocessed, fewer ingredient, naturally raised food, somehow costs much more than the poisonous goyslop. Decades prior, the good food was just called "food". Now, to get the good food we have to spend a lot more. So, if we want to eat actual food, so we're not poison ourselves, we're absolutely spending a lot more on food than what our ancestors did.
Only a thoroughly brainwashed individual, or a shill, would suggest that the poison sold in grocery stores and most restaurants could even be classified under the category of "food", while discussing food costs and completely ignoring how poisoned our food has become, while classifying all that poison under "food" to argue that food costs are cheap.
You all pretend life was perfect before the boomers wrecked it. It was never perfect, not even close.
Even though you are spending more of your paycheck as a percentage on groceries than you were 4 years ago (thanks biden) it was way worse in the 80s.
They used to ration gas in the 70s too.
Life sucked in the 80s compared to today. But none of you remember the bad stuff. You didn't live through it.