America’s bloated military budget and imperialism.
US veneration of veterans—those war criminals who fought after Korea, if not after WWII.
increase protections “intellectual property” means increased violations of free speech, property, and things such as progress.
people still using Twitter, Facebook, and Amazon, even though it makes their owners richer.
cat and dog owners who feed their pets factory farmed meat, and people who buy eggs from those who have hens in battery cages.
vehicles that are excessively loud be they pick-up trucks, sports cars, and motorcycles.
people spending $100 000s on a house, but not a fraction of that to make it over half energy self-sufficient with things such as solar cells and battery arrays.
NIMBY laws that causes much of the homelessness.
Americans who dump on 3rd party candidates because they think they can change the 2-party state from within the 2 parties.
Local cable monopolies—a cable isn’t a highway or railroad—you can bunch up cables of competitors together.
Canadian retaliatory tariffs on the US. Let the free market—something that Trump and many in American business who aren’t acquainted with—do the retaliating.
The oldest boomer turned 21 in 1967, and 18 year-olds could essentially only vote for President in 1972 and after (18 year-olds in 1972 were generally born in 1954).
The youngest boomer turned 18 in 1982.
None of them voted for Roosevelt, Kennedy, or LBJ;
and the youngest boomers couldn’t vote for Nixon, Ford, Carter, or Reagan’s first term.
Clinton was the first boomer President, and for about 8 years, there were no new wars, save the bombing of Belgrade in 1999 after they were ethnically cleaning Kosovars and Europe was doing little about it.
A majority of boomers voted for Dubya, but the same applies to Gen Xers, and perhaps some early millennials.
pre-dates boomers, and many boomers opposed/oppose.
most Americans revere their vets.
many people supported it. Many late gen Xers and Millennials were P2P fans, but many seem to have given it up for iTunes, iPods, and iPhones—because Steve Jobs is such a frickin’ genius and innovator.
Policy not needed: if all post-boomers ceased such, these companies would take big hits, and alternatives would have far better success, but if anything, post-boomers seem even more addicted to such than boomers. Post boomers can’t help it. Free will doesn’t exist, or so I’m told by younger folks. When was the last time you didn’t use your smart phone for 24 hours, if ever?
Policy not needed: don’t feed one’s cats and dogs with such meat, or give up on cats and dogs.
IMO, most of these annoying vehicles are driven by post-boomers.
Policy not needed: the typical post-boomer probably hasn’t read the Wikipedia article on PVCs or batteries. Maybe some AI will tell them on their phone and they might remember it—maybe.
Such policies existed before boomers could vote.
Have you read what I stated? Many post-boomers do most of the dumping. I get downvoted here for promoting 3rd parties and attacking the 2-party state. But yes, go support Millennial Graham Platner because an old boomer like Susan Cole mustn’t win—and support Bernie and AOC, until they are sidelined and then vote for the centrist nominee. Don’t even think of voting 3rd party as most post-boomers seem to oppose it.
Don’t vote for Jill Stein as it could sap votes from Harris. Don’t vote for gay Millennial Chase Oliver because Trump is essentially libertarian.
The problem is your ageism.
Lol okay. What was the problem before my ageism then? And what year did my ageism become the problem?
to your 1st question: There was/is a number of problems.
to your 2nd question: I don’t know: I don’t know you, pseudonymous.
Interesting. Not what you said a second ago. Such as?
America’s bloated military budget and imperialism.
US veneration of veterans—those war criminals who fought after Korea, if not after WWII.
increase protections “intellectual property” means increased violations of free speech, property, and things such as progress.
people still using Twitter, Facebook, and Amazon, even though it makes their owners richer.
cat and dog owners who feed their pets factory farmed meat, and people who buy eggs from those who have hens in battery cages.
vehicles that are excessively loud be they pick-up trucks, sports cars, and motorcycles.
people spending $100 000s on a house, but not a fraction of that to make it over half energy self-sufficient with things such as solar cells and battery arrays.
NIMBY laws that causes much of the homelessness.
Americans who dump on 3rd party candidates because they think they can change the 2-party state from within the 2 parties.
Local cable monopolies—a cable isn’t a highway or railroad—you can bunch up cables of competitors together.
Canadian retaliatory tariffs on the US. Let the free market—something that Trump and many in American business who aren’t acquainted with—do the retaliating.
among other things.
Any questions?
The oldest boomer turned 21 in 1967, and 18 year-olds could essentially only vote for President in 1972 and after (18 year-olds in 1972 were generally born in 1954).
The youngest boomer turned 18 in 1982.
None of them voted for Roosevelt, Kennedy, or LBJ;
and the youngest boomers couldn’t vote for Nixon, Ford, Carter, or Reagan’s first term.
Clinton was the first boomer President, and for about 8 years, there were no new wars, save the bombing of Belgrade in 1999 after they were ethnically cleaning Kosovars and Europe was doing little about it.
A majority of boomers voted for Dubya, but the same applies to Gen Xers, and perhaps some early millennials.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000_United_States_presidential_election#Voter_demographics
pre-dates boomers, and many boomers opposed/oppose.
most Americans revere their vets.
many people supported it. Many late gen Xers and Millennials were P2P fans, but many seem to have given it up for iTunes, iPods, and iPhones—because Steve Jobs is such a frickin’ genius and innovator.
Policy not needed: if all post-boomers ceased such, these companies would take big hits, and alternatives would have far better success, but if anything, post-boomers seem even more addicted to such than boomers. Post boomers can’t help it. Free will doesn’t exist, or so I’m told by younger folks. When was the last time you didn’t use your smart phone for 24 hours, if ever?
Policy not needed: don’t feed one’s cats and dogs with such meat, or give up on cats and dogs.
IMO, most of these annoying vehicles are driven by post-boomers.
Policy not needed: the typical post-boomer probably hasn’t read the Wikipedia article on PVCs or batteries. Maybe some AI will tell them on their phone and they might remember it—maybe.
Such policies existed before boomers could vote.
Have you read what I stated? Many post-boomers do most of the dumping. I get downvoted here for promoting 3rd parties and attacking the 2-party state. But yes, go support Millennial Graham Platner because an old boomer like Susan Cole mustn’t win—and support Bernie and AOC, until they are sidelined and then vote for the centrist nominee. Don’t even think of voting 3rd party as most post-boomers seem to oppose it.
Don’t vote for Jill Stein as it could sap votes from Harris. Don’t vote for gay Millennial Chase Oliver because Trump is essentially libertarian.
The Graham Platner Left Is Rewriting History
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1FtyyQi198k
24:17
BadEmpanada Live
I don’t think boomers were the largest voting block in the mid-1970s.
Mark Carney—he’s the PM of Canada—is Gen X.