• @[email protected]
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    110 months ago

    This is such a tiring generalization. Boomers, like the rest of Americans, had been detached from politics for much of their lives. You realize most every president has been near a 50/50 split for vote? It’s not like Reagan won with 80% of the vote, which the majority voting age at that time was boomers.

    Who has a stranglehold on government power is corporations. Fight the real enemy, not the people who for much of their lives (at least half of them) were trying to do the right thing.

    • LeadersAtWork
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      210 months ago

      I suggest we choose to fight at all. Which we haven’t. Somehow for the last 6 years we all continue to talk most and act least.

      • @[email protected]
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        010 months ago

        The simple fact is if everyone who was capable of voting did vote in their interests we would easily move the US left (actually getting us to somewhere center/left-center as there is no left whatsoever in America). Republicans would go away, we could move past Democrats, and directly address corruption.

        But, “their” system of making people think voting doesn’t matter (plus of course voter repression and gerrymandering) and keeping people focused on shit that doesn’t matter (like ageism) is working, as it has for decades.

    • Ultragramps
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      110 months ago

      The average age in Congress is the highest ever, both things can be true.

    • @Eldritch
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      110 months ago

      It is a tired generalization. That’s why I didn’t make it. I wasn’t talking about boomers in terms of this party or that party. But boomers as a block and their control of the positions of power in the parties.