• Flying Squid
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    151 year ago

    Are they in charge? Doesn’t seem like it in the U.S. The president is a boomer, his likely rival is a boomer, most of congressional leadership are boomers… it’s boomers in charge. Can’t wait until they die out.

    • @Aliendelarge
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      101 year ago

      Biden is actually too old for the current common range for boomers and falls under the Silent Generation.

      • @cmbabul
        cake
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        21 year ago

        I believe Biden, McConnell, Trump, and Pelosi are all Silents

        • @Aliendelarge
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          21 year ago

          Trump was born in '46 so he is right at the start of the boomers. With Clinton and W, he is the third boomer pres.

    • @MajesticSloth
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      51 year ago

      They cover that in the article. They mean incoming people running companies. So the corporate world. Not politics. The article is about workplace environments.

    • @SomeoneElse
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      31 year ago

      Our prime minister in the UK is just a year too old to be a millennial (born 1980) and he’s still completely out of touch with reality.

  • Kasumi
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    141 year ago

    deleted by creator

    • @marciealana
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      71 year ago

      I just had to work with my doctor to fill out an ADA (American Disability Act) form to allow me to work from home. I’ve been working from home for three years and only needed it now. (I do have the disability, but this whole back to the office thing has been annoying.)

  • @MicroWaveOP
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    81 year ago

    Research from Stanford points to generational divides on remote work. Workers over 55 (mostly boomers) prefer to work remotely around 35 percent of the time, while workers in their early twenties (Gen Z) preferred to be remote about 45 percent of the time and workers in their 30s and 40s preferred to work from home closer to half the time. In other words, Gen Xers have become the unlikely warriors for flexible work.