• themeatbridge
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    2261 year ago

    On an unrelated note, suddenly, boomers care about affordable housing for no apparent reason.

    • @[email protected]
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      461 year ago

      Suddenly boomers believe in a massive increase to social security taxes to pay for them.

      I look forward to watching them die off.

      • TheWoozy
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        -161 year ago

        That’s a hell of a lot of hate to admit to online.

        • Brawler Yukon
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          191 year ago

          I’m not saying dude’s right (not saying he’s wrong, either, mind), but Boomers have been trying to choke out everyone outside of their cohort (and a significant chunk of those in their cohort, for that matter) for decades. The sooner they’re out of the way, the sooner the rest of us can start picking up the pieces they’ve left us.

        • JokeDeity
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          41 year ago

          These people haven’t just hated me my entire life for being an atheist, pro LGBT, non racist, but they’ve actively done everything possible to destroy the world for everyone in it. Zero sympathy from me.

    • TheWoozy
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      -191 year ago

      Ageist comments are weirdly popular on lemmy. Why is ageism encouraged when sexism and racism are not?

      • @foggenbooty
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        431 year ago

        Disclaimer: These are obviously over generalizations and don’t match all individuals.

        Because it’s not the age people are against, it’s the generation. The boomer generation had some of the most prosperous years in American history and wasted them. The general idea is you’re supposed to make the world a better place for the people that come next, and they did the opposite. They cut social systems, defunded education, let public transportation die, outsourced everything, and lined their pockets with investments in oil that are killing the planet.

        I won’t blame someone for being old, but I will judge them by what they did and supported during their life. And as a whole, the boomers have a lot to answer for.

        • @[email protected]
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          01 year ago

          There is a huge subset of boomers that fought and voted for the betterment of society that were completely fucked by the system. Maybe a LITTLE bit of consolation and empathy for them?

      • mommykink
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        1 year ago

        Because old people are insufferable and leech off of society while continually making things worse, even well past their expiration date.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Noticed this myself, come here less and less since it’s just as toxic as reddit ever was. Think I might be done with it since it’s just ragebait crap.

    • Fermiverse
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      -731 year ago

      I still everyone thinks that boomer`s houses magically built themself and cost nothing. No interest was payed for the loan and the time there where built money rained from the sky.

      • @Nabs
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        771 year ago

        Tell me more about how you want every to know that you know nothing about the changes to monetary policy, socio-economic issues, or regulatory change that has happened since the mid-70’s.

      • @glimse
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        721 year ago

        If you think that, I know you’re unfamiliar with the economy and real estate.

        They bought them, yes. In fact, they had higher interest rates! My dad’s first mortgage in the 80s was at 17%…but the loan was less than 2 years of his salary which made his payments pretty easy. Now I’m expecting to have to pay 5-6x my salary for a similar home.

        And to get ahead of some rebuttals: adjusted for inflation, I am making more than he did at the time so it’s not that. And the homes I’m looking at are in less desirable neighborhoods than I grew up in so it’s not that either.

        Furthermore, his parents’ generation wasn’t hoarding real estate for Airbnb rentals.

        • HobbitFoot
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          191 year ago

          Also, there has been a drop in new housing construction since 2008.

          There was a massive multigenerational push to build new housing, with government agencies either facilitating new construction with infrastructure or helping to fund its construction.

          • CharlesReed
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            31 year ago

            Do you mean new housing as in individual stand alone houses, or does that also include multi unit apartment buildings?
            I only ask because in the old area I used to live in it seemed like they were building new apartments left and right. Meanwhile as far as houses go I would be inclined to agree, as I haven’t really noticed any new construction going on. But that’s just in the area I live now. It’d be interesting to see nationwide numbers.

            • HobbitFoot
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              61 year ago

              Any new housing unit. There has been an increase in multifamily housing, but nowhere near enough to cover for the total drop.

        • HubertManne
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          -41 year ago

          if he bought his first home in the 80’s then your dad is a really young boomer to. or waited awhile for some reason. anyway there is a different with each generation over the 20 year span. not that it makes much of a difference when things are great. just older boomers had it a bit better even. The basic pattern is the younger the worse you have it if you where born in the 70’s or later. I really can’t fanthom why people are still having kids.

          • @glimse
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            81 year ago

            Hey wasn’t Ford started by Henry Ford? It’s an equally relevant question.

            Are you a boomer going for some sort of gotcha here or something? Karl Marx could have started Airbnb and it wouldn’t change the situation we’re in now so…what does it matter?

            • @doublejay1999
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              -41 year ago

              The point obviously is that the relentless attacks on “boomers” conveniently and consistently leaves out that Gen X and Millennials are the landlording generations, who have grown up with cheap money.

              Buy to let didn’t really take off until interests rates fell in the late 90s

              But this doesnt fit the narrative, and would leave you looking like fools tricked into fighting a generational war, instead of the criticising government policy like the savvy individuals I’m sure you all are. 👍

              • @glimse
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                101 year ago

                But you’re the one inserting a generational war here, not me.

                I was explaining the difference between buying a home in the 80s and buying one now and why boomers DID have it easier in that regard because you made a dumb joke about young people thinking boomers got free houses. Then in response you pulled out some unrelated millennial bullshit…? I didn’t even say BOOMERS held the rentals…I said prior generations weren’t hoarding real estate.

                Neither of your replies have addressed the comments you replied to. You just kinda made up an enemy to argue with.

                • @doublejay1999
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                  -81 year ago

                  I didn’t make any jokes about free houses.

                  Read better, fool.

              • Deceptichum
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                71 year ago

                Millennials barely own homes, we have much lower home ownership rates and that’s only dropping more with each subsequent generation.

      • @[email protected]
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        -51 year ago

        People also fail to factor in the difference in ameneties between boomers’ 2 bedroom, single floor, no-garage house vs what people demand today

        • @glimse
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          71 year ago

          I’m actively searching for a house to buy - smaller than the one that what I grew up in - and while you’re right about people wanting more space, it does not matter. Homes are disproportionally more expensive than they were in the 80s

          • @Wakmrow
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            11 year ago

            The house I grew up in is now worth 1.4 million dollars.

            • @glimse
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              21 year ago

              I was going to include house much they sold it for a few years ago but I didn’t think it was a fair comparison because they added a second floor

              • @Wakmrow
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                21 year ago

                It’s the thing I use to hammer home the idea that our lives are dramatically worse than our parents. I could not dream of paying that mortgage but my mom could pay it as a single mother of two because they bought it in the 80s for 300k and engineer salaries allowed them to pay it.

      • @doublejay1999
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        -91 year ago

        You didn’t hear ? Things are only hard now.

  • Neuromancer
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    1071 year ago

    I blame the removal of pensions and replacement with inadequate 401k plans.

    Social security was never meant to be a retirement plan.

    • Argongas
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      411 year ago

      Maybe it should be. Decoupling retirement and Wall Street would probably let us take a more honest look at the costs and benefits of for profit corporations in our society.

      • Neuromancer
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        131 year ago

        We need regulations (laws) to make them viable for retirement.

        A forced match plus a 10% pay paid for by the employer.

        Most people just can’t save enough in a 401k to make it solid retirement program. You’re capped at little under 20k a year. I may mine every year.

        I wouldn’t even mind a national pension plan or something similar.

        The current system isn’t viable for many reasons.

        My mom is retired but she has two pensions and social equity plus some other income. She’s in a rare spot that she’s very comfortable in retirement.

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          The amounts have changed. For 2023, the current 401K maximum is $22,500, and if you are 50 or older, $30,000.

          For 2023, the total contributions you make each year to all of your traditional IRAs and Roth IRAs can’t be more than: $6,500 ($7,500 if you’re age 50 or older), or. If less, your taxable compensation for the year.

          Cutting the budget to come up with an extra $28,000 is the hard part.

          • Neuromancer
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            21 year ago

            I’m not eligible for a Roth and I don’t get a tax deduction for an Ira. I do roll over my 401k into an Ira when I go to a new employer.

            The amount change ever year but they really don’t amount to a good retirement.

      • HubertManne
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        101 year ago

        agreed. retirement and healthcare should not be tied to employment. Want a snazzier retirement. Fine that is 401k/ira material. Retirement plus health insurance should be enough to pay for a retirment home private room where you won’t be molested (i.e. - pays enough that folks don’t want to lose their job)

    • @Eldritch
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      301 year ago

      Actually, it kind of literally was. Though it’s frustrating how common it is for people to share that misconception.

      • @AdolfSchmitler
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        121 year ago

        AFAIK it literally wasn’t. It was meant to be “one leg” of a “three-legged stool”. One leg was Social Securty, one leg was company pensions, and the third leg was personal retirement savings.

        • @Eldritch
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          51 year ago

          The thing is. Not every company had pensions. And almost none do today. The concept of personal retirement savings is not something that has ever been reliable adequate or common throughout most of human history. Both are literally the reason Social Security was enacted. It is literally a retirement syatem/social safety net. To make sure that the elderly do not starve die or fall to homelessness in their old age.

          Check out question 4 on this page on the actual Social Security Administration website.

          Q4: Is it true that Social Security was originally just a retirement program?

          A: Yes. Under the 1935 law, what we now think of as Social Security only paid retirement benefits to the primary worker.

          I don’t blame anyone for thinking that it isn’t though. Fascists/capitalists in the United States have spent decades upon decades. Honestly nearly the last 100 years trying to destroy/raid the fund for their own benefit. And gaslighting everyone else.

    • @derf82
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      191 year ago

      Or more accurately, social security should be a proper national pension plan. Fund it by increasing contribution rates and uncapping contributions.

      I stick with my underpaid government job solely for my state pension. At 55, I can start to get 70% of my final salary guaranteed, with annual COLA adjustments. I may not be rich in retirement, but I can get by.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      401k works fine if you actually use it. A big problem is people didn’t contribute, where pensions generally had mandatory contributions. Also letting people borrow on them was a bad idea.

      • Jamie
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        1 year ago

        And borrowing on them is just a bad idea. At least in the case of my 401k, there’s no early payoff, you don’t make interest off it while it’s borrowed, it really can hurt in the long term unless the loan amount is very small.

        I looked out of curiosity because I want to buy a house somewhere in the next 5 years, and immediately ruled out any consideration of borrowing off 401k.

  • teft
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    961 year ago

    They should cut back on avocado toast and get rid of cable.

    • @dhork
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      351 year ago

      They should get rid of that land line, you know they still have one

  • elouboub
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    611 year ago

    “Fuck you, I got mine” turns into “Fuck, they got mine”.

    Maybe voting just for soi and against vous wasn’t that clever after all? Will they stop voting Republican?

    • @KaiReeve
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      231 year ago

      Unfortunately, no. They’re going to watch Fox News talk about how this is all Biden’s fault and only the GOP can save them from suffering the same fate. They will continue to follow the same pied Piper that led them here.

    • mommykink
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      1 year ago

      Dear Boomers,

      First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out— Because I was not a socialist.

      Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out— Because I was not a trade unionist.

      Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out— Because I was not a Jew.

      Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me. [YOU ARE HERE]

    • 👁️👄👁️
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      1 year ago

      It will literally continue to be like this until they die out

      The best thing we can do is get them out of office.

  • Seraph
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    311 year ago

    Oh no! It’s the consequences of my own actions!

  • TheWoozy
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    261 year ago

    I’m pretty sure there were Zero homeless boomers during the great depression.

    • @srecko
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      11 year ago

      But also all of them had zero homes.

  • @[email protected]
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    211 year ago

    Anyone here who comments about how they deserved this fate or how they got what was coming to them needs to grow the fuck up.

    There are very, very few people in this world who have done something bad enough to have this kind of condition even be remotely justified. They’re gonna either be on the streets or in basic Medicaid nursing homes for the rest of their lives. Many will get beaten and robbed. Many will probably just commit suicide to avoid the nightmarish conditions. And people here are celebrating this?!

    Newsflash, the baby boomer generation are also people who also deserve to have someone give a shit about them. You people are sick.

    • @CADmonkey
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      -81 year ago

      So, the kids won’t let you move in, you’re running out of options, and you’re here on lemmy telling us how sick we are (after how many years of boomers telling millienials we are the problem) because you’re about to be homeless?

      • Kushan
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        161 year ago

        Do you not think that the vitriol against boomers is just another example of getting different groups of people to hate each other so they’re distracted from the real issues?

        If it’s not immigrants and minorities, why not get different generations at each others throats. Seems to be working.

        • JokeDeity
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          -21 year ago

          It could be. However, I’ve spent my entire life not only being shit on be boomers verbally and mentally, but I’ve been watching them PURPOSEFULLY do everything in their power to destroy this world and it’s inhabitants with every political move they make. I cannot even fathom having sympathy for a group of people so spiteful and greedy and selfish.

    • Grayox
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      141 year ago

      Bruh they were and still are brainwashed by so much anticommunist propaganda. They had to survive in those material conditions, and if they made it they had to buy into the lie of American Exceptionalism for their prosperity and not the Dollar becoming the worlds reserve currency and propping up European Social Democracy, Dictators, and Kings. They reaped benefits they were actively being kept in the dark about, if they are waking up cause piss is tricking down their face, i will still celebrate them waking up. We need all the people we can to wake up and realize how the elite have stolen from the working class and are only taking more and more as we continue to kill our planet to give them more wealth…

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        Cognitive dissonance is really strong if you have to question the way you were living your whole life when questioning the current situation. This makes those people far more likely to be easy prey for far-right propaganda than to be waking up, I’m afraid.

    • @[email protected]
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      151 year ago

      Like there aren’t babyboomers who also have nonsay in policies and those that haven’t struggled their entire lives

      The more things change, the more they stay the same

      • @InverseParallax
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        1 year ago

        As a genx I had to struggle my whole life.

        Because boomers around me were arrogant morons who didn’t understand they didn’t understand anything, and they weren’t entitled just for being born.

        • @[email protected]
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          61 year ago

          I’m also genX and know boomers all across the spectrum from malicious to entitled to regular people to fantastic human beings - kind of like every other group or generation of people

  • @crystalmerchant
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    71 year ago

    There are many books and at least one Oscar-winning movie about this

  • @uis
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    51 year ago

    Meanwhile amount of empty homes is increasing. I WONDER WHY.

  • JokeDeity
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    41 year ago

    Wait, the people who caused all of this are now suffering the consequences? Oh no, whatever will at do?!

  • @[email protected]
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    11 year ago

    Ugh, I just knew what this gross comments section was gonna look like.

    Look, whatever perceived collective guilt an entire cohort of humanity has in your view, it’s really disgusting to celebrate and gloat over a report about the elderly becoming homeless.

    When subsequent generations decide they have the right to dance on our graves for whatever it is they decide we did, I hope your ghosts aren’t too whiny about it.