The graying of the American workforce continues: Baby boomers are working longer and earning more than their predecessors did in what Americans typically think of as retirement years, new research finds.

Almost 20% of Americans ages 65 and older were employed this year, according to a new report from Pew Research Center. That’s nearly double the share of those who were working 35 years ago. In total, there are around 11 million Americans 65 or older who are working today, comprising 7% of all wages and salaries paid by U.S. employers. In 1987, they made up 2%.

And not only are more Americans at or above the traditional retirement age of 65 working, but they are also earning substantially more compared with what older workers earned in the 1980s. Now, the typical older worker earns $22 per hour, compared with $13 per hour then. Their wage growth—some of which can be attributed to their working longer hours than older Americans did in the past—has outpaced that of workers ages 25 to 64 over the same time period, according to Pew’s research, which is based on data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey and the Federal Reserve’s 2022 Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking.

      • @[email protected]
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        165 months ago

        I dk depends if there is an agenda or if the person saw data and forgot. I’m always skeptical if they don’t say equalivent or with inflation. They just wrote “compared” which seems like no math was done. Pretty sure we are all earning less than our counter parts in 80’s.

      • @Earthwormjim91
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        65 months ago

        I’m not even sure where they got it from because it’s not in the linked Pew article… from 4 years ago.

  • the post of tom joad
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    5 months ago

    What a useless article. It doesn’t even account for inflation. Is it designed to make boomers feel good about having to be a wal-mart greeter to survive?

    Perhaps they are “bored” in retirement because even after a lifetime of labor there isn’t enough money left to do anything but sit and watch tv?

    • @ExfilBravo
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      315 months ago

      I’ve lost count of how many boomers I’ve heard say “I don’t know what I would do with myself if I didn’t have to work”. Fuck that generation. They had a chance for everything and said “whatever!” And just did nothing instead.

      • @Sho
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        Literally heard a group of boomers talking over coffee the other day. One goes " weird we haven’t had snow, I guess it could be because of global warming" then another goes “yeah but not like we need to care!” Then they all had a big laugh about it…

      • the post of tom joad
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        155 months ago

        They’re the same flavor fucked as us. I don’t hate them for not knowing what to do with themselves without working. I hate the meat grinder we’re in

        First, their ‘i love work’ attitude is both taught from society (look at this article for example) and straight up cope. Not just that; their lives like our lives have been consumed by work and the business of living. I too have had precious little time and energy to spare on developing ourselves outside it.

        • @[email protected]
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          5 months ago

          In a country like US there should never be a shortage of jobs. And all jobs should pay a living. Also provide many opportunities to climb the ladder. There should not be a shortage on American Dream basically.

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    • @[email protected]
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      I wish people would just quit it with this ageist crap.

      “We” are not fucked over by “the Boomer generation”, we are fucked over by unchecked capitalists. The struggle is not a generational one but a class struggle. It’s people with money stealing the value of your labor, but the Bezoses of this world sure love how you’re all blaming it on old people and are laughing all the way to the bank.

      Shitting on boomers because they had affordable housing and well paying jobs is crab mentality. Everyone should have that, but it’s not the regular folk boomers who took that away from you. They were just lucky to be born at a time when the capitalists hadn’t ruined that yet. About the only thing you can blame them for is that some of them don’t quite understand how exactly the world has changed for the worse for young people, and that their back-in-the-day conventional wisdom doesn’t apply anymore.

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    • @Linkerbaan
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      -785 months ago

      How so? They’re flopping between two parties just like the current generation of voters.

      Watch the reactions when I type this:

      Vote third party.

      • @Sonicdemon86
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        735 months ago

        The only way voting third party works is if we get rid of “first to the pole” and instead used something like “ranked choice” voting.

        • @Linkerbaan
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          -295 months ago

          Yeah but that’s not in the interest of the current duopoly. They’re not gonna shoot themselves in the foot as long as they keep getting votes doing this

          • @[email protected]
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            But voting third party doesn’t actually accomplish anything. Take it from someone who did it for decades. It doesn’t shake up or change the system, it just perpetuates the minority rule set up by Project Redmap.

            The right way to do it is to vote your conscience locally, until there is enough support at higher levels. Skipping right to voting for third party presidential candidates is simply naive, I’m afraid.

            Edit: Steve Hofstetter lays it out well (I wish I could find this one elsewhere) https://m.facebook.com/stevehofstetter/videos/why-voting-third-party-for-president-makes-no-sense/359024631794244/

          • @assassin_aragorn
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            135 months ago

            What’s interesting about this observation is that you have to conclude voting isn’t the solution. No matter how you vote, either Democrats or Republicans are going to win in 99% of cases. Every vote you deny to one party to teach them a lesson is an implicit vote for the other party. The counts won’t matter so long as one or the other win.

            So what’s the moral thing to do? In terms of voting on a national scale, you pick the better option. But on a state and local level, vote for a reasonable third party that’s investing in growth.

            And no, that hasn’t been tried before, because none of our current third parties actually want change. They throw away their money at the federal level while rubbing shoulders with oligarchs. We need a party that starts local with a 50 state ground game and then gradually accumulates power through local victories. Creating this party is what we need to figure out what to do.

            • HubertManne
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              25 months ago

              greens run for local positions near around me but im in a major metropolitan area.

            • @Linkerbaan
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              -165 months ago

              Be the change you seek or stop blaming boomers cause you’re all doing the exact same shit as them.

      • @[email protected]
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        75 months ago

        Voting third party works in other countries but in the American system the only real option is to vote for some fringe wing of one of the parties. Bernie lost with the establishment in the end but he was close. Trump actually won and took over the party. That’s the only way to do it.

        • @Linkerbaan
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          -105 months ago

          Boomers have been saying this shit for decades and I’m not seeing them achieve much.

          But you keep doing you.

          • @[email protected]
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            5 months ago

            What do you mean? Trump run the country for 4 years, packed the supreme court and banned abortion. If that’s not much I don’t know what is. Or do you think it doesn’t count because that’s not what you want to achieve?

      • Hildegarde
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        55 months ago

        People blaming the boomers for the current problems have an overly inflated view of the power of ordinary people.

        The people are in power are those to blame, not the ordinary people who chose one of the few options presented to them.

        • @dvoraqs
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          65 months ago

          They also have collective power as a voting bloc and group that participates actively in local elections

  • @snekerpimp
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    375 months ago

    A fluff piece telling me how I should feel grateful for working till I die because it will appear that I’ll make more money?

    https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/f23ceb80-4d51-4ebf-8f22-fdc93b509c75.jpeg

    • tmyakal
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      165 months ago

      The fun one is where they brag that older workers are making “substantially more” because they’re averaging $22/hr versus $13/hr in 1987. Adjusted for inflation, that $13/hr should be around $35/hr.

      More people are working longer for less money.

      • @[email protected]
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        65 months ago

        Okay thank you, I was so confused reading that. I was waiting for any mention of adjusting for inflation.

  • @dhork
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    I think this article is making an incorrect assumption that these older workers are sticking around in the same caliber jobs they had when they were younger. Those people simply enjoy their jobs, and can still do them, so are not ready to just stop doing it. But there are many more classes of older workers:

    • the ones with the financial security to retire early, but do not want to just sit around the house all day. They may want to stay employed part-time somewhere as a social outlet.

    • the ones with the financial security to retire early, except for health care. These workers might take jobs with less responsibility and pay, but make liberal use of their health insurance until they qualify for Medicare.

    • the ones who don’t have that financial security, so they still need to be an active part of the workforce until their Social Security payments kick in.(which still may not be enough)

    So, it’s not always the case that an older worker remaining in the workforce prevents another mid-life worker from advancing. However, every older worker remaining in the workforce fills someone else’s position, and eventually it all trickles down to the entry level jobs. So it does end up screwing today’s new grads in the end, just like their student loan debt and the sky-high housing prices do.

    • @2piradians
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      35 months ago

      My manager is a prime example of your first category. He has a nice federal retirement and a chunk of a 401k, but he stays here…riding his desk. He can’t begin to fill the shoes of the Gen-X manager he replaced. Thus the quality of my department suffers because he’s a weak manager and susceptible to the schmooze by younger employees.

      He took over the position just after he: 1. Moved 2 hours away, and 2. Had a massive heart attack. This guy’s circumstances are screaming at him to retire, but he just. Won’t. Move. On.

    • @[email protected]
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      15 months ago

      However, every older worker remaining in the workforce fills someone else’s position, and eventually it all trickles down to the entry level jobs.

      Assuming anyone is hiring entry-level positions.

      At my company, there have been countless rounds of layoffs and early retirement packages, and nobody being hired at entry-level. The few people who have been hired have come in with a decade or more of industry specific experience, and have been expected to hit the ground running.

      I don’t know if all industries are following similar trends, but my kids experience trying to find “no experience needed, entry level” jobs suggests it is pretty wide spread.

      Working your way up from the bottom seems to be increasingly a thing of the past.

  • CubitOom
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    275 months ago

    The interesting thing is when you think about how social security is supposed to work.

    The younger generations need to work and earn a decent wage to subsidize the older generations retirement.

    The longer the older generations stay in the work force, the less openings there are for the younger generations to contribute to social security.

    • bean
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      45 months ago

      Wait until AI takes jobs -_-

    • @Smoogs
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      35 months ago

      The younger generations need to work and earn a decent wage to subsidize the older generations retirement

      That’s not how RRSP works.

      • @[email protected]
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        55 months ago

        No, but it’s still correct.

        Retired individuals make use of tax funded systems all the time and those only work if younger people pay taxes.

        • @Smoogs
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          No that is not correct. That also isn’t how taxes work. Everyone who is working pays taxes and everyone benefits off the taxes they pay into. They don’t pay each other’s taxes.

          Retirement is very different from taxes that are paid into for disability or welfare. And if you are not working you are not paying taxes. You’re either pulling from retirement that you pay yourself, unemployment that you also pay yourself or welfare which is a different topic altogether as we’re assuming this is to do with workforce tax so the individual is working and thus paying a tax for later benefit.

          If you are talking about RRSP (or RIF dependant on age)that is paid privately from the individual. If you’re referring to a social system such as CPP is still paid into as taxes by the individual.

          https://www.canada.ca/en/services/benefits/publicpensions/cpp/cpp-benefit/amount.html

          You are still the same person benefitting off your own paid taxes regardless of age. Older people were paying taxes the whole time they worked which they are benefiting on the taxes that they made. Young people don’t donate to it for them. It is written on every pay-cheque you receive.

          The issue is that you have to donate it to yourself but if you are not qualified in your job (and if there aren’t enough people to take the supporting roles) the taxes you pay into will be higher but the pay rate will be lower. This is the issue as these roles come up for grabs or that roles get rewritten as the person before them retired. Old people didn’t do this to you. So if you’re looking to blame someone for that, look to the bad managers. Not old Merryl who’s been a working nurse paying her taxes all her life.

          you will be old one day and looking to benefit off the taxes YOU paid into all yours life. This isn’t something young people are paying into for someone else. They are paying it for themselves as an assurance and assumption as they get older.

          The main complaint about aging population isn’t that someone isn’t paying taxes for an old person, it is that old people are now old enough to retire and leaving work to benefit on the taxes they made all their life and no one is qualified enough to take over the job. And no doubt some shifty bullshit is happening by upper mismanagement to the role the moment they leave. And thus the replacement is a smaller pool that now has to pay more taxes for themselves to benefit.

          this isn’t the fault of older people that there was no one ready to replace them. It also isn’t the fault of older people that there are higher tax rates as the population shifts and it’s not equal. They can’t simply change your circumstance by simultaneously existing and not existing and if you think that’s how all your problems are solved, you probably have a lot of problems that are a ‘you being unreasonable about problems’ problem. Not a ‘them’ problem.

          • @[email protected]
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            15 months ago

            Every year, the government funds itself with taxes being paid now. Not years previously. If older people who are retired use the hospital, the hospital’s resources were paid for by the most recent taxes.

            And when I pay my taxes now, the government doesn’t take a small percentage of it, put it aside, and mark it as “for road maintenance in X decades”.

            If working people stopped paying taxes, all programs would collapse entirely, they wouldn’t keep working only for retired people who paid into them sufficiently.

            It’s pretty obvious that all of government needs tax payers every year

          • @Smoogs
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            -25 months ago

            I’d hate to know the adult who still expects dinner from the boob and an elderly parent to change their diaper and the only reason is they felt entitled to it.

              • @Smoogs
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                5 months ago

                They don’t though. They paid taxes all their life into a retirement. You didn’t do that for them. Also: gross. Learn to go potty.

                • @[email protected]
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                  05 months ago

                  Cool, let’s stop paying into the bucket then and they can use the money that’s left in that fund to pay themselves.

    • @RBWells
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      25 months ago

      Kind of. But working longer also means that person costs less in social security, and the plan was designed as a pyramid scheme. But we can’t grow in population forever. So if this is the glut of old people, they need to work longer. That’s why one of the “fixes” to any system like that is increasing the retirement age. Also the economy isn’t a zero sum problem where I can take your job, really. It’s more like a living system. Jobs get created and lost, it grows from the bottom up.

      • CubitOom
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        15 months ago

        That’s a good point.

        Somethings I didn’t realize I don’t know of till now. When does one withdraw money from social security? Like do they have to request it from the government? A government worker might have a retirement age but for most Americans, it’s more of a guide. I know plenty of people that are in their 70s and they never plan to retire. If they continue to get paid on w-2 and report earnings to the IRS, does that mean they are ineligible to receive social security benefits?

        I suppose if they are not able to collect social security money, and they continue to pay into it but they retire later then you are 100% correct and it’s not as big of a problem for the younger generations as I thought.

        Although I would say that the job market is in fact a competition. No matter if you are someone with seniority and experience, someone with little experience willing to work for less, or simply an automaton.

    • @[email protected]
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      -75 months ago

      subsidize old folks retirement? why? didnt they work for 40+ years? shouldnt that have been long enough to save up a retirement fund?

      • @Smoogs
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        • CubitOom
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          15 months ago

          I’m talking about in the USA. It is supposed to work the way you say. But in reality, you aren’t paying into an individual account for yourself. You pay into a pool that the government uses as soon as it receives the money for the current recipients of social security.

          Really it’s a ponzi scheme with declining contributors and an increasing amount of people cashing out.

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwO2hEO13iY

          • @Smoogs
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            15 months ago

            some severe misinformation about that video :

            For one it’s 9 years out of date and thus cannot apply to todays demographic of massive influence of Airbnb and gentrification.

            For another while it mentions the national debt it fails to mention HOW the national debt (cough military) became that bad. It is mainly an accountant error (president is basically an accountant)

            For another it fails to mention the taxations that are actually in place for pensions (I’ll mention below) and it also fails on how to make the connection about how those pensions are ‘wealth transfer’ programs. And speaking of wealth transfer, it got the definition wrong. Wealth transfer isn’t paying into someone’s pension. The definition is actually hereditary in that it goes the opposite way: what the older generation leave to their family upon death or invest for schooling or help out with buying houses for their children .

            For another the crux comes up at 3:01 and your entire argument is boomers are struggling to sell stuff…if this were true they could always take a page from essentially the rest of the world: sell your stuff offshore or to companies like Airbnb . In fact it’s one of the major (global) issues right now with finding enough housing because everyone is selling their properties (and there isn’t enough) and it’s all owned by offshore because there is always offshore buyers and there’s always capitalists on the Airbnb market. And I may remind you that a lot of younger generations now fill up the capitalist roles who are more than willing to turn a profit. I find it hard to believe that selling your property is the end all problem here when practically the rest of the world is on fire because of how easy it is to sell property for a hefty chunk of money and many vulnerable are homeless as a result(many of those vulnerable are boomers with financial and medical issues btw). The richer Boomers with property simply do not need a millennial to buy their property to turn profit. They got many buyers offshore waiting with baited breath. But what is an issue you should be paying attention to : capitalists such as airBNB are your problem here raising the prices. That is being run by everyone younger than boomers too who did receive a transfer of wealth. Not just boomers.

            For another 6:15 many of these issues that younger generations are facing are put in place by younger than boomers. It’ll reiterate what I said in another post: if a boomer leaves a job and the job description changes/gets sent off shore or etc, this isn’t what boomers are responsible for. This change comes from younger generations changing the job description locking their own fellow generation out so they can make a buck. Just look to Zuckerberg and how much he makes selling private information. He’s a millennial btw. Cuz the richer younger generation are probably even more successful at greed than the boomers. There’s an even more exacerbating differential on class now than before when you have a diversity of generations filling the billionaire roles now. That isn’t on the boomers. That’s on capitalism. Retiring Boomers are no longer the only people at the capitalism table making bad decisions. So they can’t simultaneously exist in a job and also retire to not exist on the job to take all the blame. That’s just unreasonable and unrealistic to point all problems that way. At that point it’s only about shifting responsibility. It has nothing to do with fixing it.

            And another: it doesn’t even mention the OAI nor 401k which is currently present in the USA and applicable in the same way as an RRSP and CPP is. It’s pretty clear that their pension comes from a very similar tax structure as to what common wealth countries do. With these pensions the important thing to keep in mind is that a company will not take a prerogative to invest in an entitlement program so it would be in earnest that the employee needs to keep on top of it to contribute their percentage for their private RRSP or 401. an employer may decide to contribute but it isn’t compulsory anywhere. Well almost anywhere…… in Australia the superannuation is compulsory. But in North America it is not.

            (Note: If this is taking you by surprise and you have a dumping stomach feeling please rush to an accountant to help you understand what your next step should be regarding your 401 immediately)

            that is something perhaps not being taught to you alongside in school about these other topics. When it really should be.

  • @[email protected]
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    Why doesnt anyone want to work?

    Says the tech illiterate boomer who is vastly underqualified and incompetent compared to the far more qualified and educated millennials who cannot find a job that he makes fun of on facebook all day at work.

  • @doublejay1999
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    225 months ago

    Last week they were all quitting and retiring early.

  • @[email protected]
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    175 months ago

    The headline makes it sound like boomers are out-earning other generations or making good money.

    • The average private sector wage is $34/hr. This indicates wildly skewed upper bounds so we can’t draw any conclusions about their earning.
    • The median in 2020 was $23/hr, implying boomers are earning less than other generations
    • $22/hr is about $45k/yr. Generously that’s about $40k after taxes. Assuming a health plan of $600/mo (premiums are higher at higher ages) and giving a generous 50% employer payment, we’re down to about 37k. tbh I feel like healthcare costs should be doubled or tripled based on costs I’ve seen from family and friends. Rounding nicely, that’s about 2k a month. If we use the incredibly outdated figure of rent/mortgage being 30%, we have 1400 to spend or save. Let’s pretend we’re able to get all bills under 400 so we have 1000 left over to use.
    • Hip replacement is conservatively 3k with insurance. That’s three months of work. You’re probably taking FMLA which means you probably need another three months to cover expenses while recovering. Use hip replacement as a stand in for other surgeries.
    • Let’s pretend crowns are as cheap as 1k/tooth. You’re probably looking at one a year ish over time.
    • Let’s pretend hearing aids are 2.5k and you’re lucky enough to have insurance that covers them every few years. You’re still out of pocket at least 1k, burning another month.
    • Some conservative estimates for cancer are about 6k for lung, breast, and rectal after insurance (prostrate is cheaper!). That’s six months assuming no FMLA; you’re probably taking some time so that’s probably more months.

    Boomers are fucked earning that. Millenials are even more fucked. Who knows how fucked GenZ is.

    • TechyDad
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      105 months ago

      Let’s pretend hearing aids are 2.5k and you’re lucky enough to have insurance that covers them every few years. You’re still out of pocket at least 1k, burning another month.

      My hearing aids were $3,600 and they were the lower end of the scale. And my insurance didn’t cover a single penny of it.

      Boomers are fucked earning that. Millenials are even more fucked. Who knows how fucked GenZ is.

      And GenX is ignored again!

      Sorry. As a GenX-er, I felt compelled to point that out. Don’t be surprised if future articles talk about how GenX isn’t retiring, but is continuing to work, though. Personally, I’m doing fine for now, but my retirement savings are way too low. I could either save more for retirement and end up financially underwater right now, or keep my head above water and then struggle when it comes time to retire.

      So I’ll likely be working until I’m 80 in the hopes of stretching my meager retirement savings through the rest of my life. And that’s assuming that Social Security isn’t gone by then.

      • @[email protected]
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        25 months ago

        Fair callout! I shouldn’t keep forgetting GenX.

        In researching all the bullets I was really surprised to find that hearing aids aren’t covered. It’s something like five states have some level of requirement. As someone with hearing loss, that’s really concerning and I’m not looking forward to that.

  • @postmateDumbass
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    145 months ago

    And continuing their destruction of opportunity for future generations.

    • @[email protected]
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      75 months ago

      If I couldn’t afford to stop working, I would be forced to stay on the payroll forever, regardless of what I might prefer to be doing.

      • @postmateDumbass
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        “You should have saved more.”

        “You lived too extravegently”

        “You should have done more politically to prevent the current economic situation from fomenting”

        2 of those 3 are often used to dismiss other generations as they struggle.

        3rd is just aimed at the generation that made today’s reality happen.

    • @WolfhoundRO
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      And thinking that the discovery of the cognitive decline would make the policymakers rethink the role of the elder in (or rather out and properly compensated) the workforce… Such a fool I was

    • @kromem
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      35 months ago

      Shhhhh.

      Don’t tell them that 3 pennies aren’t actually more than two quarters because there’s more of them.

      Otherwise people will catch on that they are being grossly fleeced by an unfair and abhorrent system of generalized inequality.

  • @febra
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    35 months ago

    Reap what you sow.