General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: At some point, young voters "broke bad" and turned on older voters. Maybe they didn't mean to hurt us. But, they did. [View all]meadowlander
(4,946 posts)"their" choices and then brushing off anyone who points it out as "playing the victim".
If we don't learn from history and acknowledge the mistakes of the past, we have no hope of fixing them.
Because if you diagnose the problem as "snowflake kids who don't know how good they have it and just want to blame old people for their problems" then how to you propose to solve that problem?
Whereas if you recognise that it is a series of choices society has made to ease the tax burden on the wealthy, gut social services, underinvest in infrastructure, housing, education, and communities, externalise the environmental cost of current consumption rates to future generations, demonise unions and rollback protections for workers, transfer risk for social security to individuals, allow the dividends from increased productivity to go to the top 1% instead of spreading them across society and reducing work hours, and pretend that climate change isn't really happening... those problems have actual solutions. And actually not that complicated ones if we're prepared to be honest and do the hard work of mending the social contract to provide greater inter- and intra-generational equity.
Edit history
Recommendations
4 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):