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Boomers

Community for : 2 years

The worst generation in human history.

Owner: Jewfed9000

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-4
Boomers.     (Boomers)
submitted by we_kill_creativity to Boomers 4 days ago (+2/-6)
21 comments last comment...
-5
Boomers.     (Boomers)
submitted by we_kill_creativity to Boomers 5 days ago (+5/-10)
10 comments last comment...
Suck.
8
Their Journey is Just Beginning     (pic8.co)
submitted by carnold03 to Boomers 6 days ago (+13/-5)
7 comments last comment...
https://pic8.co/sh/6ZxG4d.png

“Is that Jimmy Buffet I’m hearing?”

#Their Journey is Just Beginning

The Big Bear obliterates the Boomer hatred for their descendants:

Boomers love to brag about how they’ll be dead before the check comes for their filthy indulgent lifestyles. The fact their children and grandchildren will live with their horrible decisions actually makes them smirk. “I won’t be around to see it! It’s your problem now, suckers!” they snicker to their exhausted children.

“All you do is complain! Get a better job then! I’m going on a cruise!” the Boomer says to their children, now in 120k of unpayable college debt because they made the terrible mistake of trusting the guidance of their deranged and narcissistic parents.

Well, Boomer, you may be happy now that you die before the check comes and you really pulled one over on everyone! But Boomer, you’re wrong about everything. Your mind is full of nonsense. Wanna know what else you might be wrong about? The eternal soul.

The Boomer is no fool, he knows the Big Bang happened, and then bacteria banged and here he is! And he played golf on the moon! And when he dies that’s it! The dirt nap!

Well, Boomer, there is also a possibility that you’re heading straight to hell and your journey is just beginning.

In retrospect, Generation X should have paid much closer attention to Animal House. Because as children, we fucked up, we trusted them.
8
The World We Lost     (voxday.net)
submitted by carnold03 to Boomers 1 week ago (+11/-3)
5 comments last comment...
https://voxday.net/2024/04/19/the-world-we-lost/

#The World We Lost

Whereas the Boomers are openly gleeful to have denied the younger generations the world they knew, it grieves Generation X that we were unable to preserve it.

When Spacebunny and I bought our first house, I consciously sought one that was on a dead end culdesac backed up on a park, with the idea that the children we hoped to have would be able to run around and play there with the pack of neighborhood kids one day.

But, as Spacebunny correctly pointed out, it was already too late for that. Even by the end of the 1990s, suburban kids really didn’t do that anymore, for a variety of reasons.
0
The Boomtardery Never Ends     (voxday.net)
submitted by carnold03 to Boomers 2 weeks ago (+5/-5)
6 comments last comment...
https://voxday.net/2024/04/15/the-boomtardery-never-ends/

#The Boomtardery Never Ends

Jewish Boomers are fantasizing about a rehash of the 1981 bombing raid on Iraq’s nuclear reactor.

Iran took its best shot (or a very significant one) at Israel with over 100 ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and over 100 drones, totaling over 300 forms of aerial attack from many different sides and vectors.

What if Israel finally decides to strike back? What if it decides to take this opportunity to finally bomb Iran’s prized nuclear weapons program?

Such a scenario has been gamed out for years, but here is one version of what it could look like.

Several quartets of F-35 stealth combat jets could fly by separate routes to hit sites across the massive Islamic Republic, some as far as 1,200 miles from the Jewish state.

Some of the aircraft might fly along the border between Syria and Turkey (despite those countries’ opposition) and then race across Iraq (who would also oppose). Other aircraft might fly through Saudi airspace (unclear if this would be with quiet agreement or opposition) and the Persian Gulf.

They might arrive simultaneously or in waves (as Iran did overnight between Saturday and Sunday) to first eliminate the ayatollahs’ air defenses at dozens of Iranian nuclear sites, carefully hand-picked by the Mossad and IDF intelligence.

First, Iran obviously did not take its best shot. It used less than one-tenth of one percent of its drones and missiles to send a strong message to the USA. Second, keep in mind that Israel used 14 planes, 8 F-16s and 6 F-15s, in 1981’s Operation Opera. It now possesses 614 aircraft, among which are 50 F-35s. Given the fact that only 20 percent of the USAF’s F-35s are currently operational, it would be very surprising if the IDF had more than 25 available for this sort of long-distance action.

Now consider that Iran acquired the S-300 missile defense system from Russia in 2016. With only 100 legacy S-300 systems inherited from the Soviet Union, the Ukrainian Armed Forces managed to prevent the Russian Air Force, which is five times larger than the Israeli Air Force and has much better fighters and bombers, from making use of its air superiority until very recently. Iran may also have S-400 and S-500 systems by now, as Russian leaders have spoken openly about supplying the Iranians with them, and Russian troops in Syria are known to have both S-400 and S-500 systems deployed with them.

In other words, attempting to repeat what was a surprise attack 43 years ago would be far more likely to lead to the literal decimation of the Israeli air forces than to harm Iran in any serious way. One of the consequences of the end of the fighter jet-era is the elimination of what has been, for the last fifty years, Israel’s advantage of regional air supremacy.

Even Hollywood knows this, as evidenced by the recent Top Gun sequel, so it’s a little surprising to see how many Boomers in the US and Israeli medias alike do not.
4
The Wicked Generation: British Boomer Edition     (pic8.co)
submitted by carnold03 to Boomers 2 weeks ago (+4/-0)
1 comments last comment...
https://pic8.co/sh/mTbGUk.png

We’re spending your inheritance! Tee-hee!

#The Wicked Generation: British Boomer Edition

A British millennial belatedly realizes that his parents’ spending on their travel addiction is rendering impossible his ability to buy a home and build a family:

As an impecunious 34-year-old millennial in an impossibly expensive property market, I am relying on, at some stage, a handout from them. But all I can see is my money receding into the distance on a long-haul trip to Bali.

With many of my friends in a similar position, and the cost of living crisis still at full throttle, the question troubling us over the generational divide is this. Who is being selfish? Us for wanting them to save their money so we can one day have it? Or them, for splurging it all so freely on themselves?

At the start of their travel spree, about five years ago, I loved the bravery and ambition of it. Growing up, we usually went to Devon or Cornwall once a year. But when there was just the two of them (my younger sister and I have long since flown the nest), they could afford to globe trot. For a bit.

Well, good for them, I thought. Let them, in their late 60s, have a couple of lovely holidays, before settling into a cosy retirement at home.

The problem was it didn’t stop at just one or two. It didn’t even stop at three or four…

How can I ever settle down and give them grandchildren if there isn’t any money in the pipeline to support them? Do they want to go on holiday more than they want me to be able to have and bring up children?

I’m not alone in agonising over where my parents’ hard-earned money is going. According to a survey by an online wealth management advice firm called Moneyfarm, two in five adult children feel their ‘blood boiling’ at the idea their parents are blowing their inheritance on luxury holidays.

Among adult children aged between 35 and 50, 40 per cent thought their parents should provide them with an inheritance (compared with 25 per cent aged over 65) — and 20 per cent had already argued with them about what was going to be left.

Another friend admits she puts phone notifications from her mum on silent when her parents go ‘gallivanting abroad’ — because all the pictures of dreamy destinations make her jealous. And resentful.

‘My inheritance is currently being drunk through a straw in a coconut in the Caribbean,’ she says. ‘It’s going to be slim pickings at this rate.’

These Millennials are not being selfish or ungrateful. And their expectations were not unreasonable. What these parents are doing is flat-out wrong. It is unquestionably evil.

There will be no short of foolish and philosophically-bent individuals who will defend these wicked Boomers as simply “living their best life” or “spending their own money”. But those are both obvious lies. Even setting aside the very different economic climates facing the generations concerned, the Boomers inherited more financial resources from their parents and grandparents than any generation in human history. And, on average, what they are leaving behind them is considerably less than they themselves received.

Nota Bene: 10 percent of the total UK tax receipts are spent funding Boomer state pensions.

And as far as the “it’s their money, not yours”, the Bible is very, very clear on what a good man is supposed to do with regards to providing for his children. The Contemporary English Version even spells it out slowly in simple language for the benefit of even the most retarded reader.

If you obey God, you will have something to leave your grandchildren. If you don’t obey God, those who live right will get what you leave.

UPDATE: We have definite confirmation that it’s almost entirely Boomers reading The Daily Mail these days. This is the second-worst rated comment, with a highly negative ratio of 38 upvotes and 620 downvotes.

If I was this young man’s parent I would make sure he and sister were on the property ladder and can rent rooms out before going off on Jollies. I sincerely hope the house is left to the two children.
2
Boomers Are Moving To Mexico After Destroying America     (archive.ph)
submitted by TheOriginal1Icemonkey to Boomers 2 weeks ago (+6/-4)
2 comments last comment...
5
There was neither sign nor show When the Boomer began to hate.      (files.catbox.moe)
submitted by GreatSatan to Boomers 4 weeks ago (+6/-1)
20 comments last comment...
3
We’re spending your inheritance! Tee-hee!     (pic8.co)
submitted by carnold03 to Boomers 1 month ago (+7/-4)
18 comments last comment...
https://pic8.co/sh/mTbGUk.png

#The Wicked Generation: British Boomer Edition

A British millennial belatedly realizes that his parents’ spending on their travel addiction is rendering impossible his ability to buy a home and build a family:

As an impecunious 34-year-old millennial in an impossibly expensive property market, I am relying on, at some stage, a handout from them. But all I can see is my money receding into the distance on a long-haul trip to Bali.

With many of my friends in a similar position, and the cost of living crisis still at full throttle, the question troubling us over the generational divide is this. Who is being selfish? Us for wanting them to save their money so we can one day have it? Or them, for splurging it all so freely on themselves?

At the start of their travel spree, about five years ago, I loved the bravery and ambition of it. Growing up, we usually went to Devon or Cornwall once a year. But when there was just the two of them (my younger sister and I have long since flown the nest), they could afford to globe trot. For a bit.

Well, good for them, I thought. Let them, in their late 60s, have a couple of lovely holidays, before settling into a cosy retirement at home.

The problem was it didn’t stop at just one or two. It didn’t even stop at three or four…

How can I ever settle down and give them grandchildren if there isn’t any money in the pipeline to support them? Do they want to go on holiday more than they want me to be able to have and bring up children?

I’m not alone in agonising over where my parents’ hard-earned money is going. According to a survey by an online wealth management advice firm called Moneyfarm, two in five adult children feel their ‘blood boiling’ at the idea their parents are blowing their inheritance on luxury holidays.

Among adult children aged between 35 and 50, 40 per cent thought their parents should provide them with an inheritance (compared with 25 per cent aged over 65) — and 20 per cent had already argued with them about what was going to be left.

Another friend admits she puts phone notifications from her mum on silent when her parents go ‘gallivanting abroad’ — because all the pictures of dreamy destinations make her jealous. And resentful.

‘My inheritance is currently being drunk through a straw in a coconut in the Caribbean,’ she says. ‘It’s going to be slim pickings at this rate.’

These Millennials are not being selfish or ungrateful. And their expectations were not unreasonable. What these parents are doing is flat-out wrong. It is unquestionably evil.

There will be no short of foolish and philosophically-bent individuals who will defend these wicked Boomers as simply “living their best life” or “spending their own money”. But those are both obvious lies. Even setting aside the very different economic climates facing the generations concerned, the Boomers inherited more financial resources from their parents and grandparents than any generation in human history. And, on average, what they are leaving behind them is considerably less than they themselves received.

Nota Bene: 10 percent of the total UK tax receipts are spent funding Boomer state pensions.

And as far as the “it’s their money, not yours”, the Bible is very, very clear on what a good man is supposed to do with regards to providing for his children. The Contemporary English Version even spells it out slowly in simple language for the benefit of even the most retarded reader.

If you obey God, you will have something to leave your grandchildren. If you don’t obey God, those who live right will get what you leave.

UPDATE: We have definite confirmation that it’s almost entirely Boomers reading The Daily Mail these days. This is the second-worst rated comment, with a highly negative ratio of 38 upvotes and 620 downvotes.

If I was this young man’s parent I would make sure he and sister were on the property ladder and can rent rooms out before going off on Jollies. I sincerely hope the house is left to the two children.
8
Boomers in a hot rod. Boomer eats the dashboard. (0:15)     (files.catbox.moe)
submitted by RobertJHarsh to Boomers 1 month ago (+13/-5)
20 comments last comment...
4
Their World Stopped     (files.catbox.moe)
submitted by carnold03 to Boomers 2 months ago (+9/-5)
22 comments last comment...
https://files.catbox.moe/7gft7r.png

#Their World Stopped

While ours kept going, which is why it’s virtually impossible to talk to a Boomer about anything anymore.

All through the 80’s and well into the 90’s, it used to drive me crazy when KQ92 would play its annual list of most-requested songs, which would inevitably end with “And number one, for the twenty-third straight year, is Stairway to Heaven by Led Zeppelin!”

This is KQ’s top-ten most-requested songs as of 2017:

1. Won’t Get Fooled Again by The Who
2. You Shook Me All Night Long by AC/DC
3. Money by Pink Floyd
4. Kashmir by Led Zeppelin
5. You Wreck Me by Tom Petty
6. Turn the Page by Bob Seger
7. Another Brick in the Wall by Pink Floyd
8. Baba O’Riley by The Who
9. Hotel California by Eagles
10. Layla by Derek and the Dominos

I’m pretty well-versed in music, but I’ve never even heard of the Tom Petty song, and I didn’t know the name of either the Led Zeppelin song or the correct name of the “teenage wasteland” song by The Who. The newest song on there was recorded 44 years ago. The only surprise is that the Boomers finally got tired of listening to Stairway to Heaven, which fell from its perennial top-spot down to number 30.

Keep in mind that this is a radio station located in the home town of Prince Rogers Nelson. And there isn’t one single Prince song in the top 500 most-requested.
1
Things Boomers Did     (Boomers)
submitted by Trollasaurus to Boomers 2 months ago (+3/-2)
17 comments last comment...
Originally I was going to post this as a response to a comment, then realized I would have to copy-paste it about 30 times over. Instead I'll link this post:

Boomers were the first generation to care more about themselves than their progeny. Or even the ones that came before them. Boomers had the easiest time finding good paying jobs that rewarded loyalty. Boomers had the 9 to 5 or 8 to 6 schedule; gifted to them by their grandparents. Boomers eliminated this schedule. Boomers worked their way up from sweeping a broom to management. Boomers created HR and inflated college degrees. Boomers threw their kids out at age 18 to fend for themselves. Boomers removed upward mobility in companies. Boomers voted for regulations and red tape on trades. Boomers voted for every tax that came their way. Boomers kicked their kids out at 18. Boomers did not teach their children the family business, pushing them to other careers. Boomers did not have family willing to take over their businesses (because they were pushed to other careers). Boomers refuse to step down and relinquish control of anything until they have to (look at our governments). Boomers had the wealth to create retirement homes to throw their parents into (first retirement opened in the USA in 1981), so they didn't have to take care of them. Boomers bought the most amount of houses, toys, etc as they approached retirement. Which rapidly inflated the cost of housing as houses were now owned by boomers who wanted passive income from rent. Boomers who retired proceeded to sell their investments to blow on depreciating things and materialistic goals. Mobile homes, cars, boats, trips across the country to visit every casino possible, etc.
Boomers with inheritance to leave, often sold to other boomers or refused to pass it down because their children did not "work hard enough" to "earn" their inheritance.
Boomers left nothing behind for their children, their grandchildren, their great grandchildren. When you raise this to a boomer they will respond with one of two preprogrammed responses. "I don't care because I will be dead and gone" or "I worked hard for what I have and you didn't have my life because you didn't work hard enough." (the average worker now works more hours than the average boomer did)
Boomers now rot in the retirement homes they created wondering why their family won't visit.
-6
What the FUCK is wrong with boomers?     (Boomers)
submitted by Bidenguy666 to Boomers 2 months ago (+2/-8)
20 comments last comment...
0
Boomer Trigger     (files.catbox.moe)
submitted by carnold03 to Boomers 2 months ago (+0/-0)
0 comments...
https://files.catbox.moe/pbucvc.png

#Boomer Trigger

Simply mention Boomers in any context that is less than obsequiously flattering, and they will come running.

Nothing will change until the Boomers die, because a) they believe obedience to the law is paramount and, b) they believe protest is actually effective. But if public prayer results in 11 years in jail while beating a 17-year-old boy to death results in nothing more than manslaughter charges and zero jail time, the only rational conclusion is that the utility of public protest is nonexistent.

- I don’t see your LAZY ASS down at the border gathering with all the BOOMERS!! It’s easy to point fingers; Do something to help us or shut up!
- Boomer here. You are going to have to suck it up – many in my generation will be around for next 30-40 years cleaning up the mess of your generation and other younger generations. You guys really fucked up a great country.
- Gen Z is the baby boomer replacement. Does anyone really believe Gen Z is more capable than baby boomers when it comes to thinking for themselves, being responsible for themselves, applying logic, really???? That’s hilarious.
- Your logic has nothing to do with boomers, NOT one FUCKING THING. Only thing you’ve done is to show the world that you are a MOTHER FUCKING IDIOTIC MORONIC DUMBFUCK! Shut your ignorant piehole!
- I’m just grateful that we were the last generation to grow up in a decent America blissfully unaware of the damage our “Greatest Generation” parents had done. You wouldn’t be so butthurt if you had grown up in a normal country.
- The boomer thing is a jew psyop to divide us further and you’re falling for it, hook, line and sinker. I’m Gen X but know a lot of boomers and most are nothing like you suggest. The FACT is that under the same circumstances our generations would have done nothing different than the boomers. It’s NOT a generational thing, it’s a circumstances thing. Since every generation subsequent to the boomers became more color blind, more faggoty, more tranny and more Soy Boy, do we just lump our entire generation into those categories? No, it’s a matter of circumstance and we should clean up our generations instead of whining like little crybabies and blaming others for our lots in life. Grow up.
- Somebody’s got daddy issues
- LOL yeah…ok! Attack the boomers, push more hatred of other and try and incite even more anger! That’ll fix everything! LOL
- You ARE “Historically-Illiterate:”……..and posts like THIS “document it”………Please ‘continue’………..or Do some Fucking ‘REASEARCH and Look LESS ‘The Fool’ !!
- stereotyping. Or do u just hate yr parents? Projecting are we? I don’t believe protesting is effective guess I’ll have to hand in my boomer badge.
- Well, let’s see. The last year of the Baby Boom was 1964 so those people are 59 and older now. I figure you have another 30 years or so to not get off your own asses while blaming previous generations.
- It’s ok if you’re tired of our memories, no doubt you’ll bore future generations with yours. I was paying attention but somehow missed the carefree part and hedonism. That is unless you factor in how we weren’t afraid to go trick or treating by ourselves or explore through the woods or ride in the backs of pickup trucks. I remember it being a favorite when my dad rode me around in a wheelbarrow! Thrilled he paid any attention to me at all. From what I’ve seen, the younger generations are just looking for someone to blame for them not have found anything meaningful in life.

The Boomer message in a nutshell:

America is the greatest nation the world has ever known, if America has any problems all of them are the fault of the Millennials, you’re just jealous that you didn’t have a great life like ours, and I’m sure glad I’m going to die before the shit hits the fan.
11
@Con77 Has Had Enough, Dammit.     (youtube.com)
submitted by TheBigGuyFromQueens to Boomers 3 months ago (+12/-1)
14 comments last comment...
10
Davos     (files.catbox.moe)
submitted by UncleDoug to Boomers 3 months ago (+11/-1)
4 comments last comment...
1
A Boomer on Gab     (voxday.net)
submitted by carnold03 to Boomers 3 months ago (+2/-1)
1 comments last comment...
https://voxday.net/2024/01/16/a-boomer-on-gab/

BOOMER: Soon you all can move out of mom’s basement…..

VD: We’ll have to move out. Mom reverse-mortgaged the house and will die engulfed in debt, so there’s nothing to inherit and nowhere to live.

BOOMER: Go earn your own house, like everyone I know. I inherited nothing.

VD: The Boomers inherited more, and will leave less behind them as a percentage of what they inherited, than any generation in memory. You’re a historically wicked generation.

BOOMER: Boohooo Mommy didn’t leave me anything. You sound childish, I wouldn’t have left you anything either.

VD: I know you wouldn’t have. You’re not a good man. A good man leaves an inheritance to his children and to his children’s children.

Even their rhetoric is nothing but self-owns.
3
Very rare Bill O'Reilly W     (twitter.com)
submitted by NukeAmerica to Boomers 3 months ago (+3/-0)
2 comments last comment...
-1
boomers still rule the world      (www.msn.com)
submitted by paul_neri to Boomers 3 months ago (+4/-5)
5 comments last comment...
11
You Get What You Gave     (voxday.net)
submitted by carnold03 to Boomers 3 months ago (+14/-3)
9 comments last comment...
https://voxday.net/2024/01/13/you-get-what-you-give/

An aging woman laments how the post-Boomer youth no longer respect the elderly:

Once revered, age is now a sign of your irrelevance to modern life.

The word boomer – short for baby boomer, anyone who was born between 1946 and 1964 – has become an insult for older people who are out of touch…

I’ll be honest – and in saying this I’m aware I may receive some ageist insults myself in response – I don’t think it was like this when I was young.

Elders were respected. Their words carried weight and gravitas.

They were more likely to be cared for within family homes when the time came, and within society, too.

Most importantly they were listened to, rather than being swiftly dismissed as irrelevant.

It wasn’t like this when I was young either. But the Boomers are actively disrespected by the succeeding generation because they broke the tradition of respect for their elders. Now that they are the elders, they are harvesting the fruit of the seeds they planted in their youth. The first problem is that they never grew up. When I was a kid, I can’t count how many times I was told by my friends’ Boomer parents “don’t call me Mr. Johnson, Mr. Johnson is my father.” So many members of Generation X grew up accustomed to referring to their elders as their peers, by their first names.

The second problem is that they had less interest in their children and their children’s activities than they probably should have. Every member of Generation X can tell stories of what sounds like a near-feral childhood, of being kicked out of the house in the morning and only being allowed to go back inside for meals and sundown. This wasn’t necessarily a bad thing, as it turns out, but when your parents require the television to remind them that you exist at 10 PM at night, it’s probably taking a good thing too far.

And while I was fortunate that my parents took an interest in my athletic activities, it wasn’t uncommon for my dad to be the only father at a number of my soccer games and track meets. And my mother religiously attended the high school soccer games for all four of her boys, although she somehow managed to do so without ever quite grasping the offsides rule. But as a general rule, our parents were simply not very interested in anything we did, no matter what it was.

The third problem was a real eye-opener, however, when Generation X began having children and discovered that as little interest as the Boomers had in us, they had even less in their grandchildren. Many of us were close to our own grandparents, indeed, some of us were much closer to them than we were to our parents. So it was shocking to discover that our parents didn’t even want to babysit their own grandchildren for a few hours a week, and were prone to vanishing across the country, or around the world, for months at a time on vacations and cruises rather than spend any substantial time with their grandkids. In contrast, I remember being sent to stay with my grandparents in Virginia for an entire month during the school year, and they were delighted to have me there. And I still remember that visit and look back on it as being absolutely idyllic.

So this disinterest was not only bewildering to us, but also prevented any close relationships from being developed between Boomer grandparents and Millennial or Z grandchildren.

image

Fourth and finally, given the behavior demonstrated over the last 50 years, it shouldn’t come as a surprise to any of the younger generations that many, perhaps even most Boomers, who collectively were the recipients of the greatest transfer of wealth in human history, are going to die leaving absolutely nothing at all to their children or to their grandchildren. Their homes and their second homes have already been sold or reverse-mortgaged to fund their five annual cruises; they’ve funded their retirements with debt that will never be repaid.

The Census Bureau data confirmed that most Baby Boomers’ wealth is tied up in their homes. In the past, the family home would be the most significant piece of an inheritance, but now, seniors can tap into their home’s wealth before they pass with a reverse mortgage. The wealth and the home go back to the mortgage company rather than staying in the family. Many seniors would rather live in luxury during their final days than offer their kids financial assistance.

Generational Wealth Lost: Why Boomers Aren’t Leaving Their Kids an Inheritance

So, it shouldn’t be surprising that young people who neither know nor owe anything to an elderly population that has never shown any interest in them do not treat their elders with the respect that we used to back in the day. Because today’s elders, quite frankly, never earned it.

A good man leaveth an inheritance to his children's children: and the wealth of the sinner is laid up for the just.

Proverbs 13:22, The Holy Bible, KJV
0
I FUCKING HATE BOOMERS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!     (twitter.com)
submitted by NukeAmerica to Boomers 3 months ago (+5/-5)
8 comments last comment...
3
Triggered! Some after-boomers here not only can't read an analog clock, they can't read a calendar either. An 82 year old will never be a boomer, no matter how old they get. The dad would have to get years younger in order to qualify... Imagine needing this explained..      (Boomers)
submitted by Sector2 to Boomers 3 months ago (+5/-2)
24 comments last comment...
"My dad... The 82 year old"

"That entire generation... They're already becoming the biggest population of homeless people" (no, that's boomers)

"This post is about boomers." (the dad is 82)

"82 is Boomer." (1946 was 77 years, 0 months and 6 days ago, which is 28,130 days.)

"You were expecting too much from boomers." (is 82 between 59 and 77?)

How old is a Boomer in 2023?
between 59 and 77 years old
As of 2023, Baby Boomers are between 59 and 77 years old. Baby Boomers are the generational cohort born after World War II, specifically between 1946 to 1964. This name is derived from an unprecedented post-war spike in birth rates.

Your primary responsibility is to not be retarded. What do you hope to gain by abdicating?
-8
I salute whoever did this! Fuck boomers!      (twitter.com)
submitted by NukeAmerica to Boomers 3 months ago (+2/-10)
7 comments last comment...
-3
Der Boomer gets triggered when you criticize their God      (twitter.com)
submitted by NukeAmerica to Boomers 3 months ago (+2/-5)
0 comments...
0
War between boomers and millennials erupts as children refuse to pay back their parents     (www.dailymail.co.uk)
submitted by paul_neri to Boomers 4 months ago (+5/-5)
6 comments last comment...