A Commentary by Doug Draper
(A brief foreword by the writer – After a similar version of this commentary ran recently in the weekly spot I am granted in the weekly newspaper Niagara This Week, I received more than a few emails from people identifying themselves as Baby Boomers who told this Baby Boomer that they did not appreciate what I was saying here about our generation.
They were quick to stress that they don’t fit my caricature of Boomers, and I take them at their word that, in their case, it is probably true since I would like to believe that I don’t fit it either. But I was quick to respond to these people who felt wounded by my thoughts that many do fit that caricature and there is the record of Boomers spending themselves and their communities into debt, investing in the greediest of corporate ventures for short-term gain, and using up or despoiling the non-renewable resources we should be protecting for future generations on this planet.
I think that many of my fellow Baby Boomers, who grew up preaching the virtues of peace and love and the common good, know, in the hearts of hearts, that we collectively have a good deal to answer for. Now I will leave the rest to my old friend George Carlin, who was a little too old to be a Baby Boomer, and the words a wrote a couple of weeks back.)
“Here’s another group I can do without, the Baby Boomers. … Whiny, narcissistic, self-indulgent people with a simple philosophy: “Gimme that! It’s mine!”
– From a sketch by the late American satirist and social critic George Carlin.
Boy, the Baby Boomers sure know how to get attention, don’t they? They – or should I say “we” since I am a reluctant member of that big, bulging cohort – always have, and why shouldn’t we?

The Baby Boomer's Cry - "Gimme that. It's mine!"
Born en masse between the end of the Second World War and the early to mid-1960s, we Boomers took our place as the most populated group of people on this continent, far outnumbering some of the generations that came before and after us. By virtue of our numbers, we became, among other things, the largest block of consumers and the largest block of voters. So why wouldn’t we get the lion’s share of attention from marketers of goods and services, and from our politicians? Continue reading →
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