I made a horrible financial decision to be born in the 90s
@Sound_Tech Жыл бұрын
By far and away my worst financial decision
@WarrenGarabrandt Жыл бұрын
My solution to this is to never have any children. I can't help the mistake that has already been made for me, but I can prevent forcing that same horrible situation on another person.
@yesasd533 Жыл бұрын
Anyone born each and every day since 2000 is doomed
@ads2053 Жыл бұрын
Me too
@Modj-j5m Жыл бұрын
That 😂was a bad 👎 idea 💡
@Creznour4 жыл бұрын
I applaud this man... Sadly, no one will buy his book. Boomers don't care, and the rest cant afford it.
@callukcraft4 жыл бұрын
true but yea he seems like he wonts to help to be honest.
@HisameArtwork4 жыл бұрын
it's ok, he's a lord, he'll manage... but I'm surprised anything good came out of the aristocracy.
@MegaLotusEater4 жыл бұрын
Justin Williams David Willetts is a Tory politician who participated in the government that gave us austerity. He’s part of the very problem that he’s diagnosed!
@pgsats4 жыл бұрын
Creznour I am a boomer and I care I despair at watching young people working so hard and not being able to set them selves up just for a basic decent life it’s the boomer 1% that has destroyed it for every one f*%# the system
@tomfoolery81004 жыл бұрын
in the 70's a supermarket cashier earned $2000 a year and 2 story houses cost $4000-5000
@Sorenzo4 жыл бұрын
Young people, travelling? I've been outside the country twice since I moved out 14 years ago, and my parents are going to Spanish or Greek isles every month or two.
@LeeGee4 жыл бұрын
Your parents sound like quents
@photinodecay4 жыл бұрын
@Oliver They're spending his inheritance :)
@bam-skater4 жыл бұрын
@Oliver Danish inheritance tax rate 25%, UK tax rate 40%
@terricon44 жыл бұрын
Traveling? I work more than 40 hours a week and don't even own a car, never been on a plane, and only went on a train once with my own money. I never go on vacations or anything, it's just sitting at home on my computer if I do end up with any free time. Used to get taken to trips or vacation areas a bit by my grandma, no longer around sadly. But for friends and others they often go areas with their parents/grandparents. Can't say I know many in my own age range that do any type of traveling or vacation on their own money, even if they wanted too. Few exceptions are... you guessed it, those who get most of their money from their parents, or got pushed into nice jobs or schools by their parents influence/wealth. Definitely more than just an issue with the boomer generation lobbying their own interests, plenty of other factors playing into the changes in the economy and how things go these days, but when the older generation does try the "You just don't work hard, I was owning a house by your age and bought my way through college on a part time job!" I really do get violent thoughts that are hard for a person like me to come by normally.
@hschan59764 жыл бұрын
Når du blir gammal ska du ha tid å resa rund i verden som din fa og mor
@cubey_doo2 жыл бұрын
My boomer parents started charging me rent from age 16 when I did weekend work (essentially, 5 days in school, 2.5 days in work including Friday evenings). So, not only were they taking money from me, they were also claiming tax relief and child benefit from me right up until I turned 21 and left university. At one point I was paying rent from my student loans while out of work in my final year of uni as I was investing 8-10 hours every day on my research. The thought of supporting their child through a critical step in their life was unthinkable. My parents never ever gave me anything towards buying a home (incidentally it was the inlaws who helped with that), but continued to enjoy 5-6 holidays a year, two cars, regular shopping trips, DAILY coffee shop jaunts (how's that for irony) and an almost daily stream of online packages in the mail. Yet, they would begrudge helping any of their children financially (on one occasion, reacting with such shock and disgust at my sibling asking for £800 to help pay off debt and get on her feet following car issues). These kinds of boomers really are a different breed of greed. I don't expect a penny from them when they die at this rate.
@40yearoldvirgil152 жыл бұрын
Most selfish and sociopathic generation ever mate. Disgusting.
@NbyD2 жыл бұрын
You are fortunate. You can charge them per hour if they call you when they are old.
@chuck18042 жыл бұрын
I'm gonna assume from this your parents didn't love you. Loveless parenting isn't a generation-specific. In this case I always advocate leaving home and/or cutting ties. Cutting that 'safety net' might be the best decision you ever make. It forces you to discover your own value and focusses you on creating your own success. Also accelerates the process of finding the people in your life who DO recognize your value (or just, potential), and will step up to support in whatever small way they can. Bottom line is you don't need negative people in your life. Parents don't get a free pass.
@cubey_doo2 жыл бұрын
@@chuck1804 Yes you are 100% correct. I have been NC from them for 5 years now. The mother was a NP who controlled the family. I unfortunately lost all contact with my siblings as they were triangulated against me (the scapegoat). It's sad, but I am much happier now and would never ever go back. I get a small amount of schadenfreude thinking that they now all have to deal with her madness and are miserable, but she can blame me for all her problems if that makes her sleep better :)
@chuck18042 жыл бұрын
@@cubey_doo I'm pleased to hear that. A tragic but unavoidable reality is that some parents aren't fit to be parents. Still I say that's a non-generational character trait, your parents just benefitted from good economic timing. Ultimately there is no cure for narcissism, except to escape it.
@digiryde4 жыл бұрын
The way you are explaining this, the age divide is a class divide now.
@TheReferrer724 жыл бұрын
Sadly it is, but don't worry we have an opportunity to fix it.
@Gloriath14 жыл бұрын
@@TheReferrer72 DNC says no.
@tjwukitsch65054 жыл бұрын
It is called the generational wealth gap in the USA.
@Zorro91294 жыл бұрын
This is unfortunately true, due to massive wealth redistribution policies across the Western world.
@baronvonlimbourgh17164 жыл бұрын
@@TheReferrer72 poison the water at elderly homes and bingo halls?
@ilikelampshades62 жыл бұрын
The scariest thing about this video is that it is 2 years old. Things have suddenly got a lot worse for millenials over the past year.
@SpinningSideKick90002 жыл бұрын
Yeah, he mentioned a small increase in home ownership for young folks in the video and said "hopefully that will continue to increase." Not a chance
@ryanreese69072 жыл бұрын
@@SpinningSideKick9000 you
@asnowman80942 жыл бұрын
I'm Gen x Mass immigration of economical migrants (Net loss) Greater proportion of wealth being taken by a global 1%.. I predict that those two factors alone account for the changes between boomers and millennials... What I'm seeing in this video. What boomer generation could expect to have and what millennials can expect to have. Then a placing of the blame on boomers for having more. Rather than an explanation of why they had more...
@brugs6282 жыл бұрын
@@asnowman8094 Yeah, then put your own presentation together and show us how what you predict is the reason. I am going to take the presentation of someone who actually has access to all the information that they needed to even begin to come close to being able to figure what happen out. Not how some Gen X'er feels. No one cares what a random person on the internet predicts. Jesus, it is amazing how even confronted with the research people are still unable to accept it. But that is a true Gen X'er my sister has the same mentality. Gen X'ers always think they can do it better, when in reality then rarely ever do.
@user-gz4ve8mw9l2 жыл бұрын
Most of us will never retire and never own a house. Most of us will be struggling to pay for basic human needs until we drop dead. A lot of us will perish before were elderly for various reasons related to lack of money. Majority of us will be worse off than our parents and their parents indefinitely. My parents were upper middle class I'm at the poverty line for example. That's not even the tip of the iceberg. When living becomes unsustainable you start planning how to die instead.
@OryxTheDragon4 жыл бұрын
Can we just hold up for a moment and apreciate how amazingly literate this sitting was? Im amazed right now. 50 min passed me like nothing.
@nicolaspinto29274 жыл бұрын
You're not wrong, I didn't even realise the video was that long until I scrolled down here.
@xerxeskingofking2 жыл бұрын
You don't get to make a speech to the Royal Institution unless your both a very knowledgeable about your subject matter AND a bloody good public speaker. they literally have the whole of British academia to pluck form.
@stephfoxwell46202 жыл бұрын
But it is complete nonsense. There was no baby boom in the UK in the years 1949-57. It is a myth. Our boom was 1958-72.
@jmac-rz6zc2 жыл бұрын
A society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they shall never sit in.
@misspat75556 ай бұрын
Conversely, a society collapses when old men cut down all the trees because who cares if there won’t be any in 50 years, they’ll be dead then! 🤦♀️
@audigex4 жыл бұрын
"20% of boomers own a second house that they rent out" - this, plus nowhere NEAR enough house building, is the biggest problem. For young people, so much of their income goes, via rent, to older generations. Which means less security and no opportunity to build equity The bank of mum and dad is a huge issue too - after decades of the idea of "work hard and you will prosper", we're now reverting to a generation reliant on the wealth and success of their parents. Lose a parent young? Not only are you dealing with that, but the financial implications will impact you for decades
@brentfarvors1922 жыл бұрын
No. The biggest problem (has been, and always will be) Compounding interest based fiat $ lending. This is the process of the PRIVATE (as in for private sector profit), loaning $ they just made up from nothing (yes; Literally fractional reserve banking), and loaning it out to your gov't, with YOU being the "collateral"...Verses...The gov't doing the same thing( like, one of their most important benefits of a gov't), and getting paid back without interest...We literally pay govt's to borrow $ from someone else with INTEREST, that we can't even afford the interest payments on...All of our problems stem from this.
@SpencerHeckwolf2 жыл бұрын
BOOMER NIMBY's have blocked housing construction. Join your local YIMBY group and advocate for more development.
@isidoreaerys87452 жыл бұрын
@@brentfarvors192 yes. Those 3 words. Fractional Reserve Banking. Are at the heart of all of our problems we deal with in the modern world. Climate Town just made a great video that relates to this.
@brentfarvors1922 жыл бұрын
@@isidoreaerys8745 "Weird" how all of these MSM "presentations" (BS!!!), seem to ignore the FED in EVERY video...?
@Lawrence3302 жыл бұрын
@@brentfarvors192 Even the gold standard had a fractional reserve. It might have been more restrained by comparison, but this alone is hardly enough to cause the current issues. If anything, the runaway accumulation of wealth by the few, combined with declining top marginal and corporate tax rates, a decrease in public investment (education, healthcare, infrastructure), and the military-industrial complex (roughly 40% of gov't discretionary spending) are larger issues.
@leophoenixmusic4 жыл бұрын
Very informative, very interesting but very depressing to watch as a 19 year old.
@eschel21554 жыл бұрын
Even as a 29 year old i'm distressed. Lets do our best to avoid the same mistake for our children.
@interdictr36574 жыл бұрын
@@eschel2155 yeah, same. I seriously doubt I will ever see a pension.
@glenm994 жыл бұрын
The answer, of course, is to get involved in politics, even at the local level. Remember the first 15 minutes of the lecture: it all comes down to voting power.
@golagiswatchingyou29664 жыл бұрын
@@glenm99 democracy is overrated.
@yanair20914 жыл бұрын
@@glenm99 I always thought that "everybody votes" was not wise, but what is the alternative?
@mattk78654 жыл бұрын
My extremely simplified summary: Boomers are a large demographic. Because they are a large demographic, they have proportionally larger voting power. Due to this, they have voted in many policies that have benefitted them over the course of their lifetimes, e.g. pensions, retirement, healthcare, social benefits/welfare. There has also been a surge of increased value in their housing due to large amounts of immigration and lack of newer and/or continued housing development. Not to mention, wage stagnation. These policies and economics have led to boomers being the most well off, fortunate, and advantaged (economically in the relatively short term) generation to have ever lived. My personal take is that Boomers have gamed the system so efficiently (knowingly or unknowingly), that they can’t see how they’ve affected generations to come. This is just the UK. Through my observation, the implications are granted exponentially in the US.
@mattk78654 жыл бұрын
Rill Totally agree! I forgot who touched on this, but the money that could be used for entrepreneurial things holds everyone back because it just goes to debt payments for most of people’s 20s and 30s nowadays.
@JurekOK4 жыл бұрын
@@mattk7865 This money IS used for entrepreneurial things and does benefit the owner of the capital. Last two times it was like this in history, they got the French Revolution and the Communist Revolution. Which is precisely what I sense happening in the UK unless Brexit does something to turn things around. I mean, in my office at work, the non-home-owners already actively avoid sitting with home-owners at the same table in the kitchen during lunch, and then the same happens after hours in a pub.
@doggydude41234 жыл бұрын
I live in California, USA and the boomers here vote in masses to hindered house development by dramatically increasing the fees. You know what doesn't get increase? It's the property taxes on homes that doesn't increase which are extremely expensive to buy. They even manage to trick a lot of young people here that cheap illegal immigration is good. Cheap illegal immigration leads to low wages and entry jobs being taken away from young people.
@nicholasbyram2964 жыл бұрын
In the US, savvy young people are saving money and working in healthcare. In the next 10 years, as Boomers require capital to pay living and healthcare expenses, all of their homes will go on the real estate market, prices will go down, and younger people will be able to buy multiple homes for decades low prices and rent them to those born 2010 and later for huge profits. The equalization is coming.
@nicholasbyram2964 жыл бұрын
@Manannan anam If you are trying to make a real estate play, the ideal timing would be people needing the capital with low demand and high supply of housing. We don't need Boomers to die quickly, it is actually better if they have unanticipated changes in expenses or mobility and have to compete against each other for home buyers, thus driving market prices down dramtically. In the US, we may see homes prices drop by 50% over the next 10 years. Good news if you want to buy a house.
@Konkata Жыл бұрын
Elder Millennial here. My Boomer parents are retired and own a gorgeous house and so many cars they don’t have enough garage space for them. The water in my house broke last year and I spent 6 months without running water (with a child). I worked months on end without a day off, plus over time and could barely afford electric. They wouldn’t help until I literally screamed at them. We finally got the water fixed and I’ve had to pay their help back. When I was going through my divorce I was allowed to stay at my dad’s place (and was only allowed out of my room from 9-5, otherwise they didn’t want to see me because it interrupted their flow). My boss had to care for my child while I worked because my father flat out refused to watch him, and daycare was unaffordable. I was so stressed out I came down with shingles in my 30’s. I was only allowed to come stay with my dad during that time because the domestic violence shelter had a 30 day cap on everyone’s stay and my days were up. I couldn’t afford to rent even though I worked HARD. When I was severely injured and was suffering from a brain injury, nobody helped me. I was on my own. Boomers are the worst generation.
@standinginthegap711811 ай бұрын
Your story breaks my heart. Your parents are horrible people. Truly horrible. I am so sorry.
@innocentnemesis351911 ай бұрын
The way boomers never had to go into major, long-term debt for a car, university education, or a mortgage whilst they watch their children struggle financially after major successive economic meltdowns, only to then offer to “help” them on the condition that they’re paid back is… well, what is it they call our generation? (You know, the one they raised?) “Entitled beyond measure?” 🥲
@MrRickmowen10 ай бұрын
amen brother I know this feeling, I lost my job in the pandemic over in the "united" states and became a contruction worker. i nearly ended up living in my work truck in -10F winters and my parents never helped me beyond just the baseline of preventing starvation. I ended up getting a impacted tooth and had it removed during covid and the doctor botched the extraction and I nearly died from a infection in my sinus (could not see doctor during pandemic for months so I was working heavy construction with brown pus leaking from my sinus into my mouth) and my parents would yell at me to stop crying while I was in my bed unable to sleep for a week in pain because they needed quiet time for their movie. then of course i ended up not having insurance for the procedure so then I was out 14k for the botched tooth removal and "fix" by the doctors.
@unconventional_health10 ай бұрын
That’s terrible how poorly your parents treated you.
@Joshua-bk4jm10 ай бұрын
After working retail I can attest that the boomers are the most spoiled and bratty generation ever; very rude as well.
@sucellos86214 жыл бұрын
I can't think of another time when one generation has anticipated, and even looked forward to the death of a previous generation. Not as a source of joy, but of relief.
@jameslewis66174 жыл бұрын
That relief may be coming thanks to SARS-CoV 2.
@trikayatranslationservices94344 жыл бұрын
Spot on, sadly. A mass sentiment indeed.
@CastorRabbit4 жыл бұрын
@@jameslewis6617 I pray I get to be an asymptomatic carrier... I'll become a modern day Typhoid Mary
@SilverMontegiu4 жыл бұрын
You mean Boomer remover
@then35t184 жыл бұрын
@@jameslewis6617 Nope, they'd rather crash the economy.
@scotsan38574 жыл бұрын
9:20 try to move jobs when everything is highly contested by all the other workers and also people demanding 10+years experience from 25 year olds
@branimirstoilov86404 жыл бұрын
Greetings from Canada (And Germany, since I lived there for a while); same situation! Entry level jobs requiring 5 years of experience for minimum wage.
@scotsan38574 жыл бұрын
@@branimirstoilov8640 germany here mate
@LegoSwordViedos4 жыл бұрын
@@scotsan3857 I live in the US and it's the same thing, can't even get a job in rural Wyoming where I live with people looking for 5 years experience for an entry level job and what's worse our minimum wages laws are worse then anything you have. I have to do that for less then $7.35 an hour because that number doesn't take into account all the taxes I must pay. So really don't even make $6.00 an hour take home money.
@jyashin4 жыл бұрын
@@LegoSwordViedos It's a side effect of all the conservative bullshit advice. 80% of the population live inadequately, so be the top 20%? Without making life better for the bottom 80%, all this does is artificially raise the criteria for job searching. Working as a barista used to be something for high school students on break. Now it requires a college degree and 2 years experience.
@aelix564 жыл бұрын
Daily reminder of that mcdonalds job posting with 13 years experience. HR is cancer.
@niallbailey84572 жыл бұрын
I feel like the generations before mine were having the best, wildest, longest houseparty ever and then my generation have had to come along to clear up and pay for the damages and because it was such a rowdy party no one else thereafter is allowed to have one 🤣
@anthonytwohill97262 жыл бұрын
That is basically what happened. And continues to happen.
@confusedcaveman66112 жыл бұрын
Imagine having a credit card that your kids, or your neighbors kids if you have no kids, have to pay for when you die, and then running up the bill to live in luxury during your life. Thats what's going on in the US.
@Rnankn Жыл бұрын
But the other important distinction is between public and private. Those with private wealth preventing public spending on those who have nothing. Just so their own kids have sound finances, a
@carlossaenz4749 Жыл бұрын
@@RnanknNo, cause the Profits are private but the debt is public, every time the banks or the big companies are saved from bankruptcy by the government their debt is sent to the public sector, so, we are the old people slaves.
@donm20677 ай бұрын
And Canada
@beckypetersen26804 ай бұрын
doesn't work that way - if you are referring to c/c. If you are referring to something else, that's different.
@normbograham4 ай бұрын
still going on. and it's what people vote for. they will not elect people whom will not spend.
@TheSubscriberWithNothing4 жыл бұрын
As a recently 22 year old young man, I’ve essentially given up on ever owning my own home, and I’m seriously considering never getting married or starting a family because I can’t see how I could afford it without having to spend my entire life working my self into the ground.
@TheSubscriberWithNothing4 жыл бұрын
Ohh, scathing.
@TheSubscriberWithNothing4 жыл бұрын
The opinion of a guy on the internet who has nothing better to do than call a person barely out of his teens a loser because he has financial troubles means nothing to me other than to provide a laugh.
@TheSubscriberWithNothing4 жыл бұрын
Three years, great math there.
@donjaun84352 жыл бұрын
having your own children is beautiful, your children will have your back through thick and thin, more than any boomer you've ever met. You dont beat your enemy by doing what he would do, you beat him by doing whats right.
@horseradishpower99472 жыл бұрын
@@donjaun8435 How do you afford to have children? Try it when you are minimum wage, and the support isn't there.
@Jeremy-iv9bc2 жыл бұрын
The greatest generation climbed the ladder and pulled their kids up with them. The boomers climbed the ladder and lit it on fire behind them. Then they said "these kids are just too lazy to work."
@whoisgtsdk8 ай бұрын
They foisted participation trophies onto their children and now complain ceaseless about their children having them.
@AlahuSnackbar3 ай бұрын
Their either culpable for raising lazy children or destroying our economy. I say the latter.
@kw59614 жыл бұрын
Make things affordable again.
@jessem89284 жыл бұрын
Central Bank money printing is designed to make prices go up 2% a year.
@TheMaleRei4 жыл бұрын
@@jessem8928 And since placing money into a savings account yields 0.1% interest, your money there is losing value. What's the main alternative? Stock market / financial institutions that bring us situations right out of "The Big Short" and "Margin Call". And the Stock Market is volatile. It is utterly and completely buyer beware. More and more, this all seems deliberate in its maliciousness and incompetence. And no, it's not either / or, it's both.
@Daniel-Jack4 жыл бұрын
@@TheMaleRei na listen do what i did saved up money and found a house bought it and rented it out
@davecrupel28174 жыл бұрын
@@TheMaleRei less than 0.1%. More like 0.001% interest. It is absolutely not worth a savings account. I can make more finding change on the street.
@DestroyedArkana4 жыл бұрын
@@jessem8928 Yeah the constant 2% inflation as well as fixed interest rates, are there to ensure that prices just keep going up. Especially faster than wages or wealth earning.
@helsphoenix26232 жыл бұрын
My Boomer "parents" have two houses, one has a finished basement that could act as an apartment all on its own (All you would need is a toaster oven down there to make it complete), and one is a modest vacation home up north on 6 acres of land. At one point my husband, young daughter, and I were really struggling and being able to stay either in their basement or at this second house would have potentially made a huge difference to us in getting our life set straight. I'd never asked for any help up until that point and we were denied (Mind you THEY were taken in by my grandparents when they were a young family back in the 70's who helped them get on their feet after a time of struggle and in a much smaller house, so what was good for the goose was not good for the gander). So now they can turn to dust in their first or second house for all I care. This and 41 years of self-centered gaslighting b.s has lead me to cut them out of my life. Family means NOTHING to these people beyond rhetoric. Boomers will all eventually die and history will NOT look kindly on any of their self-centered b.s. I'm officially changing their name to the Most Hated Generation.
@40yearoldvirgil152 жыл бұрын
Heard this all too often
@toter802 жыл бұрын
Why not the "Worst generation"
@tachobrenner2 жыл бұрын
Wait, doesn't that just mean you had the misery of having bad parents?
@justinokraski37962 жыл бұрын
Also they’re responsible for glam rock, some of the worst music
@BungieStudios2 жыл бұрын
Careful we don't become the generation of complainers--- Never mind. Too late. 😅
@hambone49844 жыл бұрын
I'm really thankful that my parents got a wake-up call when my dad had to look for a new job after he couldn't continue with the physical demand of his job. They're still pretty delusional when it comes to current economics and events, but thank god they finally realized that it's not just a bunch of kids running around having minium wage jobs because they're "easy" it's literally because jobs are only paying that amount. My dad walked out of so many interviews the first few months he was unemployed because they refused to match his previous job or pay a living wage and none of them offered benefits even though they were jobs that requires various certificates and degrees. He finally found a job and lowered his expectations on new hire packages, but now their newest obsession is "we're getting old, you're the only child without a house so you should buy our house so we can retire and move in with one of your siblings!" Even though they have no money for retirement because they've spent all their savings on vacations and moneyholes, they want retire on the money they get for their house and when that money runs out they expect their kids to pool their money together to support them, but at the same time have as many grandkids as possible.
@whattoputhere80632 жыл бұрын
thats chronos for ya
@fterimage2 жыл бұрын
Just arrange an accident for them.
@richardj90162 жыл бұрын
You’re the generation that are the richest “victims” of all time.
@horseradishpower99472 жыл бұрын
@@richardj9016 Please evidence this claim.
@thebreadbringer2 жыл бұрын
If my parents would be so entitled to expect me to support them from my below-living wage I would outright deny them and not give them a cent. At that point I'd hardly care what they had done for me previously, that in and of itself is such a horrid move to expect your child take on your burden that it almost immediately undoes all goodwill they might've built up over the years. It's not so much asking for support, it's expecting and demanding it that really rubs me the wrong way.
@JerkinERV4 жыл бұрын
watching this I thought of my dad, did not graduate with a business degree....had me, my 2 brothers and mom to take care of, managed to land a 225K a year job.....we lived in a nice house, had cars, went to college and not a single one of my brothers or I could afford 3 boys and a house even with degrees and no debt...... just bitching... but I will say one major problem is that the older generation refuses to leave/die off... I still work with people who refuse to retire... they're making 100k or more and no one can move up because they are just lingering..... anyone else having this issue?
@earthtohouston4 жыл бұрын
GenX to Boomers everywhere: RETIRE ALREADY!
@grewdpastor4 жыл бұрын
So what did your dad wrong then?
@aredub18474 жыл бұрын
push them down the stairs.
@Karen1963Yorks4 жыл бұрын
@@zacharywilhelm2462 So you think people working in 2 of the lowest paying sectors that exist are not poor? They keep working tables etc because they enjoy it? Has it occurred to you that they are poor but too embarrassed to tell you?
@Karen1963Yorks4 жыл бұрын
@@zacharywilhelm2462 As I pointed out Not everyone tells you every detail about their financial problems. There are a lot more people struggling than there are happy to share that information.
@annnee68182 жыл бұрын
My dad had a bachelors degree and retired at 63 with a comfortable pension. I have a PhD and the money I can put towards retirement will barely cover rent in 40 years. I don't expect to ever be able to retire and I'm LUCKY, I know many people who can't save any money at all. And he complains why I don't have kids he can play with now that he's bored.
@gg60532 жыл бұрын
😂😂 Fathers
@milestoitaly2 жыл бұрын
The surfing analogy: You Dad was in the right place at the right time, he caught a particular wave and surfed it to retirement. Pure luck, he may not even have been looking back to try and pick the wave. But driving the surf was the only surviving working economy post WWII, so most the waves were making it easily to the pension beach. Costs have gone up though, too many have gone into non-productive pursuits, driving costs higher for all of us, pensioned or not. There are still healthy waves to catch.
@Rnankn Жыл бұрын
@@milestoitaly did you not watch the video? It literally wasn’t luck. It was a use of political power to benefit themselves at the expense of others. It is no different than a feudal lord appropriating the wealth of others merely because he has mercenaries to deploy against the peasantry to intimidate and coerce. The feudal lord or tyrant isn’t lucky, they used their power to construct a system what works to their benefit. At least, until the people started relieving them of their heads.
@two-sense Жыл бұрын
@@Rnankn So, you would prefer I don't leave my two houses to my kids? I shouldn't participate in this tyrannical situation any more? Leave my estate to a cat charity? Or to you, so you stop whining?
@two-sense Жыл бұрын
I have no degree at all. I own a small business where most of my employees are millennials and genZ. Not a single one of them has any inclination to ever own their own business. I make 3 or 4 times more than people I know with PhD's. You have a choice. You can complain or adapt, up to you.
@Luka.142 жыл бұрын
My late grandpa who was a boomer. Is one of the people I respect the most. After he died Al of his savings he had left went to his grandkids college education. He lived in a apartment and after he retired he spend most of his time investing money in the community and took care of my dad when he was in a rough part of his life.
@michaelcornelljr4 жыл бұрын
Boomer Females: My government, ex-husband, and children will sustain me through retirement. Boomer Males: My pension will sustain me and my ex-wife through retirement. Millennials: What is a pension and who/where is my father?
@thechurchofdiscountdan74364 жыл бұрын
too real
@markchang29644 жыл бұрын
oof
@rumhound59034 жыл бұрын
Have you seen my father?
@iwankazlow22684 жыл бұрын
In Germany, we pay 15% for health care and 20% for pensions. Pensions are Umlagefinanziert, which means there is no fund, we pay for the pensions now spent on the old. Pyramid schemes, that's what I call these systems.
@owensspace4 жыл бұрын
Where’s my paycheque?
@given-namesurname57404 жыл бұрын
Boomers ruined "respect your elders." They didn't respect theirs and they're not worth respecting as a generation
@gorillanotion10242 жыл бұрын
Facts!
@kavky2 жыл бұрын
In older times the elders earned their respect by being strong and wise enough to survive through war, famine, and disease to an old age. Nowadays thanks to medicine, unless you're born with a crippling health condition any fool can live up to be 70 or 80 years with almost no effort other than keeping a job.
@stlouisix32 жыл бұрын
The vast, vast majority of Boomers fully abandoned Christianity and have led to the decay of the global formerly-Christian society as a result.
@exxxxoskeleton2 жыл бұрын
They also ruined the modern woman
@maureenogorman87402 жыл бұрын
So true
@spiritualeco-syndicalisthe2074 жыл бұрын
Each generation for thousands of years: Did everything they could, survided wars, diseases and poverty to provide a better world for the next generation. Boomers: *I have the right to destroy both the world economy and the planet and I demand respect for that*
@lenasauve36604 жыл бұрын
The best comment here.
@gaby14914 жыл бұрын
This is so true and i dont think they know
@quinnp84934 жыл бұрын
It never ceases to amaze me when people combine open selfishness with self-righteousness . I can understand saying "Hey, I know it's bad but I really like having an SUV and think its worth it"; but that's not what you hear, what you hear is "everyone complains so much about SUV's today, well screw them, it's my right."
@InternetMameluq4 жыл бұрын
Gotta use up the world before my children get it.
@PuresG1ft4 жыл бұрын
@@InternetMameluq shit ... do you think they saw us playing sonic and though "gotta be fast!"? :o
@jonblaze322 жыл бұрын
This has greatly affected American cities. Boomers have consistently opposed upzoning and adding new housing, for various reasons, but (either intentionally or not) their policies have created a massive housing shortage because we didn't build near enough housing from the 70's to the 2010's. So rents are wildly out of control, and housing prices just keep going up. An average home in my neighborhood is about 15-20x my yearly salary. I can move into a more economically poor area of my city and it drops down to about 8-10x my salary. In 1970, the average home price was a little more than 2x the median salary here in LA. Adjusted for inflation, overall median income is actually 2% lower than it was in 1970, median rents over that same period increased 85% and median housing prices have increased by 60%. Nationwide, the median income of people between 25 and 34 only increased by $30 in 44 years (1974 to 2017). It really is a case of "F** you I got mine." They bought houses and then watched them appreciate, and refused to support policies that add housing, including even modest proposals for rezoning to duplexes and triplexes.
@rogerwilco22 жыл бұрын
The US is 10x worse than anywhere else in the developed world. They have never updated their city design since the 1970s, where other countries have, and as a result have a completely unsustainable car-dependent suburbia. City planning and first-past-the-post elections and wealth in politics and media have created a very dangerous cocktail in the USA.
@itoibo42082 жыл бұрын
after the crash in 2006, we had tons of unoccupied houses. The shortage was because banks and the wealthy do not have to sell. They can sit on it.
@breadformyfamily41752 жыл бұрын
The problem is millions and millions of people trying to cram more of themselves into small areas like LA for example. Of course it goes up in price, there is literally only so much space and everyone wants to be there. Duh. Move away from the fun.
@jonblaze322 жыл бұрын
@@breadformyfamily4175 Greater LA is about 80% zoned for single family housing. Creating infinite sprawl by continually building suburbs in more and more marginal locations is silly, we have plenty of room here to upzone. The issue is that the people who own homes don't want apartment buildings and missing middle housing in their neighborhoods. So there is a generational divide between people who don't want their neighborhoods to change and people who want to live and work in LA. Space isn't the issue, it is the way space is allocated.
@jonblaze322 жыл бұрын
@@breadformyfamily4175 What's wrong with that? If people want to live in cities, let them. Everyone knows you can buy a house in the middle of nowhere and have lots of space, but people are CHOOSING to live in cities. So build more dense housing our cities so people CAN live there. The issue right now is that it is literally illegal to build dense housing due to restrictive zoning laws.
@JosephKulutu4 жыл бұрын
This is happening globally in one form or the other. I was already and am still so disgusted right now.
@pseudonymousbeing9874 жыл бұрын
There's so many potentially disastrous things coming to a head in humanity's near future isn't there?
@IdgaradLyracant4 жыл бұрын
When I was born there were about 4 billion people on the planet. Now there is around 8 billion. It's almost as if doubling the population on a single planet has some far reaching impacts.
@TheReferrer724 жыл бұрын
@@IdgaradLyracant Its not a worry this is levelling out.
@cgavin14 жыл бұрын
@@IdgaradLyracant In this entire video he's talking about causation and evidence but ignores the fact we have open borders, no training, unaffordable higher education and social competition like never before thanks to millions of extra economic competitors imported from elsewhere. its all the fault of the native boomers? No mention. Just bad older white people = source of all woe.
@pseudonymousbeing9874 жыл бұрын
@vctjkhme But has there been a number of problems simulataneously converging and coming to a head in the near future? I am quite young and live in the UK btw.
@AnimeshSharma19774 жыл бұрын
sounds like Boomers had a party and Millenials have to pay for it...
@annuvynarawn3924 жыл бұрын
Millennials did not learn to spell, I see.
@angrybeavers39524 жыл бұрын
That is literally what he said...
@roberto86504 жыл бұрын
@@annuvynarawn392 Ok boomer
@annuvynarawn3924 жыл бұрын
@@roberto8650 I am not a Boomer. I am Generation X.
@roberto86504 жыл бұрын
@@annuvynarawn392 Almost worse.
@rb74914 жыл бұрын
My parents: Buy a new car when they get tired of theirs. Me: Buy an old decrepid truck and learn how to fix it so I don't need a mechanic.
@InternetMameluq4 жыл бұрын
Oh gee you're so entitled to a car, why can't you walk 30km to work like I did when I had my first car, which was new btw.
@SherrifOfNottingham4 жыл бұрын
@@InternetMameluq This is a different argument, especially in America where the infrastructure is based entirely around you having your own transportation. My job is 45 miles from my home, there is no public transportation available that will lessen the length, it's an hour by car and the pay is so little that I can barely afford to work towards getting a new car if my car ever kicks the bucket, and of course I can't afford to move to a home closer, which ultimately wouldn't solve the problem as it would still be a 10 mile walk. The fact is the country is built for you to have your own car, if you don't have one you won't be able to get a job. It's a chicken an egg problem in this country because no employer will hire you without one, so if your parents can't help you get one you can never actually get a job, worst part is the pay for most jobs is limited to the point of people barely able to get new (used) cars. Due to the massive up scaling of cities, and the fact that some of the largest cities in the country have little to no public transportation. Cars are something you NEED to survive now. Only some situations in some areas can you get away with out them, but that's the exception not the rule. So are you entitled to a car? Well, that depends on whether or not you believe everybody should be entitled to a meal and a bed.
@rb74914 жыл бұрын
@@Werdfrerb2 I don't buy new, why am I financially inept?
@LordSandwichII4 жыл бұрын
@@InternetMameluq Well, cars in the 1970s weren't exactly known for their reliability... :p
@InternetMameluq4 жыл бұрын
@@LordSandwichII :D
@singingway2 жыл бұрын
That's what happened to me and my cohort group. And they never SEE that. They always think they "deserved" everything they have. They think they were smarter, more capable, "did life right" while we "did life wrong," and they think they just "worked hard" even though they really have no idea what things are like for the people coming after them.
@UltraKev814 жыл бұрын
Boomer: "We didn't have those fancy pocket computers when we were young, you are all so spoiled" Millennial: "True, you only had your own car, house and a secure job with future prospects"
@daftpunk34014 жыл бұрын
30 millions cars produced in 1990 compare to 70 milliosn produced now? WHO YOU TRYING TO TRICK???
@UltraKev814 жыл бұрын
@@daftpunk3401 You think young people own new cars? Not many ;).
@dalehitchcock63824 жыл бұрын
Millennial here (in my early 30s). I literally have never known anyone around my age who has bought a brand new car.
@TheSpacecraftX4 жыл бұрын
@@daftpunk3401 My gran has had 3 new cars in the last 10 years. My mum has had 2 used cars (because one had to be written off) and I've never had a car of my own; I have shared with my mum when I've been around but when I'm away from my mum's it's public transport only. Old people get new cars. Young people get used cars.
@angelgjr19994 жыл бұрын
@@daftpunk3401 Most brand new vehicles are bought by old people. That’s why a work truck now costs a hundred grand. We can’t afford anything.
@jamesaldridge42574 жыл бұрын
I know a few boomers who live in a house with three empty rooms, and have letting properties strip-mining other people's kids for rent. And they complain about having no grandchildren :-/
@slinkyrabbit274 жыл бұрын
Boy do I love having to pay for social security that I'll never actually get myself :))))
@seafoam61194 жыл бұрын
Do you hate paying taxes? I've got a solution for you. Its called, Tax evasion! Get it free today!
@ChocoholicChick2224 жыл бұрын
@Nicky L They didn't say they wouldn't need it, they said they wouldn't get it.
@David-lr2vi4 жыл бұрын
Monado Boy. Tax evasion only works for rich people and multinational corporations.
@jon91034 жыл бұрын
@@David-lr2vi it's not evasion when you pay legislators to make it all legal.
@David-lr2vi4 жыл бұрын
Jon. And just because it’s legal doesn’t make it right of course.
@optimalforager2 жыл бұрын
I know a guy who has 6-figure income job, gets a government pension (as well as generous pensions from his government job), who own multiple investment properties (which have increased dramatically in value, but that have not had those gains taxed), had a free university education, and has all the associated benefits that come with being a "poor-old pensioner". Clearly this is a highly inequitable and unfair system and it will need to change...
@kazansky222 жыл бұрын
If will change after we paid all the boomers to have good lives and then die off.
@Vagrant1234 жыл бұрын
30 year old millennial in the US, and much of what he describes is true here too. The very notion of buying a house or traveling is just inconceivable to me right now. Even putting a deposit down on a house might wipe out my savings (much of which was acquired by inheritance).
@item69312 жыл бұрын
Love ur username. Would serve on that ship lol
@steve5nash4 жыл бұрын
this is the most in depth breakdown on wealth and power distribution that I have seen
@dorkasaurus_rex4 жыл бұрын
You haven't seen many, then. Read Thomas Piketty.
@nickmagrick77024 жыл бұрын
is anyone else starting to feel like The Royal Institution is starting to replace what TED talks used to be? just having that kinda realization. At first I thought this place was narrowly focused but im seeing talks from political realms to physics to paranormal speculation. The real important questions that TED used to be about.
@JurekOK4 жыл бұрын
Indeed, thank You for stating this! It's like TED has run out of ideas worth sharing. Maybe they should enlarge the "X" in TEDx to make sure the actual exceptional people go for the real deal. I mean, I now personally know 3 people that spoke in a TED-X event, mostly for just wanting rather than having something to say.
@randomman0574 жыл бұрын
I believe TED talks have earned a poor reputation with actual academics in recent years. The standards for what constituted a talk were lowered as TED from my understanding was more about creating an environment for like-minded "intelligent" individuals to network and share ideas. The talks just served as entertainment while the main focus was on the networking.
@clumsydad71584 жыл бұрын
true, i don't watch TED because they are often so vague, general and anecdotal... snooze
@nickmagrick77024 жыл бұрын
@@clumsydad7158 They didn't used to be, they were very direct and informative at one point.
@0Apostata04 жыл бұрын
" paranormal speculation" TED was never about that, they simply banned controversial speakers, such as Graham Hancock
@Bee-uy2cn2 жыл бұрын
Sadly I relate more to my grandma when talking about economic hardships of life. She doesnt tell me to get a third job, or to stop buying avocado toast (which i have never had in my life) like my mom does. She just says “i know honey, i went through it too, hopefully we can vote in some people to help you out, we voted FDR and that helped us tremendously.” She is apart of the greatest generation. When she was little housing wasnt an “investment” it was a roof over your head meant to keep you safe. She said she knew that when they started “flipping houses” in the 70’s and 80’s that the market would suffer. Her father was gifted a house by a complete stranger because he felt sorry for them. That would NEVER happen now.
@EyePatchGuy88 Жыл бұрын
"We voted FDR and that helped us tremendously.” Not in the long run.
@samyandkitty8399 Жыл бұрын
Go look at this mans graph. According to him people born in 1920 made way more than us.
@laurajane4806 Жыл бұрын
Not according to Mr. Beast (lol) 🙂
@jamiemunn9200 Жыл бұрын
@@EyePatchGuy88OK Boomer!!! The 80s would appreciate their trick el down policies back.
@MartymcFly-zz2pg Жыл бұрын
Fdr was sick
@frmcf4 жыл бұрын
On council tax: as well as being extremely regressive, it is also passed on to tenants! Our main property tax is not even paid by the owners if it’s a second home that they rent out! Why do we allow this?
@igotes4 жыл бұрын
Because council tax pays for the services you use, not the maintenance of the property.
@frmcf4 жыл бұрын
@@igotes I understand the 'logic' of it, but this is the UK's principal tax on property and it is implemented as a tax on living, not a tax on wealth.
@turtleflipper99354 жыл бұрын
@@igotes except when I was looking after my grandad and bought a house, I was charged full council tax because it was an "empty property" there is no consistent argument about "why council tax"
@SMURGwastaken4 жыл бұрын
@@igotes Which is horseshit because you still pay it even if you live somewhere else and the property is empty. A lot of councils even double the tax for empty properties.
@saltservice40244 жыл бұрын
@@frmcf If it was just left to just landlords to pay council tax outright, there would be shortage of money for these local services. What does council tax pay for? Local services such as planning, transport, highways, police, fire, libraries, leisure and recreation, rubbish collection and disposal, environmental health and trading standards. If you really understood the logic, you'd know without council tax the place would look like the downtown of Aleppo in Syria. You'd know that some of these people would of spend years working to pay off something called a *mortgage* You can't have tenants without owning outright the property. So they obviously had to do something to earn that money. You just seem jealous that you don't have a second property, and probably are yourself a tenant living under rented conditions. Why don't you climb the property ladder and then you too can do the same as your landlord.
@reidwallace42584 жыл бұрын
I know in Canada every other young person I know has the same plan. Rent until your mom dies and move into her house... She is never gonna be able to sell it because nobody can pay what the market claims it is worth... There are fewer young people than old people, as they die/move into homes the market either has to adjust, or collapse, and we arn't lucky enough for a collapse.
@terricon44 жыл бұрын
Ya... that works if your parents were somewhat responsible... mine inherited her house from her mother, but as she wasn't the most responsible in her life can't keep it do to costs, so there definitely won't be any notable inheritance by the time she passes. And honestly... is having your parents die as soon as possible really something that should be seen as the biggest likely improvement in a generations quality of living? Because that's messed up no matter how I think about, and something every generation should be doing their best to make sure does NOT apply to their own children, and for more reasons that one.
@reidwallace42584 жыл бұрын
@@terricon4 Its clearly messed up, thats the point. We have been left in a no win situation as far as the housing market is concerned. Either the younger generations lose out on their chance to build some wealth and live a good life, or our parents die young, move into homes, or sell their homes cheap. There is no good option.
@TheMuslimsarecoming4 жыл бұрын
Sounds nice in theory but you have to have parents for this to be a viable option.
@reidwallace42584 жыл бұрын
@@TheMuslimsarecoming Yeah, not really meant to sound nice, its kinda just the grim reality caused by steadily inflating house prices being a generations major retirement resource, coupled with 30+ years of mostly stagnant wages.
@TheMuslimsarecoming4 жыл бұрын
@@reidwallace4258 im 25 living in Sydney Australia im aware of the injustice. But I don't have the luxury of having a family to inherit from so they solution of inheritance is a pathetic solution.
@timothyblazer17494 жыл бұрын
GenX here. Look up Charlie Brown and Lucy. My entire life the boomers have been Lucy. Millennials think they have it bad. At least they know what they dealing with. I was gaslit my entire youth into doing thing after thing, which nearly all failed, until I crested 30, and just decided to do something different...risky, according to boomers. And that worked. However the housing crisis took what little wealth I had accumulated, and I am now staring down 50...barely recovered from that travesty. They didn't just pinch their children. They killed us. I think I'll be ok...but world travel? Vacations? Probably never again.
@lexort42044 жыл бұрын
Then please work with us millennials to improve all of OUR circumstances. Well being for all!
@giarnovanzeijl3994 жыл бұрын
I wish you the best of luck my friend.
@thegardenofeatin59654 жыл бұрын
There's a particular subset of us Millennials--the older among us, those born in the late 80's--who really did get an extra special kick in the teeth. I went to a fairly expensive private out-of-state technical university. Big bucks doing that. But it was okay, there were plenty of job opportunities in my field when I graduated...in the summer of 2008. AHAHA big ol' student debt barreling straight into the "Great Recession." It felt like "Congratulations on your achievement, now take off your mortar board, lie down and bite the curb."
@Arkhigoul4 жыл бұрын
Here for you politically friend, we WILL restore some of your mobility before it's too late. We're all in this together.
@yosh62784 жыл бұрын
@No One says u. im 29 putting myself thru school fulltime and work full time. i've spent the most of my adult years digging myself out of debt forced on me by boomer parents.
@theexchipmunk2 жыл бұрын
Before I started studying, I was working as a Lathe Operator here in Germany. Which is one of the best payed metal working craftsmenships here in Germany. 30 Years ago you could have affored a house, car, regular holidays to other countries and a large family with the earnings from it. But I? I could aford a apartment and an old car. Getting a child for example would probably have ruined me and doomed me to basically poverty. With one of the best paying jobs in metalworking.
@Bristecom5 ай бұрын
Yep, I'm a sales manager for one of the largest companies in the world but I can't even really afford the minimum costs of living of rent and food and insurance now. My mom did something very similar in the 90's and made almost double what I make now - back when inflation and costs of living and everything was so much lower and better, plus she was married to my dad who made even more money and they both had a lot of financial help from their parents early on. Now they are retired with a nice pension and social security and investments. Despite all this, they simply don't want to admit that it's significantly more difficult for me and never offer any meaningful help. They just tell me that they worked back then too so I just need to figure it out and hopefully things will eventually just get better for me while they waste tens of thousands of dollars each month needlessly renovating parts of their house. LOL
@TheMusicalFruit4 жыл бұрын
Presenter: Calmly dismantles every stereotypical insult hurled by Boomers online. Boomers in comment section: Hurls stereotypical insults.
@Whydoyoureadme4 жыл бұрын
My parents will indirectly insult me on the topic that I have not got what they had when they were my age, when they have given me so much more than they had at my age. I try to explain to them that what they gave me was the wrong things, and that it's just impossible for me to own my apartment at age 28, let alone at age 19 as my father did. It just doesn't work like that. A guy I know bought two apartments every year from his orange harvest (he owns a TINY orange farm) and today he can't even pay the WATER for the trees at the end of each season. He is still well off from all the apartments, but I could at best buy ONE apartment every 25 years, it makes no fucking sense anymore. Good luck owning your own house is overrated.
@Macheako4 жыл бұрын
Good for the speaker...he picked the right Demographic to side with 🤣
@Brockisac4 жыл бұрын
Presenter : calmly explains that he is against generation conflict and that it's not this answer Comment section : shows hate for boomers
@Karen1963Yorks4 жыл бұрын
Posh guy live in the well paid world of academia paid by struggling tax payers in the real world pats a bunch of students and layabout on the head and tells them how hard they have it and the idiot layabouts lap it up.
@101yayo4 жыл бұрын
@@Karen1963Yorks Sounds like a very stereotypical boomer comment.
@cloud20184 жыл бұрын
Here in the US the life expectancy for millenials is for the first time in modern history, dropping. The largest reason is simply because healthcare is an unaffordable luxury. I wish the biggest problem I faced was higher taxes and lack of property ownership. I just do not want to die young because I cannot afford health care. My government and majority of voters in the US says that healthcare isn't a human right and lack of insurance and inability to deal with rising costs is a personal failure and I deserve the consequence. Boomers are literally watching their children water down insulin and try to treat cancer with over the counter drugs and calling an Uber instead of an ambulance and they're calling us entitled and that we do not deserve the privilege of watching our own children grow up like they did.
@lelandbuerman40252 жыл бұрын
Become a Peace Officer. They are still in short supply and get good benefits. Especially in places like NYS
@cloud20182 жыл бұрын
@@lelandbuerman4025 I am fortunate enough to have a good job with excellent insurance. Just because I have an abobe average pay with state benefits, doesn't mean I am oblivious to the many more that aren't as lucky. Majority of my adult life I spent rationing asthma medication or going without medication at all because I couldn't afford it. "Just be a peace officer by working in one of the most expensive cities in the country" is hardly a solution. Our government is preoccupied dealing with high costs without addressing why prices for healthcare are hyper-inflated sometimes with a markup in the thousands of a percent.
@lelandbuerman40252 жыл бұрын
@@cloud2018 I understand your point; I just also consider it more of an educational and cultural values issue. There are good paying jobs with benefits all across NYS. But unfortunately the retention rate of new hires is terrible. Some argue that it’s money, and to a large extent I agree, but we are also raising an entire generation of entitled and seemingly incapable people. Who are likewise at a steep disadvantage regarding personal finiancial education and literacy. I worked 2 jobs throughout high school and have continued to work multiple jobs throughout my adult life. I was born in 86 yet genuinely feel as though unchecked internet, media, and video game usage has spawned a majorly sedentary and entitled generation - where good help is just hard to find. Yes there is a place for desk work and tech but there are also seemingly no tradespeople to be found and labor shortages across my home state.
@thomaslove64942 жыл бұрын
@@lelandbuerman4025 this is the correct answer... Don't get me wrong.. there are challenges that face young people today... But it's not as bad as this talk makes it out to be.... For one... Alot of boomer wealth goes directly to millennials and will be inherited by millennials. 2nd... I came up as an ironworker in the south making $100,000 a year... I've owned a home since I was 19..... Now I'm a project manager and we cannot give enough money/benefits away to entice young people to come on board... I don't think if we offered a million dollars a year it would be attractive enough.....
@CaptainRotmeat2 жыл бұрын
@@thomaslove6494 Pay me $100k/year (adjusted for inflation) and I will literally move to the South to work for you. I'm a reliable worker in good health and not snobby about what work I do.
@micksc14 жыл бұрын
He didn't mention the selling of government assets at least here in Australia to fund tax relief that would have helped the baby boomers the most.
@LordBillington424 жыл бұрын
Same in Britain. People still talk about Gordon Brown selling half of the UK's gold reserves at the bottom of the market 20 years after the event.
@mrblack8884 жыл бұрын
@Paraponera T I get where you're coming from but that isn't the measure of an asset when the government owns it. Any monopoly can be profitable because it sets its own prices. That doesn't mean it is a good business. If government runs the education system but it costs 4x what it should and nearly bankrupts people who have to pay for it, is it really a public good? Or a wasteful and corrupt program?
@sirtickleshitz4 жыл бұрын
@@mrblack888 then they try and ban privatized schooling because public schooling is losing the numbers.
@elly83534 жыл бұрын
All while paying a pittance to Newstart receivers
@darkmage354 жыл бұрын
@@elly8353 All while inflicting unpaid illegal forced labour on the long term unemployed, too.
@letsRegulateSociopaths2 жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure everyone after the BBs knows exactly what he's talking about. As well, the BBs were the first generation exposed to advertising based on psychological research. It convinced them that they are the center of the universe and that they deserve everything... Look where it's got us...
@musicspinner2 жыл бұрын
Not to mention raised in an environment where leaded gasoline exhaust was still being spewed into the air.
@donm20677 ай бұрын
Hate to tell you, but that started in the 20s look into Edward Bernays
@beachhorse54434 жыл бұрын
I am a millennial, and my baby boomer neighbor paid very low 40k (back in the 80s) for his house compared to me 150k. Our houses are exactly the same and have the same value today. I remember him telling me when he worked, he made more money than I do now, he had a working class job too, along with me. As a homeowner (lucky me) I pay 4 times more property taxes now than he does because he had the luxury to buy his house for a cheaper price way before I was born.
@dalewilkins84122 жыл бұрын
I'm an Australian millennial. Our house pricing is way more extreme than this. I would sell my soul for your housing situation. In 1993. When I was 2 years old, my mother purchased her house for 56k. It is now worth 950k. My mother made $20 per hour in 1993. I make $30 in 2022. It took roughly 1.5 years pay to buy her house. It would take me 16 years pay to do the same. Her house has not been renovated or improved since purchase.
@fishslappr2 жыл бұрын
And your name is almost Dave Willets!
@seksiama2 жыл бұрын
Intrest was like 12% though.
@dalewilkins84122 жыл бұрын
@@seksiama 12% of 56k is $6720 4% of 950k is $38,000 Interest doesn't matter much for smaller amounts.
@item69312 жыл бұрын
@@dalewilkins8412 I'm a Gen X Australian and housing was becoming unaffordable even back then. I kept renting and missed the boat. I feel so bad for younger generations. I made a bad call, but young people now don't even have a choice (unless uber-rich parents).
@SilverKnight164 жыл бұрын
Short answer: Yes. Long answer: Yes, and we are so incredibly screwed, even the Boomers are starting to worry about it.
@leonie77544 жыл бұрын
Only because most of them want to be grandparents and sadly, most of their millennial offspring are not in a financial position to even consider it thanks to their choices. Oh and because of their choices, their kids are also stuck living with them into their 30s. The boomers didn't think that would happen, they thought their kids would be off a decade ago and they want their house to themselves or be able to sell it on and can do neither.
@sanctuaryism3 жыл бұрын
yeah... because they can't trip around so much now and have their "entitled" kids all back at home living with them because of the fakedemic. if that won't humble some, then what will lol...
@chrishart85483 жыл бұрын
The next generation won't even bother getting jobs they won't see the point.
@monke69122 жыл бұрын
@@chrishart8548i am genZ, will try to be artist or advanced homless guy that hunts cats and grows edible mushroms
@PistonAvatarGuy2 жыл бұрын
"...even the Boomers are starting to worry about it." Only because their kids are stuck living with them. They couldn't care less about anything unless it directly inconveniences them.
@CameTo4 жыл бұрын
Respect to anyone who admits that part of their success came from external good fortune. It's too easy to blame everything in the young individuals today, they have it harder than anyone in my opinion (yes anyone).
@TheReferrer724 жыл бұрын
@Kaleb Swager Americans really have the short end of the stick, there would be riots in Britain if we were being fleeced like that.
@jcjc41642 жыл бұрын
Gen X here. I've noticed boomers around me got promoted at 2-3 years on the job back in 70s and early 80s. GenX and younger are going 20-30+ years and not getting a promotion,while having contractors whittle away at the work they currently perform.
@stevie2pants4 жыл бұрын
Bruce Gibney came to similar conclusions (and several additional interesting ones) in his book, "A Generation of Sociopaths" based on U.S. data. There are big charts in the back of the book listing off dozens of policy changes over time, their effects on various generations, and the generational breakdown of Congress (Boomers have had the majority for decades, holding about two thirds of both the Senate and House seats before dropping to 54% in the House in the 2018 midterms). The whole book is a must-read, but those charts alone are worth grabbing a copy.
@ShannaCarlson5254 жыл бұрын
I'll pick up that book. Thanks for the recommendation.
@TheWaggishAmerican3 жыл бұрын
It is a fantastic book and everyone should read it.
@rebeccawoolfolk53772 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the recommendation. I'm a boomer, but I don't get how my fellow boomers don't see what's going on.
@stephfoxwell46202 жыл бұрын
Britains babyboom was nothing like the US one. Our boom was in the 1960s.
@atlas47332 жыл бұрын
I'll go pirate it. Thanks for the suggest.
@Xercruz4 жыл бұрын
Jesus, it feels like he's talking directly about my life as a millennial. I thought it was just me who was a failure at life - good to know I'm not alone, lol.
@0IHasanI04 жыл бұрын
well it is kinda hard to get even a job now... you know im self employed( i was... ) Over 98% of my costumers werer boomers. And the 2% were just inheritet positions.When the Boomers die out( and im sorry to say that and at the same time not) i can finally request a decent prize where i can grow my work and hire people... fricking underpaying....
@atp15793 жыл бұрын
Same here
@AdamBechtol3 жыл бұрын
:p
@philm6523 жыл бұрын
@P White the thing I can't get my head around is how hard it is to relate to my parents generation. I have explained so much of this stuff to them and they just can't see any of it, they have seen us struggle and just don't see that they got help and we don't. It's bizarre.
@grandyeetburgersupreme5583 жыл бұрын
The moment you stop listening to boomer tales is the moment you exit the matrix.
@xander94604 жыл бұрын
young people traveling? Yes, doing volunteer work to get free housing/food, going to the cheapest hostels sharing room with 40 people, cooking food yourself (mostly rice and fried veggies) because you can't afford to go to a restaurant. "Vacation"
@TerfBashingMFer80214 жыл бұрын
"Work Trip Abroad"
@themurmeli884 жыл бұрын
The only person I know of my age group who "travels" does it solely for work reasons, aka. company pays the expenses. The rest have done via exchange student programs, as in "this is probably the only chance I'll have to travel, ever".
@Marco-no8qm4 жыл бұрын
story of my life*
@sanctuaryism3 жыл бұрын
EXACTLY.
@gillianshimwell49843 жыл бұрын
too late to be read or for a reply, probably... but on this point, it seems odd that a backpacking traveller is complaining about the lack of five star. The rucksack and bunking ,pilgrimage style of travelling is exactly what the more adventurous of decades past embraced and enjoyed. As long as you're wise enough to be safe, ... even British "holiday cottages" used to be a lot more basic. Having a work or family reason to get more involved in another country was almost my only travel experience, at any age.
@06224kim2 жыл бұрын
As a "boomer" I have long felt the sentiments expressed in this brilliant analysis but for me it was "gut feel". In my opinion we are the most disgustingly selfish generation and should be held to account. We will not be held to account because of our voting power. So it falls to us to be decent human beings. Our solution is to "generation skip" our own anticipated inheritances. We take responsibility for our own welfare and pass the inheritance from our parents directly to our children. This should deliver a real (capital) benefit to our children at the crucial time when they are trying to establish home/career/business. It may not work, but we have to get the conversation going.
@anthonytwohill97262 жыл бұрын
By the time you lot pass on all your I'll gotten gains, your children will be long past the age where they can have children of their own, biologically.
@06224kim2 жыл бұрын
@@anthonytwohill9726 Exactly right. This is why we are disclaiming any inheritance from my parent's estate and passing it straight to the next generation. With normal life expectancy this will deliver an inheritance when my children are in their early thirties as opposed to waiting for me to shuffle off - by which time they will probably be in their late fifties. The point I am trying to make to my fellow boomers is that if we collectively make choices like this we could make a great difference in the lives of our children - and if our children choose the same method of estate planning this would be a permanent shift for the benefit of future generations. We need to start conversations like this, but to be respectful in the process.
@chuck18042 жыл бұрын
@@06224kim I'm reading this and I'm thinking we probably need more Kim Powells in this world :). Yes a 'boomer' led, solution-oriented conversation around this would be a real step forward. That said, the cost of living extends well into retirement, so boomers without a comfortable pension are not without financial uncertainty. I watch my own mother grapple with this moral dilemma, although she is both careful and generous with her relatively modest savings, being that she has 4 (grown up) kids and now 3 grandkids to support. Ultimately this is an inequality created by unique and changing economic and political conditions over several decades within a capitalist system. It's unfair (and inaccurate) to blame an entire generation for actions they took as individuals, only for the basic comfort and security of their own futures, and those of their children.
@Bee-uy2cn2 жыл бұрын
My grandad died and my mom and went and bought a porche and another home to rent out for triple the mortgage. When my grama passes i suspect she’ll buy a tesla and another home.
@HyperiPoro Жыл бұрын
Well done Kim. As a millennial age 30 you sound like a great person, just feel you putting the weight of others in your generation on your shoulders. If we had more like you in this world things would be great. Have a good one friend
@ghostnoodle97214 жыл бұрын
Boomers: *Has reasonably priced college* Boomers: *Minimum wage paid for college in 1,000 hours* Millennials: *Has four part time jobs, cant afford college* Boomer: Why dont you try being more successful like me?
@---cr8nw4 жыл бұрын
This is the result of tax-payer backed student loans. There's no financial underwriting, so anyone can get a loan. Colleges can charge whatever they want, regardless of the return on investment.
@austinlopez58054 жыл бұрын
@@---cr8nw Thanks boomers
@---cr8nw4 жыл бұрын
@Austin Lopez, I'm not a boomer. It's just another example of the road to hell being paved with good intentions. It's good that college is accessible to everyone, regardless of class or race or background. It's bad that so many people go to college. It's worse that so many people take out loans without doing a cost benefit analysis. It's even worse that so many people take out loans and then fail to complete their degree programs.
@Master-ls2op4 жыл бұрын
lets just take half that successful-ness from you. and when you try to make up or build that into your system of success we will call you evil and a monster and try and have you destroyed.
@117johnpar4 жыл бұрын
College is a scam always has been.
@itzdaman4 жыл бұрын
32:21 this chart is actually terrifying. The biggest rise in 1950 in educational spending is accompanied with high pension and medical spending through to 1977. While even the biggest fall in pensions therafter spared education. However the projected figures give a huge rise in pensioner medical costs and even a steady increase in pensions, while declining for education... This is not only going to destroy the future of the next generations in their capasities to generater wealth while having to pay more. It is also the only time in history this insanity has happened.... Here we can't even learn form history, drastically new laws have to be propposed for the youth and by the general public if we are to save society.
@musicwelikemang4 жыл бұрын
And guess who the largest voting block is? BOOMERS! So this reform will never happen. They will keep these benefits for as long as possible and the pollies will give it to them so they get re-elected.
@Icipher3534 жыл бұрын
Until the vote is restricted to those who are net taxpayers, the freeloaders will keep voting for more benefits and more free stuff paid for with other people's money, until the productive people either give up and join the freeloaders, or they will leave and move to a place where their effort is rewarded. The old adage was "No taxation without representation", but an additional phase must be added, "No representation without taxation."
@tylr36694 жыл бұрын
To be fair, we really dont need to spend as much on education. Internet is drastically fixing that. When I went to college I didnt really know what youtube was. 2 years later doing my masters I used youtube to replace my professor's lectures. Education is becoming about will and discipline more than access.
@HaloFTW554 жыл бұрын
The increase in education was a result of the Sputnik Crisis. The US just poured money into education because some imaginary Communist invasion that has and will never happen. On the plus side, we get cool gadgets and (probably) are better educated.
@Acetyl534 жыл бұрын
Society is already done. The boomers are braindead cowards so completely programmed they can never be woken up. The younger generation is in terrible health, and the power structure is rapidly moving to sterilize them. Kids who are perhaps even as old as 16 right now, may already be sterile. Younger, odds are it's already done. It's all damage control at this point. The cell phone was the nail in the coffin.
@Sakuyamon4 жыл бұрын
There is also an issue with job hiring getting more and more mechanical... All applications go through the internet now, and companies can let bots pick out the best applications, sure it sound good but it lets employers get really picky... Someone could be the better choice by being the more motivated, honest and hard working, but lack a good cv...or just have a cv that the bot dont like. When my grandparents were young, they could just walk into a store and get a job, but today you couldnt even get the employees to take your cv.
@tylr36694 жыл бұрын
True. I've had to research keyword algorithms just to get to human responses.
@Budokid4 жыл бұрын
@@tylr3669 take the initial job posting. make the font white. submit it as an additional "blank" page with your resume. add any other keywords you think relevant. robot defeated.
@jeffshackleford31524 жыл бұрын
@@Budokid does that actually work?
@Budokid4 жыл бұрын
@@jeffshackleford3152 if they are using a program to just read in the data and keyword filter, yes. Program unless specifically written to doesn't care about color or realize white on white is unreadable to ppl. And if they did ignore white text, they have to filter a range of unreadable colors (and make sure the main page color wasn't modified) in the color spectrum rather than a specific value because slightly off white would otherwise bypass checks for "white" and an off white page color would accommodate slightly more off white text further increasing to range of colors they'd need to ignore.
@jeffshackleford31524 жыл бұрын
@@Budokid thank you very much for that information
@OuterHeavenNET Жыл бұрын
I’m a millennial, I have worked and saved hard until now to buy a house. I’m 32, my wife is 30, we have two children. We are both nurses in good paying positions, yet the housing market is so rough it took us a lot longer than it would have in the early 2000’s let alone earlier during boomer season. My dad who is a boomer to this day scoffs at house prices, and believes we should be able to find a good 4 bedroom 2 bath home for around 50k. //edit i’m American.
@ryderoreilly9807 Жыл бұрын
Try living in New Zealand where the average house price is over 1 million and over 10x our Average wage.
@Amer1can1nfidel Жыл бұрын
It's all your fault btw and you're lazy 😂
@PBNIP Жыл бұрын
@ryderoreilly9807 a bunch of socialists living on an island with little natural resources. What could go wrong?
@OuterHeavenNET Жыл бұрын
@@ryderoreilly9807 Aside from visiting Hobbit village I have no desire to live in New Zealand. It's a beautiful country, but that's about it. No offense.
@emperorreign615410 ай бұрын
Tell your boomer father to go seek professional help.
@ElementZephyr4 жыл бұрын
Jobs earn less, Jobs are harder to find (automated application rejection and more prior experience needed), Jobs are contract based with very little loyalty from the employer, Employers don't do walk in application/interviews anymore, Rent is higher, Rent requirements are higher (rent needs to be 1/3 total income), College is 4 times as expensive because of federal loans, and college education includes a couple semesters of mostly worthless general education courses. *I wonder why younger people say they're having problems*
@dingfeldersmurfalot45604 жыл бұрын
Usually about two years are devoted to the "associates degree" level stuff.
@buttlesschap4 жыл бұрын
college is also more expensive because of a bloated administrative structure that is probably at least 70% boomer demographic.
@dalehitchcock63824 жыл бұрын
I felt like smashing my head on a desk when my boomer parents encouraged me to hand cvs out in person. Literally every one said what I expected : it's all online
@dingfeldersmurfalot45604 жыл бұрын
@@dalehitchcock6382 Yup. Reminds me of my strabismus, an eye condition which makes it so you can't see in three dimensions. Even my own mother asked me why I didn't just try harder.
@TheWaggishAmerican3 жыл бұрын
@@buttlesschap Nothing like the Pres. of your institution giving himself a huge raise to his already outlandish salary, all while shutting down school functions, laying off maintenance, and hiring more administration for no reason.
@celdur46354 жыл бұрын
The Boomers will be called "the disastrous" generation.
@AQuietNight4 жыл бұрын
The Boomers operated on assumptions of economic growth projected at the time. I am not sure this guy is the best person to explain it. But, I will say I see the Millennials are now setting up their own cycle of social mess.
@AQuietNight4 жыл бұрын
@@Ren33469 The same could be said for all previous generations going back to Adam and Eve. Like global warming. A bit of data and you create hysteria. Some argue a temperature spike occurs just before an ice age sets in. If an ice age sets in, the ones who created the hysteria based on the information of the time are going to be hated?
@AQuietNight4 жыл бұрын
@@Ren33469 You can't stop Mother Nature when she is on a tear.
@AQuietNight4 жыл бұрын
@vctjkhme They think everyone wakes up every morning thinking how can we make them happy. And their taste for free stuff goes beyond student loans.
@AQuietNight4 жыл бұрын
I should add environmentalism didn't start with the Millennials. I walk to many places instead of getting in a car and I have thousands of gallons of fuel that way just as an example. I'd like to see a vast reduction in the dog population just as one way of reducing animal waste both in their food and their feces production.
@thekagifret2 жыл бұрын
I live in Australia and am astounded by the parallels between us and the UK. This is one of the most incredible, heartfelt presentations on what a society is there for, and how far we have strayed from this. Poignant, on point and wonderfully presented. It is a must see . Thank you for your contribution Sir.
@anthonytwohill97262 жыл бұрын
It's the same almost everywhere there was a giant post WWII baby boom. Check Japan and South Korea to see how they talk about their own boomers. It's a global phenomenon.
@two-sense Жыл бұрын
If young people would only get out and vote. Why do they give up their power like that? They complain about boomers voting in policies which help only them, but then they sit at home on Election Day.
@modestalchemist2 жыл бұрын
my mom once asked me what i thought about some shoes she wanted to buy. They were ~$300. I said i thought they were nice but not $300 nice. She asked how much i would spend on shoes, and i told her $30-$80, and only the $80 if they have a specific purpose like for work. she was just so out of touch.
@thygrrr2 жыл бұрын
The first recorded incidence of an actually okay Boomer!
@melissachartres32192 жыл бұрын
Okay, Boomer!
@DeeDeex007o Жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣
@zenithian152 жыл бұрын
I'm a millennial. I don't own property, or a car. I have no plans to start a family. Despite having a Master's degree, I only make minimum wage. I'm currently living in my parents' house, trying to save money so I can afford to go back to school again. Simply put, I don't have the means to accumulate wealth the way my parents did at my age (I'm 36). This presentation didn't tell me much beyond what I already know. The reality is my parents' generation made choices that screwed my generation over, but we are being blamed for it and told to stop complaining. If they put as much energy into fighting corporate greed and reclaiming some of the benefits they fought to gain for themselves, we might stand a chance. But boomers don't care. They've got it made in the shade, and they're happy there.
@melissachartres32192 жыл бұрын
You have a master's degree and earn minimum wage at your job? And you want to go back to school for some more of that?! Let's first talk about the kind of choices that YOU yourself made.
@caskaptein98892 жыл бұрын
I would like an updated version of this after the whole covid crisis. Im a working 30 year old right now and can bearly pay rent, food and energie. Plus, house prices has absolutely skyrocketed in the last 2 years
@BungieStudios2 жыл бұрын
Rent control is making it worse where I live. Landlords don't want to rent and tenants don't want to move.
@jordanhowe18992 жыл бұрын
Wait until the energy crisis is really in full swing this winter 🙃
@michaeldelarm16302 жыл бұрын
my grandfather always told me "just work hard, if you wanna have a lot of money, fold it in half and put it in your pocket" 30 years later Im broke Af working multiple jobs still trying to find this money to fold and put in my pocket... He's a business owner with a hand full of properties that he owns.... thanks for the solid advice grandpa...
@grouchy882 жыл бұрын
you just need to work harder
@GenericNameeee2 жыл бұрын
Well to be fair that’s inheritance money if he hasn’t pledged it away.
@dammitthatguy31072 жыл бұрын
@@grouchy88 He's gotta work 4 jobs smh
@d00der412 жыл бұрын
@@grouchy88 You need to pray harder too. Gotta step up to muh Jesus game. Watch Kenneth Copeland. He'll show you the light.
@trustytrest2 жыл бұрын
@@grouchy88 He works hard enough. It's you who have never worked a REAL job in your life. Sure must be nice being a spoiled brat living off of daddy's money.
@wolfboy184 жыл бұрын
It's Worse in the States. Also that thing he said " Well I've paid into it, so I'm entitled to it! " And there it is... Boomers are the most Entitled Generation... I work in Retail, I make maybe $1000 a month. Most people in the younger generations have 2 or more jobs, and work often 16-18 hours a day, not including College/University. Oh and most people in the Younger Generations are nearly a million dollars in debt just from Schooling. People in my Generation can't afford the nearly Half a million dollars just to get a house. So Boomers, please stop dunking on the Millennials.
@Hypersonik4 жыл бұрын
It always fascinates me about 'school' in the US. The juice doesn't seem worth the squeeze. In the UK, in recent years since the massive University price hike, it certainly isn't worth it. Graduate programs used to be a thing, but more companies are falling back to apprenticeships. Once you move out of the first stage of your career, no one cares about what school you went to or if you went at all.
@Moonless64914 жыл бұрын
@@Hypersonik I saw a job ad on indeed the other day, during my job search, requiring a Bachelor's degree for $9 dollars an hour.
@Hypersonik4 жыл бұрын
@@Moonless6491 Wow, that's pretty insane!!
@MatthewBrackney4 жыл бұрын
@@Hypersonik Agreed. In hindsight my educational debt isn't worth it, but when I was just coming of college age (I'm 38 now) the conventional wisdom was still that the job you'd get would outweigh the debt. I think I was just at that cusp where that was no longer true. I still owe 90k in school debt, but I've never had a job where I could afford to pay more than my minimum payments (around $800 per month) and still afford a decent life.
@angelgjr19994 жыл бұрын
@@Moonless6491 Yup. I got an interview for a job at Verizon. They wanted a college diploma, and guess what they offered me? 8 dollars an hour. I walked out the interview. Most jobs pay slavery wage, heck. Atleast slaves had health insurance and a roof over their heads.
@markog19994 жыл бұрын
"Ten thousand pounds? that's hardly anything!" *Me with 97p in my bank account* haha yeah
@angelgjr19994 жыл бұрын
I have about 9k dollars saved. I literally can’t afford to get hurt or I’ll end up in debt.
@svenskayami4 жыл бұрын
@@angelgjr1999 i know the feel so hard to save up anything. If i move out i cant even afford furniture 😂
@BHBalast2 жыл бұрын
Don't worry guys, the inflation caused by money printing to afford social benefits is coming for our savings...
@petelee24774 жыл бұрын
The big problem was employers were very quick to drop salaries during the recession but very slow raising the wages up when it was over
@kylerector60822 жыл бұрын
They always are quick to drop pay and slow to raise it.
@anthonytwohill97262 жыл бұрын
Boomers are the employers.
@alanlight77402 жыл бұрын
Just a couple points: (1) Smart people saw where things were going a long time ago. My father (b. 1930) explained all this to me back around 1980 when I was about 10, and spoke of it as something that had been obvious for a very long time - well, he explained about 80% of it anyway. But he also noted that the general public would never vote to fix things so it would just continue until everything fell apart. So I've known pretty much my whole life where things were headed. (2) The ad that came up for this video for me was for tiny houses.
@linmal22422 жыл бұрын
Well the trouble is with 'tiny houses' is council/zoning regulations, perhaps less so in big America, but U K , Europe where the restrictions on doing anything are so great that it has to be a corporation that builds stuff, makes dwellings etc. The 'Tiny house' movement is just a flash in the pan and will be gone. Mobile homes, caravans are the equivalent elsewhere.
@nidrikzleet59862 жыл бұрын
@@linmal2242 yes in Europe it's so freaking weird. Belgian here, the ONLY way to build anything anywhere is to be a corporation.... if you're just a random person you can barely put up a tent in your backyard or you'll be fined.
@crazydragy4233 Жыл бұрын
If you think America has less zoning restrictions then you've never tried to build anything anywhere urban@@linmal2242
@Slarti4 жыл бұрын
My father was born just before the boomer generation and became very wealthy doing very little. Whereas myself being born in 1970 have found it quite difficult to accumulate wealth in comparison, having had to change jobs regularly and compete with a lot of people. The population of the world has doubled in my lifetime.
@jackrobinson94034 жыл бұрын
no ur just as bad mate. i'll go get the pillow. i swear to god!
@davidmahon52694 жыл бұрын
@ As someone who has tried to hire in the IT sector over the past decade, immigration hasn't mattered in the slightest. Maybe it helps hiring managers in the lowest rungs of the economic ladder, but even entry-level IT jobs are horrific to fill. I'll happily work with someone who is self-taught. And as a GenX who has hired Millennials, GenX, and Boomers, I've encountered the exact same failings regardless of generation, gender, and nationality. They struggle with accepting that problems in complex systems don't have simple solutions, and so rather than focus on steady incremental improvement, they favor the hail mary approach, which almost never succeeds (even though those successes are rather well known). Isolationism is a hail mary. So is Marxism.
@sebastiendubois79354 жыл бұрын
Even after hearing this I struggle to hate the boomer generation. My father, a late boomer, drowned himself in his greed and hypocrisy. In doing so he destroyed his relationship with his friends, his parents, his siblings and me. Last year he died alone in his home from a heart attack after years of severe depression slowly biting away at his soul. There's always a price to shunning ones responsibilities. If anything him and his generation will serve as an example of the terrible cost of greed. I much prefer carrying that lesson with me into the future then waste my time looking at the past with resentment.
@ledumpsterfire64742 жыл бұрын
As another commenter basically said, we're upset that we're coming up in this unnecessarily difficult world. We're not waiting around for boomers to die out of some sick enthusiasm, but out of relief, as we'll finally have the chance to fix things with them out of the way. I don't think most people hate boomers themselves, a generation is too abstract a concept to hate on the scale of individuals, but we hate what they represent.
@sammyruncorn41652 жыл бұрын
@@ledumpsterfire6474 I agree.
@touchthesun2 жыл бұрын
Spoiler Alert: Yes, yes they have. In the unlikely event that there are historians (or a functioning society at all) in 100 years, Boomer will be remembered as the generation who ate the future that belonged to their children and held on to power so long they forgot their own names.
@rin_etoware_29892 жыл бұрын
an entire generation of ringwraiths
@noaccount42 жыл бұрын
@@rin_etoware_2989 Nazgul economics
@TheAbandonedAccount7 Жыл бұрын
Aren't most of the big time CEOs gen x'ers these days tho? I fail to see what exactly boomers did so bad
@LudwigVaanArthans Жыл бұрын
@@TheAbandonedAccount7 nope, most CEOs are boomers, and even if they weren't, the vast majority of investors are boomers, and the CEO is nothing but a lapdog of the board of investors in most Western countries. Also, if you can't see what they did wrong, even after watching the quite good presentation shown in the video, that sounds more like a you problem than anything else.
@biocular10 ай бұрын
@@LudwigVaanArthans Very well said.
@Coastpsych_fi99 Жыл бұрын
This explains why fewer grandkids and future children will be coming. Fascinating the impact of the age cohort you are born with and your opportunities in life.
@kamilareeder1493 Жыл бұрын
Yes, 😮☝️❤ this year there were very few children out trick or treating and big part of that is, New families aren't buying houses and having children as much anymore, so there were less children around on Halloween 😢🎃
@redirishmanxlt4 жыл бұрын
Thank you Lord Willets for having the courage and skepticism to challenge the notion that "millennials and gen-z's are simply lazy and unambitious". Representing this conclusion will ultimately be extremely unpopular among your peers, and I have nothing but admiration and respect for anyone is willing to do this.
@IonShard2 жыл бұрын
well... he is selling a book, lets not get carried away.
@landsea73322 жыл бұрын
Willets is slick politician selling fiction. Notice how is fictional book is not peer reviewed an published in an economic journal ? Notice non of his garbage would ever be published in investor sites ? Because he would be laughed out of the room. . The 1970's era of stagflation gave snake oil salesmen the excuse to say that Keynesian economics doesn't work so they phased in Neo Liberal "economics." Thatcher & Reagan privatized every public asset they could get their hands on - then they brought in the great fraud of " trickle down economics." Thatcher decided than London's "square mile" would be one of the financial capitals of the world - creating massive wealth inequality . It was also the beginning of globalization - where British jobs were shipped off to cheaper labour markets. Suggest reading "Three Good Rules for Pundant Behaviour " By economist Miles Corak - which is on line. .
@blu00654 жыл бұрын
"The warehouse of Mom and Dad" // looks at all of my stuff at my parents' well.
@QuizmasterLaw4 жыл бұрын
at least they let you store your things at their house... how generous of them!
@camw6214 жыл бұрын
Dude, right about when he started that line was when this whole thing really started sinking in. I'm technically born right at the end of GenX, start of Millenial, and it's getting to be where he's factually describing my entire life, haha..
@dwoodward9314 жыл бұрын
Yeah that line hit me hard. Lol. I rent and a lot of my stuff is with my parents.
@captainblacktail81374 жыл бұрын
What's interesting is that those who are now writing their wills are finding that their kids are throwing away every physical object they get. They spent ages taking care of china and other family collections from their parents and grandparents that now gets to be thrown out as trash that there is no room for.
@hexadecimal52364 жыл бұрын
I'm going to buy some land in the middle of bumfuck egypt, put a tiny home one it, and wait for the inevitable collapse while studying gardening, I already know how to hunt, fish, and smoke meat and I worked as a butcher for years. But yeah, I've never owned a 3/2 home, I came close once, but the bank refused bc of my student loans, which is Federally illegal, but they do it anyway. Until then, yeah, my few scant possessions will be in my parents garage. =/
@Xsyuanari4 жыл бұрын
I'm 28 now and my mother who is about to turn 47 used to tell me, constantly, "Things break, don't worry about it, it's just 'stuff'." At first I assumed she did this because we were poor and replacing things wasnt easy or always possible, but now I know the truth. She was preparing me, in her ultimate motherly wisdom, for the future. A future in which the dead own me, and anything that breaks gets weighed against food... I have a good mom ^_^
@TheMasterOfPeanuts2 жыл бұрын
I find it so jarring and interesting that this man is part of the UK Conservative party, and yet his proposals are to raise property taxes and gift a 10000 pound inheritance to every citizen who hits 30. This is so far removed from the "policies" of the US Republican party that I'm reminded of just how ridiculously skewed the Overton window is in my country. I doubt even the "liberal" Democrat party would be agreeable to those proposals.
@RhodokTribesman2 жыл бұрын
UK is much closer to the global center than the distinctly neoliberal right-leaning US. Americans are kinda disconnected and think "Republicans right, Democrats left" without actually knowing the true center for fully developed, 1st world, Western countries
@tweakr43772 жыл бұрын
Another American here- It’s so beyond frustrating that even the “liberal” democrats offer essentially nothing of value to the country because they are a neoliberal, stagnant party that leeches off of the outrage and political regress caused by the republicans. I wish I could see a way to get the democrats more left at least
@Millez Жыл бұрын
He's the minority of the Tories - don't be fooled
@jamiemunn9200 Жыл бұрын
@@MillezA minority, but the Republicans don't even have a single person willing to accept and honestly look at the issues.
@axlcinema Жыл бұрын
It's a really dumb policy, that £10,000 isn't free, someone is paying for it, most likely us. Conservatives are a joke.
@robinkemper224 жыл бұрын
Wow you know, a lot of this is something in North America too. Thing is, the youth is living either in poor conditions or with mom and dad then we get the "Why aren't you having kids???". And we are sitting here, hardly being able to support ourselfs or not supporting ourselfs (having help from family) thinking, "How? We don't have enough for ourselfs let alone children!". It's a tough world right now honestly. I can only imagine there are going to be less and less children being born from this point on for a while because of this issue.
@JoJo-rx6bi4 жыл бұрын
most definitely, kids in this environment are out of the question.
@exxxxoskeleton2 жыл бұрын
That’s what they want
@rdlewis36164 жыл бұрын
As a Boomer myself, I have been disappointed in my generation which went from young people who cared about the world to greedy old people; and the three Boomer presidents, Clinton, W. Bush, and Dumpy have been disasters.
@davecrupel28174 жыл бұрын
"Young people who cared about the world" *HA!* I highly doubt you cared about anything beyond yourselves anymore than you've forced my generation not to. I was born Christian but stopped bothering with it awhile ago. But i have made a prayer to the Devil, that he takes 90% of your generation in his arms, and NEVER lets you go.
@Zorro91294 жыл бұрын
Obama was as much a disaster as any of them.
@Kikker8614 жыл бұрын
@@Ren33469 Obama administration was very divisive. You can't blame him for disliking the former president. An example of a divisive policy: during the Obama administration, Congress put a limit to how much could be borrowed as part of a college loan, citing "predatory loans" from big banks and "low return rates" as concerns. This resulted in honest people becoming unable to pay for college through standard federal college loans. Policy only served to deter the people who wanted to go to college but couldn't afford the rising costs.
@Kikker8614 жыл бұрын
@@Ren33469 They were all destructive. Difference in how much they destroyed is negligible when we consider that people's lives were ruined and their suffering was from the government. It isn't dishonest to point out that Obama's policies was very divisive, it is objective truth that we can glean from the 2012 election. If you're calling me dishonest, please do your duty as a free citizen of the commonwealth and do your research.
@Zorro91294 жыл бұрын
@@Ren33469 Well now, you've exposed your partisanship. How objective you are!
@eXistenZ154 жыл бұрын
Put this guy in a museum. A conservative who actually understands and acknowledges the issues of this generation and what needs to be done about it? I always thought I'd see a dodo before I saw a conservative who cares about the future
@johnrobinson514 жыл бұрын
His political allegiance was a revelation to me was pretty shocking. If they were as forward thinking as this one, I'd consider voting for them. But given their track record with systematically dismantling the state and protections in favour of laissez faire economics, my vote is never going to be given.
@ledumpsterfire64742 жыл бұрын
Thing is, conservatives as we think of the term today aren't real conservatives, they're social and fiscal regressives. They want low spending and tax and domestication of production, but support complete fiscal irresponsibility and rampant outsourcing so long as the GOP tells them it'll benefit them somehow. They want small government, but will support government expansion so long as they're told it's good for them. I could go on. If you only want what's prudent and responsible when it's convenient, you're not a conservative, you're a sponge in the GOP's pool.
@patricknelson2 жыл бұрын
In the United States, he’d probably end up labeled a leftist or socialist.
@pmfg8752 жыл бұрын
From an objective standpoint, conservative people (I’m not conservative) are often exposed to environments that foster financial literacy and attentiveness to economics. On an individual level he has a much better than average quality of education, just by the way he explains things it’s apparent. He also is capable of integrating his educational components, life experience, and intellectual curiosity. Even more notable is his ability to apply all of his learning within a humanitarian, moral framework. He realizes the big picture and doesn’t want his nation to be harmed. If all politicians were as thoughtful as this gentleman, progress would be made because good faith debate could happen between various political groups.
@TheThoughtOasis2 жыл бұрын
Now I know why I’m struggling while I’m doing everything I ‘should I’ or ‘must do’. At 32 went burn out last year.. I think this gives me a sense that I’m not a failure, and I have to try to let go all we taught. Because nothing of that could be achieved or realized. I don’t know how I have to this, but I’m happy I came across this documentary.
@isidoreaerys87452 жыл бұрын
I’m 32 as well. I’ve been living in my car for over a year
@jondo553 Жыл бұрын
It's always someone else's fault, eh?
@adamdahlin60254 жыл бұрын
Boomer: Pension, Paid for home, College education paid for when acquired, Ability to raise a family on one income. Also Boomer: "Millenials are so entitled."
@dingfeldersmurfalot45604 жыл бұрын
Most boomers don't have pensions. Yes to the rest.
@JudasBenPesach4 жыл бұрын
@@dingfeldersmurfalot4560 They do here in Australia!
@rollingdudes88593 жыл бұрын
Boomers = DRAFTED for WAR!!! Millenials = NEVER DRAFTED!!!
@Rawnfella3 жыл бұрын
@@rollingdudes8859 I’d love to see your generation try and live in our shoes.
@rollingdudes88593 жыл бұрын
@@Rawnfella I am not a BOOMER but I do admit life was NOT ALWAYS PERFECT back when BOOMERS were young!!!
@JoeNoshow274 жыл бұрын
As a millennial I find Boomers confessing to their sins deeply therapeutic. At last, the trauma can be processed. Edit: To clarify, I'm being somewhat sarcastic here. I am not using the term 'confession' literally. Nor am I being literal when I say that I'm processing trauma while watching some old guy talk about statistics. Relax guys.
@3QUIN34 жыл бұрын
That is the truth. Its sinking in as their lives end and reflection on a worthless existence takes hold.
@mayastic95704 жыл бұрын
you can't even call this a confession. It's a "here's the problem I created, now deal with it. sorry, not sorry."
@3QUIN34 жыл бұрын
@@mayastic9570 Sadly this is true. Smiling about it the whole time.
@JoeSmith-fw8ix4 жыл бұрын
Don't fool yourself. If this is what a Boomer is willing to admit to then it's actually way worse. Also, M. voors is correct.
@JoeNoshow274 жыл бұрын
@@mayastic9570 It's a joke.
@evergreen-4 жыл бұрын
37:53 - I have worked on social policy for 30 years trying to improve it 38:10 - I seem to benefit the most from the social policy! Nothing but pure luck, you don’t say!
@theeinhaender51324 жыл бұрын
thatsthejoke.png
@JasonMcCarrell4 жыл бұрын
Ya, this is just a bit of british dry humour and it's the point of the presentation. He's a tory, he went through life also trying to benefit himself, but he's pointing out the flaw in that and the consequences of that. The solution is more tricky, he showed some ideas, but you can tell he's trying very hard to avoid taking things away from people, ie. the rich. I deally you'd tax rthe rich so hard, that they'd have to get rid of some of their millions/billions in assets, but most people are very scared of taking things away from, even, the rich.
@tartiflette64284 жыл бұрын
@@JasonMcCarrell He is clearly points out the issue about wealth accumulation into a specific older generation and the associated pressure on income taxation on the younger ones buuuuut carefully avoids talking about the very evident wealth tax solution. Not a peep either on the vanishing taxation of inheritance in the last graph, while at the same time talking about how such inheritance is now the best vector upward in quality of life.
@Zorro91294 жыл бұрын
@@JasonMcCarrell Taxing the rich doesn't do anything except make the wealth of society disappear.
@hamdepaf66864 жыл бұрын
"I thought to make it better" -> implies he doesn't think that way anymore
@erinwhipple4666 Жыл бұрын
I’m so happy to have a nice boomer father who somewhat gets it. He still expects kids and can be a bit over-optimistic, but he is fully willing to help me and my brother as much as we need because he understands that we don’t have the luxuries that he did at our age.
@LeeGee4 жыл бұрын
We all know the Boomers ripped off their kids just as they abandoned their parents.
@Getz-Da-Chompy4 жыл бұрын
@@AnnoDominiAD Nice try. Turing invented such 'boomer' technology before the boomer generation even came around. Typical boomer behaviour - claim the achievements of other generations as your own... Let's just hope this Wuhan virus manages to spread around a bit more, shall we? I hear the chances for the older generations to survive it are.. well.. quite a lot lower ;) Good luck!
@diegonatan63014 жыл бұрын
@@AnnoDominiAD snowflakes exist because of boomer professors and teachers, things like safe spaces, gender studies and so on are boomer and early gen X creations. Also the tech that we use in modern computers is currently creation of gen X, not boomers, unless you are using Pentium 4 and Nokia 1110...
@forposterity40314 жыл бұрын
@@AnnoDominiAD With your cause and effect logic the first human that discovered how to produce fire is responsible for all technology and as a boomer you owe them the luxury of your ignorance, which you seem to display so proudly unaware of your own self. I find you funny taking such pride in accomplishments that have nothing to do with you, it's kind of sad. You must have no accomplishments of your own to speak of since you attach your own self worth to feats done by people you only have age in common with. So why then if you can attach yourself to positive things like "boomer tech" why don't you attach yourself to any bad instances of the era as well?
@Edgar-Friendly4 жыл бұрын
@@AnnoDominiAD Gen-X built the modern tech world.
@Gerdk214 жыл бұрын
@@AnnoDominiAD The most prominent "Invention" boomers created is how to spend more money then you actually have. Boomers should never get a pension, you should work until you have repaid the deficit you have created. For example take US national debt between 1985 to 2018 this is Boomer economics for you, this is a perfect example what boomers invented.
@parhamad60444 жыл бұрын
What triggers me is that years and years of research prove these issues, yet none of the politicians actually DO something about it.
@tommacduff43304 жыл бұрын
vote labour!
@dammitthatguy31072 жыл бұрын
Most of them are old too so they don't care
@two-sense Жыл бұрын
You could run for office. Start local. DO something about it. We boomers changed the world to how we wanted it. It's YOUR TURN now. Get out from behind your phone and act!
@Millez Жыл бұрын
@@two-sense campaigning costs money we don't have 😎
@two-sense Жыл бұрын
@@Millez The only thing you seem to have is excuses.
@acheron164 жыл бұрын
*Me with a barely functioning car that I inherited, a job that barely leaves me any money after spending my salary on rent and lliving expenses and with a conscious choice to not have kids for the foreseable future:* Wish life was better *Boomer:* That's cuz you're lazy. By oyur age I had a new car, owned my house and was married and had 2 kids.
@SerifSansSerif2 жыл бұрын
Or they tell you how you should do it, by moving out to a swamp hut behind a radioactive waste site and make a fortune off some nonexistent specialized job you have no inclination or skills for and that you should fashion a makeshift cart powered by the mutant swamp rats for your transportation, just like they did.
@two-sense Жыл бұрын
You inherited a car? I wish I had been that lucky.
@joebloggs4925 Жыл бұрын
@@two-sense bore off will you
@MrRickmowen10 ай бұрын
yeah but we could have like gotten a trade or something and still be impoverished because you need to be making plastic surgeon money right now to be boomer tier
@TheM41a9 ай бұрын
Whilst they live off lavish pensions and social supports paid for by the taxes of younger generations they label as 'spoiled'.
@tojatojatoja2 жыл бұрын
My grandparents are the baby boomers. They built a walfe in my family when I was a little girl. I live in Poland and they worked in the US in the 90s and earned a lot of money. With this money, my grandparents bought a large apartment for my parents (my parents were then in their 20s). Grandparents bought my father everything - new cars, they funded a prosperous life! As long as my grandfather be alive the finances were kept by him, but when he died, the real fun for my father began. Grandma gave all the money to my father for alcoholism, another cara, failed businesses. I will also mention that when my parents divorced, my grandparents decided that my father would stay in the huge apartment, and my mother and I would move to another apartment that they bought. Can you even imagine that your parents are able to buy you an apartment ?! And so, after many years, the prosperity generated by my grandparents, baby boomers, disappeared because my father wasted it. I have completed my master's degree, completed many courses, and I am barely able to survive. I works for the government earning the minimum wage. I don't have a car because I can't even afford to get a driving license, renting is very expensive. I renting an apartament from lady who is also a baby boomer. I don't know what will happen next with us millennials..
@bens76863 жыл бұрын
It’s true, I enjoyed travel as a US millennial… because moving to Germany was literally the only way to afford a degree.
@master81272 жыл бұрын
Yes, but you better move out before half of your wage is taken away by taxes for the german babyboomers who are funded by that....
@ColonizerChan2 жыл бұрын
@@master8127 Honestly at least they put their taxes to try to help society instead of mostly being tax breaks and funding a large military that we didn't ask for.
@master81272 жыл бұрын
@@ColonizerChan You see the results now, a society you dont wanna be part of and that sometimes doesnt even speak your language anymore. Most money is wasted in germany for antic administrations and the interest of the younger generations is completely ignored due to the aging population
@gustaveardila62864 жыл бұрын
My Grand mother was born after the great war and was the one to build up my family's relative wealth and kept us in the middle class. My mom has spent it on doing as she pleased through her life. I will get the scraps she wishes to hand me down once she is done ruining the legacy of my iron willed grand mother. Makes me want to scream and rage, but the air gets stuck in my throat, as if the despair of not knowing how to solve this mess for my children.
@tojatojatoja2 жыл бұрын
My dad did that.. Wasted all of grandparents money.. After 2 wasted big apartments, many of new cars, grandparents big house nothing left for me-his only child... It's sucks! And now I just try to living, expensive rent, food. I don't even have a car becouse i can't afford to buy a driving lesson. I have a bachlor degree and working for the goverment for minimum wage. Sort for my English, I better speak than writing.
@ChrisHillASMR Жыл бұрын
Po|$on thier a$$. What does it matter. No one will care enough to investigate anything.
@tacticoolrick55622 жыл бұрын
You know what really sucks tho, is to be an millenial who's parents were highschool dropouts. My parents could have gotten university degrees on 6 months minimum wage salary, but opted not to... Of course I paid my own way for everything, including my education. Looking back I have no idea how I had the energy...
@two-sense Жыл бұрын
Richard Branson is a high school dropout.
@michaelkaminski842 жыл бұрын
Something no one addresses: when the retirement/pensioner age was decided as 65, the life expectancy was like 72. So you retired closer to 60 with savings, and got an extra help for the last decade or so of your life. Boomers retire at 60 still, often younger ("Freedom 55!") due to all the wealth they have accumulated, and then expect to live no less than 90, which people are doing in more and more numbers. Being 90 used to be unheard of, now it's not uncommon, in 15 years it will be relatively normal. So if you started working at age 22, retire at 57, but then live to 94, you are taking for more years than you have actually worked and expecting people with 1/10th your wealth to support you. If boomers live to age 94, they should be retiring in their 80s.
@JamieStLouis-tu9ml2 жыл бұрын
assuming you know when you are going to die?
@KratomFlavoredAdidas2 жыл бұрын
Many of these 90 year old boomers with dementia don't even want to live anymore but the medical industry keeps them alive unnecessarily long for no reason but to make profit off taking care of them.
@teage122 жыл бұрын
Agreed. Instead, they are asking the younger generations to start their retirement even later while themselves keeping their retirement age.
@two-sense Жыл бұрын
Boomers started working when they were in their early to mid teens, usually. Full time all summer and part time all year. I guess it's ok to wait until 22 now since you need all those "life experiences" to record for Instagram first.
@two-sense Жыл бұрын
@@teage12 Are all you whiners going to refuse the inheritance you will get from us boomers? Thought so.
@kagitsune4 жыл бұрын
Re: 15:58, also, being poor is expensive. Having to suddenly fix a car problem you had to let fester while you were saving to pay off your student loans, having to eat out or order in because you don't have kitchen space (or time between your three jobs) to effectively cook... It all adds up. Sometimes a nice coffee is a small, inexpensive way to feel okay for a moment. The companies that extract our labor have nickeled and dimed us enough.
@Rika9142 жыл бұрын
They did have a larger cohort, but most importantly much lower educational requirements for most skilled jobs. Nurses or teachers only needed a diploma or associate's degree. In the immediate post-war era even those requirements were waived for those with equivalent education in my country. I attended an Anglican grammar school in the late 00's and I distinctly rember that there were a few pages in the back of our diaries listing all staff and their qualifications. There was one teacher in his 80's bless his soul, and beside his name simply read "TCertEd". The entries of many younger staff took up at least two lines listing fellowships etc.
@Kyle-sm6tr4 жыл бұрын
I give you the highest reward for you speech. "Thank You Boomer" You will be one of few to deserve it.
@thenaturalpeoplesbureau4 жыл бұрын
There are a few... We always have to treat them according to their deeds relative to their possibilites they would have realistically had, so yeah!
@dingfeldersmurfalot45604 жыл бұрын
@@thenaturalpeoplesbureau Yup, especially since people born in 1945 faced completely different circumstances and a very different world than the people born even 10 years later, much less 20. The term boomer is too broad.
@TheLordTyphoon2 жыл бұрын
This is pretty much universally understood by people my age (early 20s). Unless things drastically change, it'll become more and more difficult to have money for basic human needs with no chance of ever saving enough to retire. People my age will be working until the day they die.