Interesting thread, but it's missing out on what is now the most important 
issue on the boomers: the contract between the generations is breaking down. 

 The baby boomers are in danger of dumping too many problems on the younger 
generation. The bills are coming in but there's been a lot of kicking cans down 
roads, and it is the younger generation who will eventually have to pay the 
bills. We have a good idea of what these future costs are: the cost of climate 
change, of investing in the infrastructure our economy will need if we are to 
prosper, paying pensions when the big boomer cohort retires – on top of the 
cost of servicing the astronomical debt the governments (especially in the UK 
and the USA) have built up. There is now much mistrust between the generations, 
and much of what has gone wrong with our economy is a failure to get the 
balance right between generations.
 

 Of course, youngsters today haven't a clue of the kind of austerity those 
living in the fifties, sixties and seventies had to endure. I'm sure they have 
a completely false picture of what life was *actually* like back in the day. 
Let me assure you life could be very hard and insecure. On the other hand, here 
in the UK, most of the wealth is now concentrated in property - as the old have 
the property, they have the wealth; whereas the young are being priced out of 
the property market thanks to the terrifying rise in property prices and so the 
young are having to pay ludicrous prices just to rent a shitty bedsit and can't 
even save enough for a deposit for a mortgage .
 

 Now here's the thing: I strongly suspect that a lot of the talk about the 
generation gap (which has a basis in fact as I've just myself outlined) is a 
deliberate attempt by the ruling elite to stoke up envy between the 
generations. The point of that strategy is that it deflects attention from 
those who are *really* responsible for the mess we're in - the bankers, the 
politicians, the hangers-on. The talk of striking a balance *between* 
generations deflects us from seeing that what is needed (indeed, what has 
*always* been needed) is to transfer wealth from the rich to the disadvantaged.
 

 (I define the wealthy as anyone who earns more - or who has possessions worth 
more - than Seraphita.) 
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, <sharelong60@...> wrote:

 When we have beautiful weather here, temps around 70, I understand why people 
are willing to put up with the high cost of living in CA. OTOH I find the four 
seasons very appealing, just maybe a more moderate version. Some of those lists 
about best places to retire list San Diego as having the most ideal weather in 
the US. But do palm trees change color in the fall?! 
 

 
 
 On Tuesday, October 22, 2013 1:05 PM, Bhairitu <noozguru@...> wrote:
 
   
 Back in the 1980s folks headed back from the cities to the small towns around 
where I grew up and bought the local restaurants and turned them from greasy 
spoons to haute cuisines.  We even had "lobster nights" at the restaurant in 
the wide spot in the road where I grew up.  I doubt if they have a Starbucks 
there yet but maybe the local grocery has an automated espresso maker.
 
 However I watched via Internet as house prices in even that small town got 
ridiculous in the late 1990s and early 00's.
 
 On 10/22/2013 10:16 AM, Share Long wrote:
 
   Some boomers have found mid sized towns with universities to be just the 
right balance of small town affordability and big city liveliness. Moving to 
such was a trend at one point. Even places with horrendous weather, like Iowa 
City, found themselves on lists of ideal retirements spots.
 
 
 
 
 On Tuesday, October 22, 2013 11:50 AM, Bhairitu <noozguru@...> 
mailto:noozguru@... wrote:
 
   
 Maybe because lattes are cheaper at Starbucks in dusty little towns?
 
http://behindthewall.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/10/22/21078363-starbucks-caught-in-chinas-crosshairs-over-posh-prices?lite
 
http://behindthewall.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/10/22/21078363-starbucks-caught-in-chinas-crosshairs-over-posh-prices?lite
 
 On 10/22/2013 09:10 AM, Richard J. Williams wrote:
 
   Perhaps no urban legend has played as long and loudly as the notion that 
“empty nesters” are abandoning their dull lives in the suburbs for the 
excitement of inner city living. 
 
 "...more expensive, denser cities like New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles 
and San Jose, Calif., saw the worst boomer flight, suffering double-digit 
percentage losses."
 
 'Where Are The Boomers Headed? Not Back To The City'
 http://www.forbes.com/boomers-headed-not-back-to-the-city/ 
http://www.forbes.com/sites/joelkotkin/2013/10/17/where-are-the-boomers-headed-not-back-to-the-city/
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 





 
 
 
 






 

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