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The Aging of Aquarius - Boomers can take credit for the 60s (LAUGH ALERT)
Washington Monthly ^ | January/February 2006 | Jamie Malanowski

Posted on 01/15/2006 10:06:43 AM PST by Chi-townChief

With the oldest of the Baby Boom generation now starting to turn 60, it seems inevitable that we will soon be inundated with books and TV specials assessing the impact of this huge cohort on American society. The Greater Generation, by American University professor Leonard Steinhorn, can be considered a very sympathetic brief for the defense. No doubt some opportunistic right-wing scribe is energetically pitching Regnery Press on the merits of prosecuting Boomers for their various crimes against humanity, even as some third party is pounding out an even-handed assessment. Hopefully at some point, Friends of the Forests will step in and remind everyone that a generation is an awfully large category to make meaningful generalizations about, and perhaps we should spare the trees. But for now, back to Leonard Steinhorn.

Readers will recall that it was Tom Brokaw's great good luck as a journalist, as a reporter of news, to uncover that back in the 1930s and 1940s, a large mass of young Americans had to suffer, a) the trials and deprivations of the Great Depression, then b) fight a terrible war —a “world war” in the parlance of the time—against countries bent on global domination. Not only did Brokaw have the courage to bring to light this virtually hidden chapter of our history, but he or an associate had the marketing savvy to title the book The Greatest Generation, an irresistibly flattering phrase which sustained the book through many printings and multiple sequels. I'm not sure, but I think Brokaw meant the phrase sincerely, if not exactly scientifically. It's not like he sat down and assigned coefficients for hardships and accomplishments, or calculated what the ratio between opportunity and outcome should be, or figured out whether one should subtract for embarrassments and shortcomings, or actually divide by them, all in an effort to come up with an equation that would yield a Greatest Generation Coefficient by which we would rank Founders and Boomers, World War II troopers and Gilded Age inventors, Civil Warriors and Manifest Destineers. No, Brokaw just grabbed a pithy, vivid title, and skipped off to the bestseller list.

Nor has Leonard Steinhorn gone the scientific route, but he certainly wants to jump into this Greatest Generation discussion. However, it's not immediately clear where he means to land. He doesn't seem to argue that Boomers are greater than the Greatest Generation. After all, he didn't call his book An Even Greater Generation, with the implication that we have superseded our elders. He called it The Greater Generation, which implies that he might be satisfied coming in second to The Greatest Generation, comfortably ahead of The Great Generation, The Good Generation, and The Generation That Needed Improvement. He even starts off the book giving props to the World War II-sters. “No one should ever doubt the valor and sacrifice of the World War II generation.... This was the generation that sacrificed their blood…suffered through the Great Depression…bravely answered the call…a horrid and heroic struggle.... Normandy and Iwo Jima…they deserve every accolade they've been given.”

However, if any of you thinks the next word could possibly be something other than “but,” I have a bridge in Brooklyn I'd like to sell you.

Steinhorn's “but” is a big one, and justly aimed. He points out that the Greatest Generation came home from World War II to an America that was racially segregated, restricted by sex roles, bigoted against gays and environmentally ignorant, and that it wasn't until the flowering of the Boomers in the sixties that progress in these areas became a reality. And in that progress, he stakes the claim for his generation's superiority.

Steinhorn is an ardent and impassioned Boomer-booster, and in an era when liberal has become a label that even liberals wear reluctantly, he is providing a very useful service. The change in America that has accompanied this generation's march through life has been profound, and because America changed, the world followed. For all the sideshows that encumbered the '60s—the sex, the drugs, the music, the hair—the ultimate legacy of the period is a Great Moral Leap Forward, such that America is now more publicly committed to equal opportunity, diversity, fairness and environmental preservation than at any time in our history. And the fruits of this progress are among our country's greatest ornaments.

But to say that these triumphs belong exclusively to the Boomer generation is to give my contemporaries more credit than is deserved. Assigning credit for historical development is a lot harder than deciding which pitcher in a ballgame deserves the win. George H.W. Bush may have been president when the Berlin Wall fell, but that doesn't mean that he ended communism. The fact that Boomers came of age in this era of social progress doesn't mean that they should get all the credit. For one thing, there were an awful lot of Boomers who spent the sixties surfing, listening to the Beach Boys, and limiting their participation in the events of the era to growing sideburns. There were, for that matter, even Boomers who were antagonistic to the great movements of the period — for instance, George W. Bush. In addition, a lot of the great leaders and heroes of the Boomer generation weren't Boomers. Martin Luther King Jr. wasn't a Boomer. Bob Dylan wasn't. The Kennedys, Lenny Bruce, Barry Commoner, Ralph Nader—none of them were Boomers. And it's not as though they were stray prophets wandering around until Boomers discovered them — they were the spear tips of large bodies of people who shared their thinking. And beyond that, lavishing credit on the Boomers undervalues the great moral struggle that our parents underwent to open their hearts and their minds, and actually change. Many Boomers accepted their politics with as much ease as it took to memorize the lyrics to “Eve of Destruction;” it was our parents, obviously with greater or lesser degrees of success, who had to overcome life-long ways of thinking to accept a black person as their neighbor, or a woman as their boss, or a gay man as their son.

Still, Boomers deserve a lot of credit, and Steinhorn does a matchless job of dishing it out. “In the 1960s,” he eloquently writes, “both Baby Boomers and Greatest Generation Americans witnessed the same society and its many flaws. One made the choice to accept and defend the status quo. The other made the choice to advance the principles of democracy, equality and freedom... to end the hypocrisy of proclaiming but not observing our national ideals, and to address the gap between the promise of American life and the reality of that life for so many Americans. The Greatest Generation deserves every bit of credit for protecting democracy when it was threatened; but Baby Boomers deserve even more credit for enriching and fulfilling its promise.”

But Steinhorn is entirely too forgiving of this generation's shortcomings. We may have been behind the political and social fervor of the sixties, but we were also behind the narcissism of the seventies and the materialism of the eighties and after. Since the Reagan administration, when Boomers shed their shag vests and disco shoes for power suits, Boomers have enthusiastically bought into the corporate values that dominate our lives. Boomers have backed Bush, and his tax cuts, and his war (of course, we've also been against Bush, his tax cuts and his war—that just goes to show the poverty of making sweeping generalizations about generations.) The point is that history is an eminently forgettable subject, and if Steinhorn thinks Boomers don't get enough credit now for making the world a fairer, more decent place, wait until the only things our sons and daughters remember us for is a whopping deficit, global warming and endless war.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: babyboomers
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I'm a Boomer myself and when I read through this, the first thought that comes to mind is "Man, what bullshit!!!" I'll agree with a point the author touches briefly on: the Boomers were very effective at taking credit for the heavy lifting done previously by the G.I. and Silent generations.
1 posted on 01/15/2006 10:06:47 AM PST by Chi-townChief
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To: Chi-townChief

Dear Boomers: hurry up and DIE ALREADY! WE'RE SICK OF YOU!

(I was born in '61, but that doesn't make ME a boomer - it makes me "Generation W"! :0))


2 posted on 01/15/2006 10:11:50 AM PST by Appalled but Not Surprised
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To: Chi-townChief
Boomers have enthusiastically bought into the corporate values that dominate our lives

Now there's Jane Fonda's,John Kerry's,Ken Kessey's, Timothy Leary's,John,Paul,George & Ringo's,Elton John's,Abbey Hoffman's,Martin Scorceses',Bill & Hitlery's,Bella Abzug's,Gloria Steinem's,Alfred Kinsey,Margaret Sanger's epitath.

3 posted on 01/15/2006 10:14:37 AM PST by joesnuffy (A camel once bit our sister.. but we knew what to do.. we gathered rocks and squashed her!)
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To: Chi-townChief
Dig to find the nugget in the offal:

Boomers have backed Bush, and his tax cuts, and his war

::whining:: It's Bush's War, it's Bush's war!

Memo to Ms. Malanowski: Screw yourself.

4 posted on 01/15/2006 10:15:19 AM PST by Old Sarge (In a Hole in the Ground, there Lived a Fobbit...)
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To: Appalled but Not Surprised

Sorry to break it to you, but 1946-1964 is the Boom. You're a boomer whether you like it or not.


5 posted on 01/15/2006 10:15:36 AM PST by linda_22003
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To: Appalled but Not Surprised

Gee, that's not nice. Can't I at least stay around long enough to help destroy Hillary's dreams of the White House?


6 posted on 01/15/2006 10:15:44 AM PST by doug from upland (NEW YORK TIMES -- traitorous b*st*rds)
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To: Appalled but Not Surprised
Dear Generation W

We outnumber you, get used to us, we're not going anywhere

Booooooomer Baby

7 posted on 01/15/2006 10:16:17 AM PST by apackof2 (You can stand me up at the gates of hell, I'll stand my ground and I won’t back down)
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To: linda_22003

You beat me to it.


8 posted on 01/15/2006 10:16:29 AM PST by Chi-townChief
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To: joesnuffy

There are only two actual boomers in that long list. :)


9 posted on 01/15/2006 10:16:41 AM PST by linda_22003
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To: Chi-townChief
Readers will recall that it was Tom Brokaw's great good luck as a journalist, as a reporter of news, to uncover that back in the 1930s and 1940s, a large mass of young Americans had to suffer, a) the trials and deprivations of the Great Depression, then b) fight a terrible war —a “world war” in the parlance of the time—against countries bent on global domination. Not only did Brokaw have the courage to bring to light this virtually hidden chapter of our history.............

ROFL!
Good Old Brokejaw. What courage.
LOL

10 posted on 01/15/2006 10:20:49 AM PST by Fiddlstix (Tagline Repair Service. Let us fix those broken Taglines. Inquire within(Presented by TagLines R US))
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To: Chi-townChief

The--let me get this straight--"Great Moral Leap Forward?" From the 1960s? Okay, you really want to place morality and the 1960s together? But if you're going to do that, I guess it makes sense to compare it to a communist revolution.


11 posted on 01/15/2006 10:25:49 AM PST by CheyennePress
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To: Chi-townChief

Never much noticed it before that none of the boomers' leaders were boomers. The boomers are followers. I was born near the end of WWII and not quite a boomer I noticed when growing up how each year younger than "us" were softer and more pliable.


12 posted on 01/15/2006 10:26:28 AM PST by Poincare
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To: Poincare

"I noticed when growing up how each year younger than "us" were softer and more pliable."

Why, thank you (from a 1955'er). I do try to keep up with the moisturizer. :)



13 posted on 01/15/2006 10:28:00 AM PST by linda_22003
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To: apackof2

LOL!


14 posted on 01/15/2006 10:29:21 AM PST by Howlin
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To: linda_22003

No offense intended, of course. Hardship does have an effect on character. You can't blame someone if they grew up in Peace and Prosperity for not having enough hardship. (Although some of us did seek it out.)


15 posted on 01/15/2006 10:33:39 AM PST by Poincare
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To: linda_22003
I'm 1954 and I'm sassafraaaing these Generation Whine kids that write this stuff.

BTW, did you notice all the young kids following those old democrat goats leaving the hearing room during the Alito Confirmation shows on C-span?

16 posted on 01/15/2006 10:34:33 AM PST by Thebaddog (K9 4ever)
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To: Appalled but Not Surprised

I don't wish to die, nor do I wish to share responsibility for the great changes since 1960. Of four of the largest, only one(racial desegregation) is worth a crap.


17 posted on 01/15/2006 10:35:32 AM PST by steve8714 (Burn Peugeot, burn.)
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To: linda_22003
Those dates keep changing! Once, I was just on the outside of the Baby Boom. Now, I'm solidly in the end of it. Make up your mind, sociologists! I can't seem to find my identity.

:-p

18 posted on 01/15/2006 10:35:48 AM PST by Chanticleer (Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point. Lewis)
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To: Poincare

No offense taken; I was joking, of course. I do agree that we were raised with an artificially high level of protection from hardship; I asked my WWII vet father about that once, and he said, "that is the way we (collectively) wanted it to be for you", meaning my generation.


19 posted on 01/15/2006 10:36:44 AM PST by linda_22003
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To: Thebaddog

I heard the hearings on CSPAN radio, but did not see them, for the most part, so I missed that.


20 posted on 01/15/2006 10:37:21 AM PST by linda_22003
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