Kuwait Times

Generation Z taunts old-timers with 'OK boomer' jibe

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Call it an eye-roll from the “snowflakes” to the old-timers they blame for climate change and student debt. “OK boomer” is the new rallying cry for Generation Z, and the meme-friendly putdown is suddenly everywhere. “The reason it’s resonating so well with Gen Z kids right now is that it’s such a simple, short response, and it’s not aggressive,” explains 18-year-old Nina Kasman, who sells “OK boomer” goods on Redbubble.com.

“It’s passive. It means I’m not going to give you a full response because we know boomers haven’t been listening to full explanatio­ns anyway,” the student tells AFP. “OK boomer” has become the retort of choice for Gen Z kids exasperate­d with the views of their elders — and a potent pushback at those who dismiss today’s youth as easily offended “snowflakes.”

It is fueling countless memes on video app TikTok, emblazonin­g hoodies and t-shirts, and was even used by a member of New Zealand’s parliament this week, forcing the older establishm­ent to take notice. “Boomer” is shorthand for baby boomers, a term used to describe people born during the uptick in birthrates that followed World War II. It generally means anyone born between 1946 and the mid-1960s when the United States enjoyed considerab­le prosperity. But “OK boomer” refers to “a certain mindset,” not specifical­ly the age group, says Kasman, who attends Northern Illinois University. “People who are older who are fighting for the environmen­t — those people are not necessaril­y boomers in this context,” she adds.

Climate protests

The pithy phrase took off early this year as a comeback to older social media users, mostly white males, who attack the “safe spaces” and “trigger warnings” promoted by many young people in the name of inclusiven­ess and respect. “We’re just kind of tired of being put down for the things that the younger generation enjoys or believes in,” says 19-year-old Everett Solares, who blames boomers for some of the ills affecting her generation. “We’re trying our best to bounce back from it,” adds the University of Alabama student. Generation Z roughly refers to those born after 1997. Millennial­s, also known as Generation Y, describes the group that came before — those roughly born between 1981 and 1996.

Both groups are regularly said to be paying the price for the excesses of their parents’ and grandparen­ts’ generation­s, when education was cheap, car ownership soared, and it was easier to find a job and buy a house. “It was possible to put yourself through college on a minimum wage job when the boomers were going to college, but that’s incredibly impossible now,” says Kasman. “We’re pretty upset about it.” Generation Z — to which climate activist Greta Thunberg belongs — has been driving massive environmen­tal protests around the world calling on adults to act to save the planet for future generation­s.

Thunberg regularly accuses older people of choosing to ignore scientists who largely agree that manmade warming is leading to a climate emergency. Twenty-five-year-old New Zealand MP Chloe Swarbrick used “OK boomer” this week when she hit back at another politician who heckled her during a speech about climate change. The catchphras­e gained mainstream traction last month when it was featured in The New York Times — and has triggered plenty of heated online debate with some older people retaliatin­g.

Death knell?

Star Trek actor William Shatner, who at 88 is not a boomer, called the jibe a “childish insult” after a Twitter user directed it at him.

American radio host Bob Lonsberry was heavily criticized after he compared “boomer” to a racial slur. The 60-year-old said it was “the nword of ageism” in a since-deleted tweet. “It’s natural for generation­s to have conflicts as they vacate positions of power and move into positions of power,” Cornell University sociologis­t and baby boomer Thomas Hirschl tells AFP. “But we have more serious issues of contestati­on in our society today: increasing economic inequality and climate change — these two things are existentia­l threats,” he adds.

In the meantime, both Solares and Kasman are keen to cash in, selling “OK boomer” merchandis­e on online marketplac­e Redbubble that ranges from t-shirts and hoodies to water bottles, stickers and socks. Solares has made around $50 since launching her products two weeks ago but hopes to make more to help pay her student loan. For Kasman, it’s more about being part of a movement and “taking back power” for her generation. But will the phrase hang around for long? “Very often when major media organizati­ons get a hold of some new bit of youth slang, that marks the term’s death knell!” linguist and lexicograp­her Ben Zimmer said. — AFP

 ??  ?? Indonesian students participat­e in a carnival to celebrate the country’s 74th Independen­ce Day, in Banda Aceh on August 18, 2019. — AFP
Indonesian students participat­e in a carnival to celebrate the country’s 74th Independen­ce Day, in Banda Aceh on August 18, 2019. — AFP
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 ??  ?? Teenage Swedish activist Greta Thunberg attends a climate action rally in Los Angeles.
Teenage Swedish activist Greta Thunberg attends a climate action rally in Los Angeles.
 ??  ?? William Shatner
William Shatner

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