Chicago Sun-Times

Age does matter, especially when it comes to running the country

- GENE LYONS eugenelyon­s2@yahoo.com

Whenever I encounter words like “boomer,” “Gen X-er” and “millennial” used to explain political behavior, it’s normally my practice to quit reading. Cant invariably follows. As anybody old enough to remember the Kennedy assassinat­ions and the Vietnam War understand­s, so-called “boomers” have been bitterly divided about every significan­t issue in American politics all their lives.

So no, knowing my birthdate tells you nothing about my politics.

Only that I’m too old to be president. Not that I’m in danger of being drafted, understand. For that matter, there’s never been a time when I wouldn’t have regarded a politician’s existence as an unmitigate­d horror. Glad-handing and grinning like an opossum all the time? Giving after-dinner speeches every night? Forever seeking to ingratiate oneself with strangers? Little solitude and no privacy? No thanks.

No matter. I’m definitely over the event horizon. So that’s my answer to a question recently posed by the Boston Globe’s Robert Weisman: “Question for Democrats: Are some candidates too old?” Illustrate­d by photos of Sen. Bernie Sanders (77), former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg (76) and former Vice President Joe Biden (76), the article asks if it’s “ageist” to think the presidenti­al train has left the station without them.

Supposedly, Weisman writes, “a growing movement of older Americans bristles at the notion that gray hair is a deficit.” He quotes Ashton Applewhite, author of “This Chair Rocks: A Manifesto Against Ageism,” to the effect that “any call for young blood without evidence that an old person is incompeten­t or that a young person can do the job better is like saying a black person can’t do the job, or a woman can’t do the job.”

Easy for Applewhite to say; she’s only 66. I’ll tell you what’s “ageist.” Life is ageist. The calendar is ageist. Elsewhere, the Globe cites Eric Schneidewi­nd (73), who recently stepped down as AARP president, to the effect that “(s)aying people are ‘too old’ is reflective of an outmoded idea.”

I do hope that Schneidewi­nd is enjoying his well-earned retirement.

So anyway, here’s the deal: My hair’s not gray, it’s white. I’m one of those shaggy-haired Irish guys like Tip O’Neill or Teddy Kennedy, if you’re old enough to remember them. I’m marginally younger than all three putative septuagena­rian Democratic candidates. I’m in excellent health — I’ve always been lucky that way — and good physical condition. Never smoked, always stayed in shape. Physiologi­cally younger than my years. All that.

And still too damn old to be president. Anybody in their mid-70s who tries to tell you they don’t feel the transmissi­on slipping as time’s winged chariot draws nearer is definitely bluffing. Maybe your judgment’s sounder, but your memory’s not what it was, solving complex problems is more difficult, and new ideas are harder to absorb.

Maybe I’m not too old to write newspaper columns or even to serve as a Supreme Court justice, like 85-year-old Ruth Bader Ginsburg. (Although I’m guessing she’s hanging on out of patriotic duty.) While hardly comparable, both are sit-down jobs well-suited for old duffers with their wits about them.

Think of the wise counselor, Mentor, in Homer’s “Odyssey.” Or of Casey Stengel, managing the New York Mets.

Although, come to think of it, “The Old Perfesser” himself retired at 75.

So should all three presumed over-75 Democratic candidates retire from presidenti­al politics? Actually, there’s little point in discussing Bloomberg, who has no constituen­cy outside lower Manhattan and zero chance. According to Edward-Isaac Dovere in The Atlantic, however, Biden and his handlers believe that having Bernie Sanders in the race “might help neutralize the issue of Biden’s age.”

Well, it says here that the amiable former vice president is definitely kidding himself. By now, Sanders is a cult candidate, overshadow­ed by younger members of the progressiv­e movement he did much to promote, bless his cantankero­us heart. Elizabeth Warren, Kamala Harris, Cory Booker and possibly Sherrod Brown all share Bernie’s appeal to progressiv­es without his advanced age and grating personalit­y.

Also, few establishm­ent-oriented Democrats — they’re still permitted to vote — are ready to forgive the personal attacks that helped Trump pillory the 2016 Democratic nominee as “Crooked Hillary.”

Meanwhile, Biden remains 76 years of age and pondering the grueling two-year physical and emotional ordeal that is an American presidenti­al campaign, which, assuming all went well, would see him celebratin­g his 82nd birthday in the White House.

Always assuming the job didn’t kill him first.

I had a talk about this with an eminent brain scientist recently, a bit younger than myself and contemplat­ing his own retirement. He mentioned differenti­al rates of physiologi­cal aging, the strain of the office, intellectu­al decline, the prevalence of hidden transient ischemic episodes and a couple of other aspects of aging I’ve forgotten.

Then he said, “Honestly, I couldn’t vote for anybody over 75.”

Honestly, nobody should.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Former Vice President Joe Biden, who is considerin­g running for president, is 76.
AP FILE PHOTO Former Vice President Joe Biden, who is considerin­g running for president, is 76.
 ??  ?? Bernie Sanders, 77
Bernie Sanders, 77
 ??  ??

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