The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

OK, tail-end boomer

- Tom Purcell

I don’t blame millennial­s and Gen Z for mocking baby boomers with the trending “OK boomer” meme.

I’ve had my issues with baby boomers, too.

“OK boomer,” reports dictionary.com, “is a viral internet slang phrase used, often in a humorous or ironic manner, to call out or dismiss out-of-touch or close-minded opinions associated with the baby boomer generation and older people more generally.”

It’s sarcasm used to tell baby boomers that they’re too critical, condescend­ing and dismissive toward younger folks’ anxieties and concerns.

I feel those younger folks’ pain.

Technicall­y, I’m a boomer, born near the tail end of that generation, which began in 1946 and concluded in 1964 – but that 18-year span is far too lengthy to accommodat­e a single generation.

Sociologis­t and author Jonathan Pontell argues that Americans born between 1954 and 1965 are actually part of their own Generation Jones.

Boy, is he right. I have little in common with front-end boomers.

When front-end boomers were indulging in drugs and free love, we tail-enders were doing our homework.

While they were traveling the country in VW Beetles and partying at Woodstock, we were doing our chores.

While they dreamed of changing the world, we dreamed of getting collegiate business degrees and goodpaying jobs.

Front-enders have criticized, dismissed and condescend­ed to us tail-enders for years.

It’s human nature: Older people always complain that younger people aren’t doing things right.

If you’re young, don’t be so sensitive. Who else do old fogies have to complain about?

I know younger generation­s worry about their sixfigure college loans, climate change and many other issues – I know you blame preceding generation­s for these woes.

But this tail-ender doesn’t see gloom and doom. Sure, we need to address lots of things, but the truth is there’s never been a better time to be alive – there is evidence that the world is doing better than ever.

Our economy, envy of the world, is expanding.

Technologi­cal innovation, already massive, is increasing rapidly. I can’t wait to see the solutions – for disease, poverty, climate change – it will bring in the not-so-distant future.

According to Cafehayek. com, today’s typical middleclas­s American lives better than billionair­e John D. Rockefelle­r did 100 years ago.

He didn’t have air conditioni­ng, sophistica­ted medical treatments, safe, fast travel and limitless dining and entertainm­ent options.

He certainly didn’t have social media to create humorous retorts that silence whole generation­s.

Here’s more to be hopeful about: Bill Gates’ charity reported in 2018 that childhood deaths fell from 12 million in 1990 to 5 million in 2017. More than 90 percent of children now attend primary school. The proportion of people living in extreme poverty declined from one-third in 1990 to one-tenth.

Younger generation­s have much to look forward to. They’ll do lots of good work with powerful tools. We all should agree on that.

Hey, I’m a tail-end boomer who’s heard plenty from my elders about shortcomin­gs. If you’re young, I hope you’ll take my well-intentione­d optimism about your generation in that spirit, rather than dismiss it with a trendy catchphras­e.

But I can understand why you might meet my optimism with a quick “OK tail-end boomer.”

I just hope you’ll be as understand­ing when your generation one day goes codger and your children’s generation dismisses your generation with a humorous catch-phrase of their own.

Hey, I’m a tail-end boomer who’s heard plenty frommy elders about shortcomin­gs. If you’re young, I hope you’ll take my wellintent­ioned optimism about your generation in that spirit, rather than dismiss it with a trendy catch-phrase.

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