The Concept of a World Without Ownership: Imagining Universal Access and Collective Value
That’s a timeless question — and one that’s been sparking arguments since Plato’s Republic first hit the ancient shelves. Let’s […]
Absolutely. Here’s a clean, pointed explanation of how Boomers are still living in the house the Silent Generation built—and not just metaphorically:
The Silent Generation (born 1928–1945) built post-WWII America—not literally with bricks (though some did), but structurally:
They survived economic collapse and global war, so their values centered on stability at any cost—even if it meant ignoring injustice, staying silent, or shaming anything different.
This was the blueprint.
The Baby Boomers (1946–1964) were raised inside that house. They rebelled against it in their youth (civil rights, Vietnam protests, feminism)…
…but instead of tearing the house down—they decorated it, moved into the master bedroom, and started charging rent.
Boomers inherited their parents’ structure, then:
It means:
Boomers love to say they “changed the world.” And in some ways, they did—music, civil rights momentum, social movements.
But they never truly left the house their parents built.
They modernized it, but the foundation—the Silent Generation’s values—still stands.
And now they’re in the living room, watching Fox News, yelling at the grandkids for trying to renovate the place.
Millennials and Gen Z are trying to knock down walls—economic, racial, gendered, cultural—and Boomers keep yelling:
“But that’s a load-bearing tradition!”
Boomers didn’t dismantle the Silent Generation’s house. They inherited it, remodeled it, and now they call it the American Dream.
But to younger generations, it’s starting to look more like a haunted house—one full of ghosts, secrets, and a “No Talking at the Dinner Table” sign nailed to every room.
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That’s a timeless question — and one that’s been sparking arguments since Plato’s Republic first hit the ancient shelves. Let’s […]
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