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A Friend Stopped By | 11/19/2008 9:20 am

Baby Boomers Beware of the Obama Administration? by Myrna Blyth

By Myrna Blyth

Anyone who has read a women’s magazine in the last 25 years has most likely read the work of Myrna Blyth, who weighs in at wowOwow with this provocative piece. Myrna is the founding editor of More magazine, was the longtime editor-in-chief of Ladies’ Home Journal, and was senior editor for Family Circle magazine. She is the chairman of the President’s Commission on White House Fellowships. She has received many awards including the Matrix Award from New York Women in Communications, Inc., the Woman of Achievement Award from the New York City Commission on the Status of Women, and was named Publishing Executive of the Year by Advertising Age. Currently she writes for The National Review Online.      

Which is the only prejudice that remains acceptable? It is ageism, of course. Voters in the recent election unashamedly told pollsters that age was more of an issue for them than race. More voted against McCain because of his age than voted against Obama because of his race. And nobody seems to think this is a prejudice that even deserves much comment.

Pundits keep lauding Obama’s victory not only because of its inclusiveness but because it is a generational change. Obama, though technically a baby boomer, is being touted as our first post-boomer president. He comes in after two leading-edge boomers who both had seriously flawed presidencies.

It is Obama’s youthful telegenic appearance, his coolness, his understanding of the power of the Internet that are important parts of his appeal to the public and, especially, to the media which needs the young, the hip, the photogenic. There is very much a sense of out-with-the-old and in-with-the-new, and in this case the old seems anything or anyone 55-plus. In fact, one wonders if in the future 55-plus will be the sell-by date for any presidential candidate. 

This election also seemed to reinforce what we already know, that we now live in a society where experience doesn’t matter very much. Both Hillary Clinton and John McCain went down claiming experience counted. It didn’t. Hillary’s harking back and McCain’s reference to even fairly recent history turned people off.  

Americans have had great affection for “the greatest generation,” the generation of Obama’s grandparents, those who grew up during the Depression and fought World War II. Their sacrifices and their selflessness are still admired. But there is a lot less affection or respect for baby boomers, especially leading-edge boomers. McCain’s defeat was the final shrugging off of the sacrifice of the Vietnam vets.     

Add to that baby boomers tend to be as full of ageism as anyone younger. It is boomers who, while still humming “Forever Young,” reach for the Botox, the Restalyne and the Viagra. They have tried, somewhat desperately, to stay ageless rather than become mature. Part of the problem with ageism now is that not only do the young not respect their elders any more, those who are older do not respect themselves.

In a way, ageism is not different from racial prejudice. African Americans always acknowledged that they internalized the negative attitudes society had about them and their physical appearance. It is the same way boomers feel about their wrinkles and themselves. But in the last years the media has helped change the image of black Americans. Karl Rove was right. The Huxtables of the Bill Cosby Show helped prepare the mindset for Obama’s election. But the media, which does not even measure the appeal of their shows to viewers over 49, has no interest in creating flattering portraits of older Americans.          

This young-old divide can become a major problem for the future. Boomers are still the largest segment of the population. And, they are the ones whose 401ks have been decimated. Part of our economy’s two-decade dizzying growth spurt was fueled by the free-spending two-income boomers. Now they will become the major recipients of government programs. During the next decade more and more of them will be getting Social Security and Medicare. More and more of them will be dealing with serious or chronic money-draining illnesses.  

How will the public react if this generation, for which there is little fondness, becomes our society’s greatest financial burden? And how will the Democratic party, which owes its recent victory to its enormous appeal to young voters, deal with the increasing needs of the boomer generation? Perhaps that depends on whether ageism, the prejudice we don’t even have be embarrassed about, becomes even more pervasive.  

114 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Marjorie C.
Frannie Em: The Harvard School of Public Health has an interesting study entitled ‘Reinventing Aging’, this is the url: http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/chc/reinventingaging/Report.pdf On the fifth page, the first sentence in the paragraph is: Approximately 77 million babies were born in the United States during the boom years of 1946 to 1964, … They are a group to be reckoned with.
By Marjorie C. on 11/20/2008 11:59 am
Frannie Em
Hi Marjorie How is the weather up there? We had a nice warm sunny SoCal day. I wish it would rain. The smoke is settling down which is great. Thanks for the report on we boomers. Took a quick peek and back to cleaning out closets. De-cluttering and unburdening myself of what is not necessary. Husband is at a meeting tonight and my son and I just take it easy. Yes, everyone is going to have to reckon with the boomers once we all start to retire. If the market keeps doing what it is doing I will never be able to retire. I wonder if PE Obama is going to come out with a Treasury Secretary so maybe the traders will settle down a bit.
By Frannie Em on 11/20/2008 8:24 pm
Marjorie C.
Frannie Em: How is the weather up there? UGH !! We have been having January weather. Strong, cold winds out of Canada… we blame Canada for our cold weather, the Montréal Express, etc. Makes us cranky and tough. However, the vision of a nice warm sunny SoCal day warms my heart… for a moment. De-cluttering: I’ve got to make up my mind to do that. too. I have way too much furniture and momentos. When the time comes, my kids will either set fire to the place or circle it with dumpsters. Neither have a nostalgic bone in their bodies. Grumble, grumble. You say, …if PE Obama is going to come out with a Treasury Secretary so maybe the traders will settle down a bit. By now you know he has, and it did settle the markets a bit. Earlier, I had hoped to see the DJA hit 10,000 by year end, now I’ll take ‘no more sliding’ as a blessing. If this thing ever turns around, there will be some fortunes made by those who know what and when to buy cheap.
By Marjorie C. on 11/22/2008 8:14 am
Delete This
Loved your post too, Lily.
By Delete This on 11/20/2008 2:20 am
rocky rocky
Hi Lily. I understand your frustration. But don’t give up on Wikipedia. It is only a good source to begin getting information. Usually, if a wiki article is good, it provides lots of links where one can go for primary, secondary, etc sources. The beauty of Wiki and why it works fairly well is that people who regularly read and use it also may elect themselves to make corrections; that is, it encompasses the aggregate whole (is that redundant?) of the knowledge of its millions of users. It’s very very cool IMO. One more thing: Even if a book is called the Encyclopedia Britannica or The World Book or any other encyclopedia, doesn’t mean that the information in that book is correct either. Those articles are usually written by “experts” and reviewed by other “experts” but (ask the flat-worlders) even “experts” can be off a bit. BEST TO YA, R.
By rocky rocky on 11/20/2008 9:38 am
Mary NSB-Florida
As a corporate observer, the employers will always need employees that are willing to put in the hours and get the work done. Everyone will find it necessary to keep up with technology. Far too many of our children are graduating with a sense of entitlement and an inflated sense of their own value. As parents we didn’t prepare enough of them to face competition and they will find it difficult to survive. As in times past, everyone needs to be more self-sufficient.
By Mary NSB-Florida on 11/19/2008 11:34 am
Marjorie C.
Lily: True baby boomers learned to go back to the land. Just curious, what is a true baby boomer? I know a ton of people born in the 50’s, and not a one fits your description. In my town, it is against the zoning ordinances to own farm animals in residential zones. Can’t even own fenced-in chickens for the eggs they produce. And my town isn’t unique.
By Marjorie C. on 11/19/2008 1:56 pm
Patty E
No, maybe you haven;t……but as one who is drawn to experiencing something other than what my parents did——I explored the country from coast to coast—-I have seen PLENTY of residential zones with farm animals……..you should get out, Marjorie, and travel the country a while…EVEN in the City of Houston, where for all practical purposes,, there is NO Zoning, you will find cows/cattle/Ducks/chickens all over inside the city limits. As a matter of fact, some of the residents purposely get themselves cattle, a cow, or sheep, or chickens, or ducks-, or horses—not just for the food and fun, but because having farm animals reduces their property taxes! It is not unusual to be sitting at a stoplight, in the middle of commercial or residential areas, and see a cow fenced in the corner of a yard—on purpose! noIS no d
By Patty E on 11/19/2008 7:55 pm
Patty E
Same here…my life is simple, but I am not. I once lived in a commune, during what some called ‘an identity crisis’—I called being young and free and living in Hawaii. Just last week, I wondered if we would go back to the communal way of living, now that we are in such financial straits, as a country—living with many, reduces the costs for all….and I ran across a website link, that suggested we were. I clicked on it and discovered that there are indeed ‘planned communities’ being built, all around the country, where all the residents eat together—-although they have their own separate dwellings, in most of them, but all in the same community ‘space’ or houses. Not only do they eat together, they have a geat room, where they gather together all day if they want. The children of one couple, are treated as the children of all the couples or families…for example… Because of my allergies, I too make my own bread—-thank goodness for Kitchen Aide! I also grow my own organic veggies, and I grow fruit as well. My neighbors on both sides, help with the gardens in all ways—-but then they get some of the veggies, too…and I don’t have to break my back planting, weeding, picking, and preserving…we all do it, whenever it is needed…and we all reap the rewards. I have the land—-they do not. In my town, and many others, there is a barter site, on the internet, where I was able to get someone to paint one of my walls ‘artistically’, and in exchange, he wanted some books I had in my library—-no money exchanged, and I have a very nice work of art on my wall in the hallway….. I have found that many other countries, people live as though they were in a small community, sharing and helping the neighbors—-and the strangers. It is not that easy to discover in America—people don’t allow themselves to do so…I guess….
By Patty E on 11/19/2008 11:15 pm
Marjorie C.
Patty: …you should get out, Marjorie, and travel the country a while…EVEN in the City of Houston, where for all practical purposes,, there is NO Zoning, you will find cows/cattle/Ducks/chickens all over inside the city limits. I do travel the country: I was in Houston in August, will be in Florida next week. About Houston, I did notice exactly what you explain: a cluster (I hesitate to use the word herd) of cattle on an open lot. My son’s explanation was the same as yours. There were even cattle at NASA. In the northeast where houses are built on half-acre lots, it’s just not allowed.
By Marjorie C. on 11/20/2008 6:58 am
Cheryl P
My mother (81), I (56) and my daughter (19) all believe it is time for the old guard to step aside. Excuse me, “ageism”? And I’m getting tired of the rants about children these days. My daughter and her friends are socially responsible young adults, working part time jobs while they complete their educations, performing community service voluntarily, getting involved in local politics and voting. I know many more young adults like this than I do the ones I hear about all the time in the news and in forums like this.
By Cheryl P on 11/19/2008 12:11 pm
Delete This
Cheryl, Me too. I am proud of my mother, myself and my son that we are educated, unmaterialistic, politically aware and socially active. My son is representative of a generation I know to be exceptional and resembling anything described by the negatives here. and the accomplishments of The Greatest Generation—my mothers and Boomers—mine are astronomical.
By Delete This on 11/19/2008 12:36 pm
Delete This
that’s ‘and NOT representing anything described by the negatives here.’
By Delete This on 11/19/2008 12:37 pm
Frannie Em
Cheryl I know many like that as well. My youngest son has great friends, I see them work together and accomplish much. I have many nieces and nephews that are very responsible, and have great heads on their shoulders. I also know and have worked with many troubled teens, as well as some very spoiled teens. They are also portrayed on reality tv in such a way that we question. I think what many people are referring to are the “millennials” http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/11/08/60minutes/main3475200.shtml
By Frannie Em on 11/20/2008 1:29 am
Delete This
Baby Boomers are a problem if that is your narrow frame….they created the richest, most dynamic, inventive country in the history of the world. People are their worldview. Obama’s worldview is more like that of the Milleneal Generation—-the great generation that we Boomers raised. Highly educated and valuing smarts, born digital and social and pairing those to solve the world problems. He is the first Internet/social networking president, has created a massive online universe that can be a galvanizing force that will give him his own Blackberry cutltural ‘Tipping Point” and abilty to by-pass traditional media. Instead of Fireside Chats he will be giving YouTube Chats. The Old Fogies are the sour people who are so myopic that they see little clearly…including oppountities and that we are in a period of change that is more monumentalthan the Industrial Age and moving at warp speed. The ones that will be left behind are those that think with 19th/20th minds….the Wikinomics whether Boomer, Gen X or Gen Y are riding the wave to tomorrow together…proud to have a president that gets. Proud that we saved the world from more of McSame.
By Delete This on 11/19/2008 12:26 pm