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Leonard Steinhorn

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Blame Wall Street, Not Boomers

Posted: 10/07/11 04:45 PM ET

A hemorrhaging economy. A tough and frustrating job market. Downward pressure on wages. Housing out of reach. High energy costs. Government strapped for cash. Questions about our global standing. Wondering about the American Dream.

That describes America all right, but it's the America of the late 1970s and early 1980s, when our country truly did seem to be falling apart.

In our media-centric world it's easy to get caught up in the moment and think that things have never been this bad and our problems are worse than at any time in history.

We like to think that our economic woes are unique to our time, that ours is the first era in which our democracy seems broken, that this is the only time in our history when the next generation may be worse off than the previous generation.

What we need is a little perspective. And a little understanding of who's responsible.

Dial back three decades and America's economy and preeminence seem far more precarious than what we believe it to be today.

Home mortgages hit a high of 18 percent and inflation spiked at nearly 15 percent, eating away at our flattening wages month after relentless month. In 1982 and 1983, unemployment stood at over 10 percent for almost a year. In the late Seventies, gas prices skyrocketed as OPEC held our economy hostage to its production quotas; Americans hoarded gas, unheard of in a time of peace, and idled in line for hours just to fill their tank.

The only major riot of 1979 took place not in an inner city but in the suburban heart of the American Dream, in Levittown, Pennsylvania, where truckers and just plain middle-class Americans torched gas stations and hundreds were sent to jail. Nine states called out the National Guard to quell gas violence. Americans joked at the time that they better take their vacations close to home because there might not be enough gas to get back.

Writing after the Levittown riot, columnist George F. Will observed, "Suburbia's symbol, the cul-de-sac, expresses America's mood on the eve of the 1980s. A cul-de-sac is, after all, just a fancy dead end."

Chrysler needed a bailout to stay afloat, we were driving obsolete and poorly manufactured gas guzzling cars, our industrial base was rusting and rotting, and American workmanship was ridiculed worldwide. Cities and school systems had no money to pay their bills, and New York teetered on the verge of bankruptcy.

Americans were so nervous about their economy that they sought refuge in gold, driving it to what was then a record price of $835 an ounce. Jewelry stores in New York City began to look more and more like Middle Eastern bazaars with people rushing in either to buy gold or to unload whatever they had, which included heirloom jewelry and gold-filled teeth. "They came in with bloody roots and all," reported one jewelry store owner.

In 1978 we learned about the toxic wasteland that was destroying the community ironically named Love Canal, and the Environmental Protection Agency later reported that there were 30,000 hazardous dump sites scattered around the country that were poisoning our land, 1,200 of which posed serious and immediate threats to people's health.

We also had just ended an unjustified and unjustifiable war that sent nearly 60,000 young Americans and millions of Vietnamese to their death. It was a war that exposed official lies and cover ups, followed by one president's personal war against his enemies that ended in his resignation. Our political system seemed broken.

It was a time of doubt, decline, limits, stagflation, and discontent, or as one journalist put it, we had entered an era of "free floating grievance." Seagram's captured the moment in an ad for its gin, "Defy mediocrity," as if drinking their product would make us feel better about ourselves.

The great bulk of baby boomers were in their twenties during these years, trying to grasp adulthood in an America of shattered dreams and shuttered hopes. Contrary to the popular image of boomers living amid constant comfort and prosperity, they instead entered a job and housing market that was among the worst in memory. Indeed history would show that for most boomers, wages have flat-lined since those years, spanning most if not all of their working lives.

The common perception at the time was that boomers would not have it as good as their greatest generation parents did. Missing from the American conversation, wrote a Washington Post reporter in 1979, "is a sense of that boundless hope and optimism one generation has had for the next in this country -- wanting our kids to have it better than we did."

It all sounds quite familiar, doesn't it?

Today there's an entire cottage industry of critics who blame our economic woes and political paralysis on baby boomers. The narrative goes as follows: boomers are a singularly spoiled and selfish generation that is the first in our history to leave America worse off for its kids. "The baby boomers, I believe, have a lot to answer for," said New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman, a constant critic of the boomer generation.

Yet no one blamed the Greatest Generation for our collapsing society in the 1970s, for the decay of our industrial base, for undermining faith in our political system, for creating doubt about the future, or for sending their children off to a brutal and pointless war. Today they are a celebrated generation, their flaws forgotten and their faults overlooked.

If anyone deserves blame for what boomers went through then and what their kids are going through now, it's not any particular generation but rather the captains of industry and finance from all generations whose dedication to bettering our nation is only a byproduct of their dedication to enriching themselves. If we win while they win, great. But if we lose while they win, that's just our hard luck. Somehow they never seem to lose.

Over the last thirty years, the barons of capital have won a great deal while the rest of us simply struggle to stay in place. We've seen a remarkable growth in American productivity in those years yet the only ones benefiting are at the top of the economic ladder. Wages and wealth have stagnated for most of us since the 1970s, yet the rich have gotten vastly richer and income inequality is the greatest since the Depression.

In this grueling recession we're struggling to overcome, the only ones who haven't taken a hit are the lords of finance and the top tier corporate managers whose salaries continue to shatter records. As the Washington Post recently documented, median pay for executives at America's largest companies has more than quadrupled since the 1970s, whereas average worker wages have dropped more than ten percent (all in inflation adjusted dollars).

Or to put it another way, CEOs today make 343 times the pay of average American workers, a stunning increase from 1980 when it was 42 times the average worker's pay. And to drive the point home, the wealthiest 300,000 Americans collectively earn almost as much income as the bottom 150 million Americans.

Whatever else comes of the protests on Wall Street and at Federal Reserve locations around the country, they are posing a challenge to the prevailing ideology in America that unbridled capitalism is the best way to run an economy. Something clearly is wrong with our current version of American capitalism, and it has been for a while. As a nation we must ask how it can be made to work better for the vast majority of the American people.

Now in challenging the economic status quo the protesters may be labeled as present day radicals. Ever since the Reagan Eighties our culture has deemed markets infallible, executives wise, and investment bankers hotshots and geniuses. As a culture we've accepted this ideology hoping that it would lift all boats. But it hasn't.

In fact what's truly radical is not the protest on Wall Street, but the income and wealth inequality that ever since the 1970s has been tearing at the very soul of the American nation.


Originally published on PunditWire.

 
A hemorrhaging economy. A tough and frustrating job market. Downward pressure on wages. Housing out of reach. High energy costs. Government strapped for cash. Questions about our global standing. Wond...
A hemorrhaging economy. A tough and frustrating job market. Downward pressure on wages. Housing out of reach. High energy costs. Government strapped for cash. Questions about our global standing. Wond...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
padrushka
question authority
08:21 AM on 10/10/2011
I am pretty tired of finger pointing. blaming is such a part of american culture and frankly,it wastes time and fails to address problems. it is as if once we find someone to blame we are off the hook.. instead of trying to find a person or reason to blame,let us look for the wellspring of the problem and try to solve the glitch,it is all wall streets fault,deregulation,obama,hitler, civil war,loss of the gold standard,no regulations, world war two, civil rights,unions, etc..the list is rather endless....whatever it is, most problems have solutions if people want to work as a team to solve them. we have created a big mess and it will be much worse before it gets better if we don't work as a team to put humpty together again.
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Byron Renty
Progressive Thinking
04:01 PM on 10/09/2011
We must impose a huge tax on outsourcing to bring jobs back, we need a trans action fee on speculators to stop driving up gas and othere prices artificially, we must rebuild our infrastructure and build a highspeed rail system from coast to coast that will make jobs for up to ten years. Pay for it by taxing billion dollar businesses 50% for 10 yrs. It's time corporations kick in for the American people! How much money is enough? How much money should you make without helping the people that bailed you out? How many people should go hungry so you should eat caviar and drink champagne? How many schools have to close before we invest in our children again? Greed is killing this country and our economy, when will enough money be eough?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimtodd
Unrepentant child of '60s
03:15 PM on 10/09/2011
Any article that quotes George Will and Tom Friedman has to be considered a satire.
01:11 PM on 10/09/2011
Inequality needs to be addressed, but Democrats are not doing it. The GOP refuses to acknowledge it.

It is an open political door that will bring political success but will cost the support of big money.

If neither party acts, a new party will rise.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lrobb
Southern Rational
12:55 PM on 10/09/2011
The majority of boomers have the same flat-lined middle class income as everyone else. If you want to blame someone or something for this state of affairs, consider the federal government. No, I am not going where you think.

Back in the 1970's a little known agency called the Defense Advance Research Projects Administration funded research on a program designed to let educational institutions and government agencies talk to each other easily in real time. At the time few could grasp the overwhelming implications. Today we call it the internet.

Suddenly world-wide communication was easy. Big companies rushed to get modems. We discovered foreign markets we never knew existed. Most thought free trade was the next great thing to propel America far beyond everyone else. Oops, we goofed.

Now America finds itself in the uncomfortable position of being at the top of the economic heap just at the turn of an era. Those who can take advantage of world trade are doing very well indeed. The rest not so much.

Unless we figure out a way to make American goods and services economically competitive with those made in Viet Nam (who knew!) and Indonesia flat-lined incomes will start looking good. What we are seeing is a slow inexorable slide to worldwide wage equivalence.

I suggest we get the union activists out of the Midwest and send them to the Far East. The quicker wages there go up, the quicker ours will stabilize.
03:15 PM on 10/09/2011
But not before Mexico has to build a huge wall to keep us out.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
midwestgirl1960
12:19 PM on 10/09/2011
Sorry but the older boomers have controlled government for the last 30 years and it was the older boomers who destroyed this country. Yeah I am a boomer but I was to young to march on Washington war protests, or march with MLK. I watched as John Bobbie and MLK were killed. Watched the first earth day and EPA regulations work now this same group who marched to get these protections for us vote morons in who will destroy what has protected us for a generation.

The older boomers became what was known as the Reagan revolution they became what they hated and march against in the 60's THE ESTABLISHMENT. It has and always was about them and what we seen when the tea party marched which was the same group of older boomers worried about themselves you know their medicare their SSI but those of us under 55 to H E L L with you.
02:39 PM on 10/09/2011
I guess I somehow missed the day in 1980 when the Greatest Generation suddenly stopped voting and turned the reins of power over to us younger folks. I voted against Reagan twice.

You make a huge mistake assuming that we think and march in lockstep. We're as diverse as any other generation, and if the country has gone in the wrong direction we have had help from our elders and from GenX and GenY.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gene Conn
Common sense isn’t common at all
08:23 AM on 10/10/2011
My guess is im close to your age. I am a younger boomer. I was just young enough to miss the marches and protests unfortunately not the tail end of the war.

The flaw in your thinking is that somehow the boomers did all the voting for the last 30 years, I can assure you they didn't. My parents vote (they are 80 years old) and my kids vote. The mix of voters for the last thirty years span the generations before and since the boomers. You are being short sighted if you try to pin all of the problems for the last 30 years only on the boomers.


All the generations before and since the boomers are responsible for where we find ourselves today. If you look at the protestors I believe you will see more than just one generation. It will take all of us working together to move forward. I believe that is what we are seeing.

Courage.
01:47 PM on 10/10/2011
I'm what you'd call an older Boomer, and I'm disheartened to see not only the blaming of our generation, but the attempt to split us even further by age. I'm outraged at what the Ryan plan proposes to do to the 'under 55's.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JonShank
Changing the world one person at a time...
11:21 AM on 10/09/2011
boomers destroyed this country
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demisfine
Often correct, NEVER right.
11:37 AM on 10/09/2011
Blaming them for being born?
Not very Christian of you.
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SaveWillowpark
12:16 PM on 10/09/2011
Ironic your bringing christianity into something like this. Need I remind you that in America we have freedom of religion as well as freedom from religion?

Besides, what is Christian about not paying people for their work, children and families starving or not having enough money to buy warm clothes for winter? Right now I'm looking at the foot hills that are now peaked with snow knowing that as soon as that snow hits the valley my kids flip flops and sneakers will no longer adequately protect them or me when we go outside. This makes getting to and from school and the playground a struggle. I don't remember having that struggle growing up with my boomer parents. Now, despite the fact that we actually make more money than most of our peers it is a problem for us. Of course my parents spent $10 to fill their tanks and I pay $70 twice a week. (No busses to my kids school anymore-no budget for that)

America is not a christian nation.
11:07 AM on 10/09/2011
Truth is this country has been in decline for some time. My parents had it better than I did, we have it better than our son does, do you actually think boomers created this situation? It's like those who think climate change can be reversed by recycling and preventing us from using our fireplaces.
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E V
12:05 PM on 10/09/2011
That's the most assanine anology I've ever heard. Essentially, what you're saying is there is nothing anyone can do about the decline of the economy so we should just accept it and go along for the ride?
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SaveWillowpark
12:08 PM on 10/09/2011
The world has gone to hell in a hand-basket in the past 30 years. Just look at what the boomers fell for in terms of nutrition. In the past 30 years the American diet has become 61% processed food which is killing us! I'm not saying that the boomers said, hey, lets destroy America. What I will say is that they allowed the TV and all of its propaganda to permeate our society to a degree that people just don't know the difference between fantasy and reality any more. i.e. News vs. Entertainment. Frankly, Boomers were mislead to all of our peril and now many of them are still in the dark. They don't realize that they've been duped and now many of them are jumping on the tea bagger bandwagon thinking that this will save us when in reality that is just all another corporate financed diversion to keep us from really doing anything to take back our country.
03:45 PM on 10/09/2011
Could the move to processed food have something to do with the fact that the two-earner household is now the norm and few people have time to cook? The move to two-earner happened because of skyrocketing energy costs, rampant inflation, and stagnant or dropping wages.

I'm amused how you pin this all on one generation as if no one else ever votes or watches television.

I hate the TEA Party with a passion, and I will point out that there are just as many younger TEA Partiers as older ones.
10:36 AM on 10/09/2011
You must be sleeping if you believe in the American Dream today. We're in the land of No-opportunity. People struggle for years and never advance, salaries are stagnant. The old expression, paying your dues doesn't apply anymore, people don't know what it means.
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09:12 AM on 10/09/2011
Good article. But still, what happens when the Baby Boomers leave he workforce, who will replace them both in terms of numbers and experience? What will happen when they stop spending? The next generation doesn't have the numbers to do so,
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gavrielle
Empty... Empty... Empty...
10:00 AM on 10/09/2011
Right behind Gens X and Y is the largest generation in US history. The millenials dwarf the boomers and every other generation preceding them. The oldest of them are just entering college now. The youngest were born last year. The question isn't who's going to replace the boomers, the question is will we have enough jobs for all of them.
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E V
12:06 PM on 10/09/2011
Excellent question.
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kokobell616
Your micro-bio is pending approval
07:49 AM on 10/09/2011
did 30 years ago. We want what we had as young adults. The problem now is that the credit spicket has dried up. Now we are understanding that flat wages for 30 plus years has consequences. Deregulation, tax breaks, low interests rates, limited Government. These were tools used to sustain the American experiment. The problem as I see it is that limited Government is less able to protect us from ourselves.The tool box is running out of tools to continue to fix a damaged society. To fight a reverse engagement only to recapture the same ground seems somewhat less that honorable. Yet when the battle has turned and losses are mounting is it not best to retreat, regroup, reequip and reengage I feel that is where our nation is at. The framers of the constitution allowed for trial and error. I believe they expected successes and setbacks. The rules for us to live by were set. Grown out of those rules are the laws we live by today. As a nation, we have the ability to change law. That is the freedom that is truly American. The vote is the only tool left to us citizens to change the way our country is to proceed. Intelligent, informed, engaged voters are what this nation needs. The future of our nation may well depend on what the next decade or so contributes.

Excuse the poor composition.

High school drop-out.

Whew... I think...um well err

OK Im done
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kokobell616
Your micro-bio is pending approval
07:13 AM on 10/09/2011
It is true that there is blame enough to go around. It is also true that we, err I am tired of hearing the same line over and over. Free market capitalism is the greatest path to wealth and prosperity yet to be devised. That statement may be true to a point. At some point there needs to be something made. A service rendered. Something of value to base the markets on. That there has been a trend towards wall street markets goes without saying. In the 50's 60's and 70's from what little I know about the markets it seems to have been a marginally effective source for some people to create wealth. As production boomed in most sectors of the economy during those years wall street seem to accept its roll as above the fray elitist. The late 70's brought the need to generate massive amounts of cash into the social consciousnesses. What developed was turning wall street into one huge casino. Deregulating financial institutions, Deregulating markets, Deregulating industries country wide. When the time had come to put the restraints of regulation back on we as a nation lost our way. We liked the fast easy money. We liked what it could buy us. We coveted our possessions. We even went so far as to obtain credit cards to pay off credit card debt.The struggle now seems to be how can we continue living la vida loca when we earn less in wages now than our parents>>
01:06 AM on 10/09/2011
There is a next to nonexistent line between American capitalism and fascism.
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vietveter
Wish ididnt know now what ididnt know then
04:59 AM on 10/09/2011
That may be true.

There is a next to nonexisten­t line between the

crooked republicants and the crooked democrats

put an end to the two party tyranny


ELECT LIZ WARREN - President 2012
11:19 AM on 10/09/2011
Right on, but I'm afraid she won't run in 2012. We need another viable candidate for 2012. I am hoping americanselect.org or the Occupy Wall Street movement will come up with somebody.
10:34 PM on 10/08/2011
Actually the early boomers are the ones running Wall Street and the banks now. The boomers (the boomers born prior to 1958) and Wall Street today are synonymous; therefore both are the root of the economic trouble today. In fact, there are so many boomers out there that have the "me generation" mentality (a less harsh way of saying many are selfish). Many of these boomers behave like the 1970s American auto industry (feverishly ignoring what cars the consumers are interested in buying and at the same time being indifferent about building quality cars and safe cars). Leonard Steinhorn explains thing quite eloquently with this article.
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vietveter
Wish ididnt know now what ididnt know then
05:01 AM on 10/09/2011
YOU are right

but

we are not all like that
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gavrielle
Empty... Empty... Empty...
10:05 AM on 10/09/2011
At least the ME presupposes that there's a YOU, and possibly even a WE. Gens X and Y are the I generations. There is no YOU, there is no WE, there is just the ONE whose needs must be met. Let us hope the Millenials see things differently.
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SaveWillowpark
11:14 AM on 10/09/2011
That couldn't be further from the true. Gen Xer's are concerned about the we not the me. We are concerned about maintaining the commons. Where as my parents think it's every man for themselves. They are content watching us toil and do not even seem to realize that the deck is stacked against us. They act like we are lazy because we cannot provide for our kids what they provided for us growing up. Never mind the fact that wages have not increased in 30 years, the cost of gas is eating up every bit of our salaries, public schools no longer cover things like music and athletic costs so we have to pay for that too. Oh, did I mention that textile costs are higher so we have to pay that much more for our kids clothes. We can't get ahead!! (This is with employment)

Gen X'ers know that it takes a village to raise a child and we're all cool with working together. Many of us are even cool with paying our taxes to maintain the commons and share risk.

It's our parents generation who started all of this. Fine, you don't want to call them selfish? Call them oblivious then. Hopefully they will wake up and help us flush all these corporate leaches from our political system and get a new congress capable of building a new great society and fulfilling the contract that America has made with her people.
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E V
12:10 PM on 10/09/2011
Gen-X "They are disenchanted with politics but work hard for charitable causes, events and institutions that build their individual and collective relationships, perhaps seeking to replace what they missed in their early family life"

Millenials: "Early indications are that they will be a Civic generation. If so, this may hold great promise for the future of philanthropy and the nonprofit sector in American society. "


1.Eastman, Charles L. "Philanthropic Cultures of Generational Archetypes. Charles H. Hamilton & Warren F. Ilchman, Cultures of Giving II: How Heritage, Gender, Wealth and Values Influence Philanthropy. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1995.
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victorlove1
I Build I Create I Play I Am
10:28 PM on 10/08/2011
If republicans gain control of both houses and the presidency , they will finalize the 30 year corporate movement into a full blown Plutocracy.

I am not lying, unless Websters is wrong!