Was the Silent Generation (1924-1945) hated on as much as Baby Boomers get hated on today ?

Homey the clown

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It seems like if you go online whether it's an online forum, Twitter, website or App comment section, it seems as if Baby Boomers (1946-1964) get hated on. From kids using the phrase " Okay boomer even though the person they're talking to may not even be a boomer, to Millennials and even some members of Generation X blaming every little thing on Baby Boomers.

It seems like Baby Boomers get blamed for everything. But was the generation that came before them which is called the silent Generation used as scapegoats as much as Boomers are today? Or did they get away with a lot of thing's because when that generation was running the country you didnt have social media. I read somewhere that Boomers have pretty much ran the country since 1995.
 

Kyle C. Barker

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It probably depends on which boomers you ask.

You'd look like a a real jackass if you are black Boomer dissing elders back then like millennials diss black boomers today(y'all didn't leave us nothing :damn: y'all a bunch of republican shills looking for butter biscuits :damn:)



Half of the white boomers were hippies who rejected their parents ideals and blind patriotism so there's that
 

Nobu

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Interesting. I never read anything about the Silent Generation, but it seems like they were hated on for being soft and conformist, hence "Silent". But once the larger Boomer cohort came around, Boomers were analyzed more closely as a generation and the Silent Generation was absorbed in criticism of Boomers in some cases.

The generation everyone stopped complaining about

The generation everyone stopped complaining about

And no, it’s not the Gen Xers.

These days, a battle of the generations is taking place in the culture. People wag their fingers at the just-coming-of-age Generation Z and their phone-dependence and inability to play outside. “OK boomer,” they reply.

Gen Xers mock the millennials for their avocado toast and selfies, while the millennials mock them back for their apathy. Then they both take shots at boomers regarding student loan debt and the cost of housing.

There’s a generation missing from this battle, despite the fact that they’re very much still around. It’s called the Silent Generation, and no one seems to have a problem them. But when they were first named as a generation, a lot of people did.

The Silent Generation (people born between 1925 and 1942)

The Silent Generation comes after the GI Generation (also known as the Greatest Generation) and before the Baby Boom Generation. They were born between 1925 and 1942 and came of age in an era of post-war prosperity. When they first entered adolescence and young adulthood they were on the receiving end of a barrage of societal criticism.

They were first characterized as a generation in a 1951 cover story in TIME. They were accused of being compliant, conformist, uninterested in world affairs.

The article summed up the accusations saying that “by comparison with the Flaming Youth of their fathers and mothers, today’s younger generation is a still, small flame.”

The Class of ’57
In 1957 LIFE ran an editorial titled “Arise ye Silent Class of ’57!” It was about all the speeches that were being given by older generations to graduating classes around the country that year.

The speakers “seemed to feel that many of the Class of ’57, unlike the gobbling rebellious young turks of the past, were a silent generation — perhaps even prefabricated ‘organization men’ only too eager to claim faceless and voiceless roles in a world whose besting sin was unprotesting conformity.”

One deplored the “growing cult of yesmanship.” Another, a generation “more concerned with security than integrity…with conforming than performing, with imitating than creating.” And another the “will to be accepted by the group at any price.”

Usually when older generations complain about “kids these days” they bring up faults like laziness, lack of responsibility, or wild immorality. But when it came to the Silent Generation, the kids were being criticized for being too agreeable, too pliable, and too silent.

The Silent Generation had been born during the depression and war years, but came into consciousness and independence in an age of stability, prosperity and modern comforts like TV, transistor radios, and sliced bread.

They brought words and concepts into the culture like teenager, rock and roll, bobbysoxers, going steady, and babysitter. They were babysitting the generation that would come to be called the boomers.

The Baby Boom generation was so comparatively huge in number and so much more analyzed, criticized and editorialized over that they ended up absorbing most of the Silent Generation in the popular imagination. Some of the figures we most associate with the boomer years were themselves from the Silent cohort. Figures such as Abbie Hoffman (1936), Jane Fonda (1937), Allen Ginsburg (1926), Bob Dylan (1941), and Stokely Carmichael (1940).

When criticism of the boomers began, the complaints about the silents were forgotten. In “battle of the generations” type commentary, they were generally lumped in either with the generation that came before or after.

In today’s atmosphere of back-and-forth barb-trading among the generations, the silents are left out. The class of ’57 probably doesn’t mind a bit.
 

Threnody

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Silent Generation's complete acceptance of physical abuse("its cool to hit your wife"), sexual abuse("somebody touched you? me too now shut the fukk up about it forever") and racism was abhorrent

Silent Generation wasn't hated on because disrespecting your elders was a death sentence....the whole neighborhood would have a green light to whoop yo ass
 

Shadow King

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There wasn't the same awareness and labeling of generational differences, or the same destruction of generational upward mobility 30 years ago so no.

And today they're 75+ meaning they've passed and are in their last days nobody is thinking about their great-grandfather's flaws.
 
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