We boomers remember the magic dust, brownies, and freaky imaginary police raids that Cheech and Chong introduced us to. Now, they're pushing brownies off again-brownies baked with aging boomers in mind. (Via Althouse)
According to Dennis Prager's insightful opinion, we baby boomers warped this society, and we continue to do so as the years roll by. Indeed my experiences with this our despicable generation confirms Prager's thoughts. As a group boomers display a haughty, presumptuous attitude second to none. They whine, and disguise their demands as suggestions, all the while plotting a fit if one fails to listen to their suggestions. Prager calls our attention to, in my opinion, the most severe scourge boomers brought on our American society-the drug culture. What innocently began as an invitation to drop out and turn on has now developed into a formidable criminal culture, involving billions of dollars and threatening millions of lives. Prager offers his apologies exclaiming:
And a real apology to those of you hooked on drugs. While your choice to do drugs is your responsibility, it was our generation that romanticized them and made them cool. "Mind expanding" we called them. But it turns out that they don't expand minds, they destroy them. Sorry.
Dean Barnett proves a point about the Boomer generation:
Baby Boomers sometimes remind me of that tiresome woman at a cocktail party who keeps talking about herself and then finally comes up for air and says, “But enough about me. What about you? What do you think about me?”
BABY BOOMERS OWE THE WORLD AN APOLOGY?
According to Dennis Prager's insightful opinion, we baby boomers warped this society, and we continue to do so as the years roll by. Indeed my experiences with this our despicable generation confirms Prager's thoughts. As a group boomers display a haughty, presumptuous attitude second to none. They whine, and disguise their demands as suggestions, all the while plotting a fit if one fails to listen to their suggestions. Prager calls our attention to, in my opinion, the most severe scourge boomers brought on our American society-the drug culture. What innocently began as an invitation to drop out and turn on has now developed into a formidable criminal culture, involving billions of dollars and threatening millions of lives. Prager offers his apologies exclaiming:
Continue reading Prager's apologies here.Posted by jeffreymark at 10:43 AM in Baby Boomers, Commentary | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)