To paraphrase
@Boom Boom Apathy this is absolute bullshit. Okay, I guess not paraphrase, merely to quote.
I think there's this notion that Boomers had it easy and didn't do anything to advance personal freedoms. They were a big part of continuing to push for civil rights in the late 60s and early 70s. They are the ones that were instrumental in Roe v. Wade in 1973. They got changes to the Voting Rights Act to include features as the protection of voting rights for non-English speaking American citizens. They pushed for Native Americans to be able to run for office (which in some states, wasn't until 1980), etc.. etc..
They are also the ones that went to Vietnam, Lebanon, Kuwait and Iraq (people at tail end of the population). These boomers had it so good that many of them had to get a mortgage with 9-17% interest rates to purchase their own homes.
In the 70s and 80s, they had to deal with the highest inflation since 1960, way higher than we dealt with the last few years. They had to deal with gas shortages and huge lines at gas stations, not brought on by weather or a pandemic. In the 70s and 80s, they had to deal with civilian unemployment rates of 6-10%. The real decline in manufacturing jobs started in 1980, when companies started moving producing to other countries, which left many "boomers" struggling to find good paying jobs, etc..etc...
And, all my Boomer friends paid back their student loans.
True, but in fairness, the government was instrumental in creating the student loan problem, which most people fail to recognize. The Gov't used student loans to make money (more money they can spend), and then jacked up the prices of public education so that they make even more gov't revenue. It made it near impossible for people to attend a university without a loan, which then put them far behind the 8 ball.
For instance, at the university I went to, when I look at what the tail end of the baby boomers had to pay (that would be 1982-83) for the field I am in.
Back then:
Tuition/Room+Board: $4,406 per year.
Average Starting Salary after 4 years: $30,900
Today:
Tuition/Room+Board: $33,123
Average Starting Salary after 4 years: $72,904
So an almost 8X increase in the cost to get the same degree, but a staring salary only 2.5X. It was a LOT easier for people back in the 70s and 80s to pay off their student loans. I'm not absolving people today, just saying that the gov't stacked the deck against them.