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Alastair's avatar

It is ironic that the generation famous for saying "don't trust anyone over 30" has become the one that won't step aside at 80! It seems that the youth-worship was only for when they were the youth...

I do think that the Boomers were probably failed by their elders in that the Greatest Generation taught them hard work but not the deeper joys of stewardship, i.e. the discipline of planting a tree you will never eat from. They were instructed in all the virtues of effort and organisation but not the pleasure of being succeeded and knowing it will grow beyond you. Historically to watch a protégé surpass you was effectively the point of leadership; for the Boomers, they feel it as a threat to their identity. Though perhaps the Boomers didn't lack that teaching, but just set it aside. The 60s was all about a rejection of loyalty, deferred gratification, and self-effacing in favour of liberating oneself.

As is so often the case the economic shifts might have been a significant factor in all this. The Boomers parents operated in system where you trained your successor because that was your retirement (ergo, the better the protégé the better the pension!). The Boomers made a system where the value you extracted while you were there was all value you'd ever see, which actively disincentives investing in the future. There is probably a bit of "founder syndrome" that bleeds through from this where Boomers see themselves as founding the modern world and so they need to be rewarded commensurately.

From my perspective the real heart of the issue is that they refuse to grapple with aging itself. I've seen many surveys that find a majority of Boomers in their late 60s and 70s describing themselves as middle-age (something so delusional it borders on mental illness). Mentorship and succession are, to a degree, memento mori practices wherein you train someone to replace you because you've accepted that you'll need replacing. If you genuinely believe you're middle-aged at 75, there's no urgency to prepare anyone.

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What the cutting locust left,

the swarming locust has eaten.

What the swarming locust left,

the hopping locust has eaten,

and what the hopping locust left,

the destroying locust has eaten.

Joel 1:4

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Tom's avatar

At a certain level, I wonder how much of the Boomer tendency to just keep on going is due less to hubris and more workaholism. It's pretty plausible that someone like Wintour would absolutely dread the prospect of retirement and not having anything to do, so instead of finding a hobby she just keeps on doing what she's always done.

Now, this sort of thing isn't unique to the Boomer generation, but what makes things different is that especially among the elites, the Boomers, thanks to technological advances, are not only considerably longer-lived than previous generations, but are also capable of working for much longer as well. Had Wintour been born a century earlier, she would likely have retired sometime in her sixties.

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