Hey there overlap listener.
is Joshua.
You are listening to part two of the silver tidal wave podcast.
If you inadvertently joined us on this episode, go back and listen to part one of the silver tidal wave.
Thanks so much.
And here's the rest, the conclusion, the part two of the silver tidal wave, a boomer autopsy.
And when we finally did manage to scrape together enough experience to enter the professional workforce, we found this corporate landscape that had been stripped of
dignity.
The boomers had killed the pension.
They'd killed the idea of corporate loyalty.
They replaced the stable career with the gig economy.
And they looked at the basic concept of employment, which historically included health insurance, paid time off, retirement benefits, and they decided that it was too expensive.
So they invented the independent contractor loophole.
They created entire industries based on algorithmic exploitation.
They told us we were our own bosses, that we had the freedom to set our own hours, while a nap on our phone tracked our bathroom breaks and paid us sub-minimum wages.
And even for those of us who managed to land salary jobs, the culture of work had been poisoned, right?
They were expected to be available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
And the smartphone, which was supposed to be a tool of liberation, became an ankle monitor.
We were answering emails at 10 o'clock on a Sunday because the Boomer executive class had decided that the boundary between life and work was an outdated concept.
We became the burnout generation.
We were producing more value per hour than any workforce in human history, thanks to those technological advancements.
But our wages were completely decoupled from our productivity or reality.
All the surplus value we generated
was funneled directly to the top, into the stock portfolios of the people who had locked us out of the boardroom.
Then there's the housing market.
The student loan crisis is the shackle.
The housing market is the locked cell.
The fundamental promise of the American middle class was that your home was your sanctuary and your primary mechanism for building wealth.
But as we've established here so far, the boomers turned housing into a casino.
So by the time millennials had saved up enough scraps for a down payment, the game was over.
We found ourselves competing against
massive private equity firms buying up single-family homes in cash.
We find ourselves competing against boomers who were leveraging the equity in their primary residence to buy up investment properties.
So they became our landlords.
They bought the starter homes we were supposed to buy.
They slapped a coat of gray paint on the walls, installed some cheap vinyl flooring, and rented them back to us for double the cost of the mortgage.
We're currently spending 50, sometimes 60 % of our take-home pay just to keep a roof over our heads.
We are paying their mortgages.
We're funding their retirement cruises with our rent checks.
And when we ask for a functioning oh HVAC system or to repair the leaking roof, we are treated like ungrateful peasants bothering the feudal lord.
They use their political power to pass zoning laws that prevented new housing even from being built.
creating this artificial scarcity that guaranteed their property value would continue to styrocket while we were permanently priced out of the neighborhoods we grew up in.
And this brings us to the psychological warfare, the gas lighting.
This is perhaps, I don't know, it's the part that pisses me off the worst of all of this destruction.
It's the one thing to be economically exploited.
It's completely another thing to be told
that all of this exploitation is actually your fault.
The boomer media apparatus has spent a decade churning out these, you know, think pieces and daytime television segments dedicated to psychoanalyzing our financial despair, right?
They invented the avocado toast myth.
They looked at a generation drowning in non-dischargeable debt, facing a hyper competitive job market and paying exorbitant rent.
And the only thing that they could come up with
when they did the math was that it, well, it was our fault because we bought a $4 coffee or a piece of toast at a brunch spot once a month.
They called us the participation trophy generation.
You remember that?
They mocked us relentlessly for getting trophies for showing up, but they completely conveniently forgot who bought the trophies, who organized the leagues, who handed them
out.
We were children.
We didn't ask for plastic trophies, right?
They gave them to us to soothe their own parental anxieties.
Then they use those same trophies 20 years later as a cudgel to mock our fragility.
They want gratitude for a world that they actively dismantled.
They told us to walk into businesses, ask for the manager, give them a firm handshake, look them in the eye.
They gave us career advice that was 30 years out of date.
And we tried to explain that applications were handled by algorithmic filtering software.
that walking into a lobby would get us escorted out by security.
They just rolled their eyes and, you're entitled.
They refuse to update their mental model of the world.
They refuse to acknowledge that the ladder they climbed up had been pulled up behind them.
To acknowledge our struggle requires them to acknowledge their own complicity in making it, right?
And introspection is simply not a feature of the Boomer cultural operating system.
Look at the political landscape they created, right?
I mean, come on.
Look at the gerontocracy that currently rules our country.
They don't want to pass that torch, right?
They have clung uh to power in the Senate, in the House, corporate boardrooms, well into their seventies and eighties.
They continued to make policy that would dictate the future of a world that they won't be around to see.
They've refused to take action on climate change because the necessary transition would require a minor sacrifice of their short-term comfort and maybe their stock dividends.
They watch the oceans warm, they watch our wildfires spread, and the once in a century storm is now becoming an annual event.
And they shrug.
They've decided that environmental collapse
is an acceptable price to pay for a couple more years of cheap consumer goods at high corporate returns.
We grew up doing active shooter drills in our elementary schools.
We grew up watching towers fall.
We grew up watching our government spend trillions of dollars on endless foreign wars while our domestic infrastructure is crumbling literally into dust.
We're watching right now as the political system has become entirely captured by corporate interests.
A system where our votes feel meaningless at the sheer financial weight of corporate lobbying.
We are told to participate in a democratic process that has been thoroughly hollowed out by the generation that's still holding the reins.
So the millennial perspective is one of profound structural betrayal.
We were promised a society and we were handed an economy.
We were promised a community and we were handed a hyper competitive marketplace where human value
measured exclusively by economic output.
How much money that you can make for someone else.
The things that actually make life worth living right, like stability and community, a healthy environment, and time to actually raise a family have been stripped down and sold
off to the highest bidder.
We're the first generation in American history
to be worse off or projected, sorry, it's a projection, to be projected worse off financially than our parents.
And that's not an accident.
That is not some natural fluctuation of the business cycle, like they tell us.
That is the direct result of a systematic decades-long policy agenda designed to extract wealth from the young and transfer it to the old.
And the boomers didn't just pull the ladder up.
They set it on fire, right?
They sold the ashes.
And they wrote a bestselling book about how the youth today does not know how to climb.
Well, I don't know about you guys, but I'm tired.
I'm exhausted of the constant hustle.
I think all of us are exhausted by the gig economy.
We're exhausted by the crushing weight of the rent and the student loans, but mostly we're exhausted by the sheer arrogance of a generation that broke the world and demand that we
thank them for the privilege.
of sweeping up this glass.
They took a perfect economic engine and they drove it straight into a brick wall because they wanted to see how fast it could go.
And now all of us, all of us, we're sitting in this wreckage trying to figure out how to put the pieces back together while the people who crashed the car are sitting comfortably
in the back seat complaining that we're not driving fast enough.
So we've reached terminal velocity, right, of the boomer experiment.
We're in 2026.
So we're not talking about history anymore.
We're talking about the present moment.
We're talking about the structural collapse of the American system happening, I don't know, right outside your window.
So for years, economists and sociologists warned us about this silver tsunami.
It's going to be the title of the episode right there.
They warned us.
about the demographic bomb of the largest generation in history basically reaching retirement age all at once.
But they framed it as a logistical challenge.
They framed it like it was an accounting problem for Medicare and Social Security.
But what they didn't articulate was that the silver tsunami is not just a demographic shift.
It's a hostile takeover.
It was the final undeniable act of generational wealth hoarding.
And we are living in the splash zone.
Look at the absolute state of political institutions in 2026.
We are currently living under a gerontocracy that refuses to yield the stage.
The people making the laws, like the people setting the macro economic policies, the people deciding the fate of the climate and the digital infrastructure, are mostly in
their late seventies and eighties.
There's a few outliers out there.
Hi AOC, if you're listening.
I doubt she is.
They are clutching the levers of power with an iron grip because to let go would mean admitting that their time is done.
They treat the United States Senate and the corporate boardrooms like a country club where the membership fees are paid by our stagnant wages.
And what's the result of this geriatric death grip?
We have a government that is currently in a state of partial shutdown.
It's uh currently late February, 2026.
Vital federal agencies are operating with skeleton crews.
The people tasked with defending our cybersecurity are working without pay because octogenarians in Washington can't agree on a budget.
They are paralyzed by their own ideological purity tests, fighting battles from the Cold War era while the modern world burns around them.
People are being shot in the streets.
This political paralysis, right, is not a bug in their system.
It's a feature.
A functioning government might actually try
to redistribute some of that hoarded wealth.
A functioning government might try to tax the massive stock portfolios and the untouchable real estate assets that the boomers have stockpiled over the decades, right?
They can ensure the government remains broken.
So they vote for gridlock.
They vote for politicians who promise to defund the IRS so their estates will never be audited.
They use their massive voting block to protect their own entitlements while slashing the safety nets for everybody else.
They have created a system of luxury communism for seniors, where their health care and their monthly stipends are guaranteed by the state, while the younger generations are
thrown to the wolves at the free market.
Let's talk about the end game of the housing market, because this is where the physical reality of their greed is the most obvious.
So for decades, while we were told that the boomers, when they got older, they would downsize and move into smaller homes, and then we would be able to buy their starter homes
for our families.
We were told they would sell their four-bedroom suburban McMansions, right, and move into sensible condos and freeing up the housing supply for millennials who were trying to start
families.
I mean, it was a beautiful theory, right?
It was also completely wrong.
So the data this year shows that an overwhelming majority of older homeowners are actually choosing to age in place.
I was thinking about that the other day.
What a terrible thing to say.
Aging in place.
They're sitting in giant empty houses that they bought for the price of a used car in 1982.
They have locked in historically low mortgage rates or their houses are paid off entirely and they just simply refuse to leave.
Now look, that's their right.
The private property is theirs.
They paid for it.
But now they're asking that they stop paying property taxes and stop paying.
Like when does it end?
They've turned the American suburbs into sprawling, heavily subsidized retirement communities because they refuse to move.
The housing supply is artificially choked.
This drives the price of the remaining homes into the stratosphere.
Starter homes dead.
I mean, we know that it's been replaced by the dual income, no kids couple present, right?
Fighting a private equity firm for a tiny house that's three quarters of a million dollars.
While the boomers are sitting on trillions of dollars of home equity and they're using that equity to take out reverse mortgages or home equity lines of credit to fund their
lifestyles.
They're literally consuming the physical shelter of the next generation to pay for their third RV or river cruises.
And when they finally do die, those houses are not going to go to their children.
They're going to be liquidated to pay off medical debt or scooped up by corporate landlords who've turned the American dream into a
permanent rental subscription.
So what is the most terrifying aspect of the 2026 landscape?
Let's talk about the end of life industrial complex.
We were promised a great wealth transfer, right?
We were told that the boomers had accumulated $85 trillion in assets and eventually that money would trickle down to the millennials and Gen Z and it was like a carrot, right?
Dangled in front of us to keep us in that little race.
But the great wealth transfer is a myth, yeah.
Sorry to tell you.
The wealth is not gonna trickle down to us, right?
It's going to be intercepted by the healthcare industry because we built a medical system that's perfectly optimized to extract every cent of generational wealth before the monitor
flatlines.
The cost of memory care, assisted living, and end of life medical intervention has skyrocketed.
Private equity firms have spent the last decade buying up nursing homes and hospice networks because
They know exactly how much equity is sitting in boomer bank accounts and they have priced their services to absorb it entirely.
A generation that essentially refused to fund public healthcare when they were healthy is now spending millions of dollars of private wealth to keep themselves artificially alive
in the final months of their lives.
It's a hard topic, but I mean, this is real life.
The inheritance that was supposed to save millennials from their student loan debt is being funneled directly into the pockets of pharmaceutical executives and private equity
managers.
And the truth is boomers are going to die broke and they're going to make sure that we stay broke right along with them.
And look at the broader economy they're leaving behind, right?
In the previous episodes, we talked about, you know, the electric stack and the commodity war for Silicon.
We talked about how AI hyperscalers are buying up
you know, the memory and the storage on the planet creating hardware famine for the average consumer.
Who do you think owns the stock in those AI companies, right?
Who do you think is cheering for the massive corporate buybacks that result from replacing human workers with large language models?
It's the boomer investor class, right?
Their retirement portfolios are heavily indexed on the tech monopolies that are actively destroying our digital world.
And they don't care that a 32 gig of
kit of RAM costs like $400, right?
Because they're not trying to build a home network.
They're looking at their Vanguard and their fidelity statements and they're smiling as the dividends roll in.
They have created an economy of extraction.
They treat the United States like a rental car, you know, that they bought the supplemental insurance on.
They're driving it over every pothole.
They're grinding the gears.
They're ignoring that check engine light.
Go get your oil changed.
Because they know they get to hand the keys right back before the transmission drops out entirely.
Because they have financialized every other aspect of human existence, right?
They turned education into a debt trap.
They turned housing into a casino.
They turned healthcare into an extortion racket.
And now their final act, they're turning the very concept of the future into a luxury good that only they can afford to define.
The institutional decay of this is absolute.
The public trust is completely shattered.
How can you ask
a generation of young people to believe in the social contract when they can clearly see that the contract was rewritten to exclude them?
How do you ask a millennial to care about the national debt when they know that the debt was accrued to pay for tax cuts for a generation that refuses to retire?
We are living in the ruins of their prosperity.
We're trying to plant seeds in soil that has been salted.
by their greed.
And they love to call us cynical.
They love to write opinion pieces about how the youth of today lacks resilience and optimism.
Speaking of which, I'm like 42.
Like I'm not some kid.
They call me a kid still.
I'm 42 years old.
But our cynicism, my cynicism, it's not a character flaw.
It's just a survival mechanism.
And honestly, in a lot of ways, it's the only rational response to a society that has been structurally rigged against us.
We are cynical because we have eyes and because we can do the math.
We can look at the inflation adjusted wages from 1975 and compare it to the median rent in 2026.
And we can clearly see that a massive theft has occurred.
We're currently navigating a world where the primary objective of the ruling class is to protect their accumulated assets at all costs.
They will shut down the government.
They will let infrastructure crumble.
They will let the climate boil.
They will do absolutely anything to avoid taking a haircut on their investment portfolios.
They are the ultimate NIMBY generation and their backyard is now the entire planet.
They don't want wind turbines ruining their ocean views.
They don't want high density housing ruining their suburban aesthetics.
They do not want to change their consumption habits to make sure their grandchildren have a livable biosphere.
They just want to be left alone to enjoy the spoils of the empire that they sucked dry.
This is the reality of the end game, right?
It's a slow grinding attrition.
And there's no sudden collapse, right?
There's just this steady, and I keep waiting for it.
I don't know if you're waiting for it.
I keep waiting for this like, this is the thing.
This is that one thing.
This is the thing.
No, it's not the thing.
There is no sudden thing, right?
There's just this steady unrelenting squeeze on all of us.
We're watching the middle-class evaporate, replaced by this techno feudal oligarchy system.
where you're either an owner of capital or a desperate renter in need of basic necessities.
The boomers are the lords of this new feudalism.
They own the land, they own the stock, they own the political system that protects those assets.
But there is a fatal flaw in their design.
A society can't survive when it actively cannibalizes its young.
The economy is never going to grow.
when the people who are supposed to be buying the goods and sharing and starting the businesses are crushed under the weight of unescapable debt.
The boomers have built a massive glittering fortress of personal wealth, but they built it on a foundation of sand.
The institutions they hollowed out are now starting to fail.
The infrastructure they neglected is starting to collapse.
The climate they ignored is beginning to collect what's due.
They're going to spend the rest of their lives complaining about how nobody wants to work anymore while they sit in their empty houses watching cable news and wondering why the
service at their favorite restaurant is so slow, completely oblivious to the fact that the people who used to work there can no longer afford to actually live within 50 miles of the
city limits.
And they'll wonder why the younger generation seems so angry and alienated.
Not.
able to connect the dots between their own policy and our overall economic despair.
And this destruction of everything good was not an accident, right?
It was a choice.
mean, in a way it was a million tiny choices made over like five decades, all pointing in the exact same direction.
Short-term profit, greater than sign, long-term stability.
Individual accumulation over collective wellbeing, me over us.
The end game we are experiencing right now is just the mathematical conclusion of this philosophy.
Well, we've reached the final stage of our generational autopsy.
As promised, uh we're going to attempt something that might feel a little unnatural after the last, I don't know, hour of unrelenting criticism.
Let's look at the other side of the ledger, right?
We're going to balance the view because to simply say that baby boomers suck and they're a monolith of pure unadulterated evil would be both historically inaccurate and
intellectually lazy.
And we hate that here.
They were human beings operating within a specific set of historical parameters, right?
And during their time on stage, they did actually manage to build, invent, and pioneer some of the most fundamental pillars of our modern existence.
I know I want to be clear about this upfront, right?
Like this is not some sort of like redemption arc and whatever, right?
Acknowledging that the guy who burned down your house also happened to invent a really fantastic type of fire extinguisher does not mean that you have to forgive him for the
arson.
But if we're going to render a final objective verdict on the legacy of this generation, we have to look at the entire scope of their impact.
So let's start with the cultural and social revolutions of the sixties and seventies.
The boomers came.
of age in a society that was economically secure, but culturally suffocating.
The 1950s American utopia we talked about earlier was a highly sanitized, deeply segregated and aggressively conformist machine.
The boomers looked at the rigid gray, you know, flannel suit culture of their parents and they actively rebelled against it.
They pushed the boundaries of civil rights, women's liberation and human sexuality.
Well,
The foundational work of the civil rights movement was laid by the generation before them, to be fair.
It was the demographic weight of the young boomer that forced those cultural shifts into the mainstream.
They marched against an unjust war in Vietnam.
They demanded transparency from a government that had grown too comfortable operating in the shadows.
They shattered the suffocating domestic expectations placed on women.
opening up the workforce and completely redefining the American family structure.
They fought for the right to exist as individuals rather than just cogs in an industrial machine.
Then we have to look at the environmental movement.
It's a staggering historical irony, but the generation that is currently presiding over a boiling ocean and a collapsing biosphere is the exact same generation that held the first
Earth Day in 1970.
They looked at rivers catching on fire in Ohio and cities choking on industrial smog and they said, enough.
They were the political driving force behind the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency.
They passed the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act.
They realized that the post-war industrial boom was poisoning the well, and they took legislative action to stop it.
They saved the bald eagle, they banned chemicals that were eating a hole in the ozone later, and they introduced the concept of ecological conservation to the American
political mainstream.
And of course, technology, right?
As an engineer, I have to tip my hat to the architects of the digital age.
The boomers invented the PC.
They took computing power out of the massive air conditioned basements of the military industrial complex.
And they put it on a desk at your house or in your hand.
In this case, people like Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Steve Wozniak, and countless engineers at places like Xerox PARC completely revolutionized human communication.
They built the foundational architecture of the internet.
They created the protocols, the operating systems, and the Silicon Foundations that allows us to record this podcast right here and distribute it across the globe.
They envisioned a world connected by information, a decentralized web of human knowledge that could democratize power and elevate the human condition.
They built the tools that make the small stack survival strategy we talked about in,
previous episode possible.
And we have to acknowledge the art, the music, and the cultural explosion of their youth, right?
They gave us rock and roll as a global phenomenon.
They gave us the cinematic Renaissance of the 1970s.
They pushed the boundaries of human expression and created a cultural footprint that is so massive that we are still completely trapped by its gravity today.
Every time you stream a classic rock playlist or watch a blockbuster that follows
the exact structural beats of a Spielberg or a Lucasfilm, you are living in the cultural house that the Boomers built.
So they liberated the culture.
They created the environmental protection framework, and they invented the digital world.
That is a massive, undeniable list of historical achievements.
But this is exactly where the balance sheet becomes an indictment.
This is where the synthesis of their legacy reveals why they remain the absolute worst American generation in history.
Because the tragedy of the boomers, it's not that they failed to build anything good, as I previously explained.
The tragedy is that they built all of this miraculous, beautiful and transformative things, and then they immediately monetized them.
They locked them up and they closed the gates.
How does the generation that marched for peace and human rights turn into the generation that militarized our local police forces and built the largest private prison industry on
the planet?
How does the generation that held the first Earth Day turn into the generation that spent the last 30 years actively funding climate denial, think tanks, because regulating fossil
fuels might hurt their index funds?
How does the generation that invented the decentralized open source internet
turn around and build the techno-feudalist panopticon.
The same people who wanted a computer on every desk to liberate the human mind are now the executives using those exact same computers to track the keystrokes and the bathroom
breaks of their underpaid remote workers.
They took every single one of their greatest achievements and they figured out how to monetize it.
They took the cultural rebellion of the 1960s and they packaged it into a highly profitable advertising campaign.
sell luxury cars and expensive denim.
They took the environmental movement and turned it into corporate greenwashing, convincing us that we could solve systemic ecological collapse by simply buying a more expensive
branded reusable water bottle.
They took the democratizing power of the internet and turned it into a massive monopolistic walled garden designed to extract our personal data and sell our attention to
advertisers.
They did not just pull up the ladder behind them on the economy either.
They pulled up the ladder on their own ideals.
They traded their principles for property values.
They traded the revolution for a retirement portfolio.
The greatest generation fought a world war.
They survived a depression and then came home and taxed themselves at 91 % to build a thriving middle class for their children.
The millennial generation and
Gen Z are currently trying to navigate the collapse of the biosphere, the death of affordable housing, the 2026 hardware famine, all while carrying a crushing debt.
We're trying to build a world just to survive the structural decay that they engineered.
But the boomers are unique.
They're the only generation in American history that was handed a functioning, fully funded economic engine and chose to dismantle it for a short term tax cut.
They are the worst generation.
And not just because they were devoid of talent or innovation, they are the worst generation.
because of the staggering Delta, the change between what they inherited and what they chose to leave behind.
They failed the most basic fundamental test of civilization, the test of stewardship.
You're supposed to leave the campsite in better condition than you found it.
Leave nothing, right?
Leave nothing behind, take nothing behind, take, leave nothing but memories.
I forget what they say.
The boomers inherited
a national park system, clear cut timber, strip mined the topsoil, sold the mineral rights to a private equity firm, and then had the gall to complain that our generation does not
spend enough time enjoying the outdoors.
Go touch grass, they say now.
Still not a bad idea.
We've also said go touch grass.
The Boomer legacy is a master class in systemic selfishness, but they will be remembered as the generation that ate the future.
They built a glittering fortress of personal wealth and they built it by cannibalizing the very foundation of society that supported them.
And now, as the government shuts down.
As hardware markets freeze and as the housing market becomes a permanent feudal estate, we're the ones standing in the rubble of their prosperity.
But here's the final thought I want to leave you with.
We do not have to inherit their philosophy.
We are stuck with their economic mess, but we do not have to adopt their hyper individualism.
We can build something different.
We can flash our routers, our servers, we can connect our lower nodes.
We can build a horizontal social contract.
based on mutual aid rather than corporate extraction.
We can look at the wreckage that they left behind and decide that we are going to be the generation that actually plants the trees knowing full well we might never sit in that
shade.
This has been a heavy episode, I'm not gonna lie, but it's a necessary one.
If we are going to survive the collapse of this monolithic generation, we have to understand exactly who built it, how they broke it, and why we can never
ever let them near the blueprints again.
Thanks for sticking with me through this, you know, autopsy.
If you found this episode helpful or it just gave you the historical vocabulary to explain your economic anxiety at the next miserable family gathering, share it with a friend.
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Until next time, keep your nodes high, keep your stack small, and never let them tell you that you are just a user.
You're an administrator.
We will talk to you next week.