{"id":27876,"date":"2007-12-18T01:01:01","date_gmt":"2011-05-19T04:30:20","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"2011-05-19T04:30:20","modified_gmt":"2011-05-19T04:30:20","slug":"how_baby_boomers_were_spoiled","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/admin.rushlimbaugh.com\/daily\/2007\/12\/18\/how_baby_boomers_were_spoiled\/","title":{"rendered":"How Baby Boomers Were Spoiled"},"content":{"rendered":"<section>\n<p>RUSH: Here\u2019s Ron in Sterling, Virginia. You\u2019re next, sir. Welcome to the EIB Network.<\/p>\n<p>CALLER: Hello, Rush.<\/p>\n<p>RUSH: Yes, sir.<\/p>\n<p>CALLER: Earlier you had said that you were an esteemed observer of culture?<\/p>\n<p>RUSH: Yes, sir.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" src=\"https:\/\/live-rush-limbaugh.pantheonsite.io\/wp-content\/uploads\/01125112.Par.89380.ImageFile.jpg\" width=\"340\" height=\"456\" class=\"alignright\"\/>CALLER: Tom Brokaw has a new book out about the sixties generation &#8212; <\/p>\n<p>RUSH: Yeah?<\/p>\n<p>CALLER: &#8212; and his prior book was The Greatest Generation.<\/p>\n<p>RUSH: Yeah?<\/p>\n<p>CALLER: My question for you is: How did the greatest generation produce in their children the sixties generation?<\/p>\n<p>RUSH: Oh, that\u2019s a great question &#8212; and I, of course, have the answer. Here\u2019s the answer. Take a look at the greatest generation; take a look what they did. Most of them endured the Great Depression, either when they were young or young adults, then along came World War II, Korea. These are people that lived in a country, at that time, much, much, much less affluent than it is today. They had to learn very early in life that there were things far larger than themselves, far more important. Hell, the country was attacked. We had a depression. You had to go to college to get an education to have a chance at a decent job. You know, those of us alive today, we can\u2019t even relate to a depression. We\u2019re in the most robust economy in the history of mankind. We\u2019ve got the Drive-By Media trying to tell everybody we\u2019re on the precipice of a recession, and everybody is panicking about it. We don\u2019t know what hard times are! They did. They understood commitment, duty, honor, country. They united, all came together. Whatever differences they had were put aside. They were fighting World War II all over the world, and there weren\u2019t any major dissenters in Congress of a major political party. We were totally unified. <\/p>\n<p>After that, guess what happened? Nikita Khrushchev shows up at the UN, bangs his shoe and says, &#8216;We will bury your children.\u2019 My parents and grandparents took him seriously. They had to. Look at what they had been through already. Then they had to gear up for what that portended, the Cold War. Then they had Korea thrown in there. They had a rigorous, very difficult, very hard life. They did not want their kids and their children to have to live that way. Every generation wants better, in terms of economics and opportunity and all kinds of things, for their kids than they had for themselves. That\u2019s human nature, and it\u2019s always been that way, and the sixties generation came along, the Baby Boomers &#8212; and I\u2019m one of them &#8212; and life has been a piece of cake. We\u2019ve had to invent our traumas. Attention deficit disorder. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. We haven\u2019t the slightest clue how tough life really was. We\u2019ve had to make ourselves think it\u2019s tough. Now, in our minds, it\u2019s been hard. I\u2019m not saying that the stress that people today go through is any different or less than the stress of previous generations. It doesn\u2019t matter. The fact is, we all feel the stress. My point is, we\u2019ve had to manufacture most of the reasons for it. <\/p>\n<p>As such, we have had affluence and opportunity like our parents and grandparents couldn\u2019t dream of &#8212; and, as such, we\u2019ve had all this time on our hands to do what? Think about ourselves, and be concerned about ourselves. Some of us are 56, some of us are 55, and on certain days, we still feel like we\u2019re 18. When my dad was 40, he was 40; and when he was 45, he was 45, and he felt 45. When he was 50, he felt 50. He\u2019d been through hell. Every one of his friends felt the same way. We, at 56 and 55, we can go around and pretend like we\u2019re in high school on the weekend if we want to. We don\u2019t think of ourselves as our age. I\u2019m 56. It\u2019s the last thing on my mind that I\u2019m 56. I don\u2019t feel it. I don\u2019t feel it physically, psychologically, emotionally. I feel young and spry, and this is because we didn\u2019t have to learn to grow up real fast. We didn\u2019t learn as soon as our parents did that there were things much larger in our lives than us &#8212; and part of the sixties generation still hasn\u2019t, and that\u2019s why they\u2019re who they are. The left-wing sixties generation crowd &#8212; the godless bunch, the atheists, the people who think man is the beginning and end of all things, people that buy into this global warming hoax &#8212; are so inwardly focused, so self-focused, so unable to realize that there are things larger than themselves.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, people who do realize there are things much larger in life than themselves &#8212; people who realize there are questions that we can all ask that we will never on this Earth be able to answer &#8212; those kind of people, who have that faith and those beliefs, provide a threat to certain elements of the sixties generation, because their faith is in themselves, and that kind of faith with no boundaries frightens people who have not yet learned that there are things much larger and more important than themselves. You say, &#8216;How did that generation, the greatest generation, produce the Baby Boom generation and some that have followed?\u2019 It\u2019s simply because they wanted their kids to have a better life than they did. They didn\u2019t want them to go through a Great Depression. They didn\u2019t want them to go through a world war. That\u2019s why when Khrushchev banged the shoe, they took the Cold War seriously. Look at the money these people paid in taxes and everything else that it cost them to fight all these wars and go through the Great Depression. They didn\u2019t want that for their kids. <\/p>\n<p>Lo and behold, at the same time the Cold War is going, we have an economic boom coming in the fifties with Eisenhower, then JFK. We started an economic renaissance, a technological renaissance in this country that produced more and invented more in 50 years than the prior thousands of years of human civilization. There are a lot of reasons for that, the freedom that we have to be creative and inventive in this country. But it really&#8230; The root of it is that they just did not want their kids to have to go through what they did. So it was sort of a hands-off, laissez-faire type of parenting, in some cases &#8212; and in other cases, by the way, some of the anti-war leftist kids in the sixties were actually obedient to their parents, and when you say that, &#8216;What do you mean? They were radical. They were protesting authority.\u2019 No, they were just being obedient in the sense that their parents were telling them, &#8216;Don\u2019t be hemmed in, you know? Don\u2019t accept convention. Go out and be fruitful and multiply,\u2019 and all this sort of things, things that their parents wanted to do when they were young or growing up but didn\u2019t have time for because there were too many serious things on the table. <\/p>\n<p>BREAK TRANSCRIPT<\/p>\n<p>RUSH: David in Chicago, you\u2019re next, sir. Great to have you with us.<\/p>\n<p>CALLER: Rush, listening to your comments about how our generation became the way it is, truly earns you the title of the great Maha Rushie. If I may have the temerity to add one thing.<\/p>\n<p>RUSH: Yeah?<\/p>\n<p>CALLER: How effectively our generation was sold socialism and communism, and if we think a bit&#8211;<\/p>\n<p>RUSH: Ah, ah! How&#8230;? Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah! How effectively SOME of our generation was sold socialism.<\/p>\n<p>CALLER: Yes.<\/p>\n<p>RUSH: &#8212; and liberalism.<\/p>\n<p>CALLER: Yes, that\u2019s true.<\/p>\n<p>RUSH: Not all of. Some of us had great parents who &#8212;<\/p>\n<p>CALLER: Yes. Yes.<\/p>\n<p>RUSH: &#8212; made sure that that stuff didn\u2019t seep into our crevices, deep, dark crevices of our cranial cavity.<\/p>\n<p>CALLER: Yes. Yes. And I am one such person whose parents would never have allowed me to behave that way, also growing up in the Archdiocese in Chicago, none of the nuns would, either.<\/p>\n<p>RUSH: It\u2019s a good point. The reason why in the sixties&#8230; Socialism, by the way, in worldwide history, it goes back as far as human civilization goes. It\u2019s failed every time it\u2019s tried, but that doesn\u2019t matter to anybody, because the people that want power over the people who keep trying new ways to sell it. But I still maintain to you that one of the reasons why it was so attractive is that, because of the way sixties generation people were raised, in some cases, they had so much time on their hands and the parents are afraid to say &#8216;no.\u2019 They didn\u2019t want to distort their growth, or stunt anything about them, and so it gave rise to all kinds of things &#8212; and when you have got time on your hands, you can be concerned about, and we\u2019ve had time on our hands. I know a lot of you think I\u2019m nuts, because, &#8216;My gosh, Rush, what are you talking about? I\u2019ve worked hard all my life!\u2019 I know you have, but, at the same time, you\u2019ve had a lot of time to think about yourself. We\u2019ve had the choice to grow up doing what we want, if we\u2019re fortunate enough to know what that is. A lot of our parents and grandparents had no choice. They had to take whatever they could get and try to make careers out of it. Then that got interrupted with the war, the Depression before that; grandparents and parents as well. <\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m just saying we\u2019ve had a lot more freedom, and with a lot more freedom comes a lot more affluence, a lot more time. Plus, you cannot ignore that after World War II and so forth and the advent of &#8212; the creation, if you will, of &#8212; the so-called Soviet Union, they had a purpose, and they infiltrated the education system and they had people that were taking these young skulls full of mush and molding them and shaping them, and it still exists today. That\u2019s actually one of the last areas remaining to be successfully challenged in terms of its monopoly, and we\u2019ve successfully busted up the Drive-By Media monopoly, and some others, but education, particularly higher education&#8230; I mean, it\u2019s pervasive even at the lower grades as well. We keep hearing horror stories about things being taught to kids all the way from first up to the tenth or eleventh grades.<\/p>\n<p>A brief time-out here, folks. We\u2019ve got a lot of audio sound bites I want to get to in the next hour. I\u2019m a little bit behind in that. We\u2019ll do that. More of your phone calls as well as the EIB&#8230; Folks, I want to apologize. Everything sounds so odd to me today that I\u2019m so distracted by how it sounds, I think I feel like half of me is not even here. I\u2019m so focused on what this sounds like. I hope my usual brilliance is nevertheless permeating your airwaves and your super-heterodyne receivers. <\/p>\n<p>BREAK TRANSCRIPT<\/p>\n<p>RUSH: This is Phil in Portland. You\u2019re next. I appreciate your patience, and hello.<\/p>\n<p>CALLER: Mega dittos, Rush.<\/p>\n<p>RUSH: Thank you.<\/p>\n<p>CALLER: Mega dittos, Rush, from rainy Portland, Oregon. I\u2019ve got a question, more of a comment. You know, you were talking about the greatest generation a minute ago, and my dad was a part of that generation. He passed away when he was about 78, World War II veteran, and I remember growing up as a kid. I\u2019m probably about ten years older than you, and I can remember what he stressed with me is, &#8216;Man, whatever you do, don\u2019t go into debt. You know, just buy what you can, pay what you can pay for, save your money,\u2019 and all of these things that is a tough thing teaching our kids nowadays when everybody\u2019s got all this credit available and they can spend their money and keep the economy going, but my dad was a whole different character. They grew up in a depression when they couldn\u2019t spend money. They had to save as much as they could, and we used to go to doctors and we never had anything. We just paid the doctor when we went or you pay him so much a week, and it was a whole different mind-set, a different mentality.<\/p>\n<p>RUSH: My dad told me the same thing. &#8216;Don\u2019t go into debt, don\u2019t do it.\u2019 It kept drumming into my brother and me, and, of course, we after awhile got tired of hearing about it because it became almost the same thing as hearing, &#8216;Yeah, I had to walk ten miles in the snow with no shoes. That\u2019s like how poor we were. And you boys, your mom won\u2019t even take you on a bus. You don\u2019t know how lucky you are.\u2019 And I got so sick and tired of hearing it, over and over. I finally said&#8230; It wasn\u2019t \u2019til I matured and grew up that I really understood how difficult life in the Great Depression was. But I had to study it because there\u2019s no way I could relate to it because I didn\u2019t live through it, and that\u2019s what I finally told him. I said, &#8216;Look, this is not effective, Dad. I understand you\u2019re trying to raise me to be the best you can be and I can be and so forth, but I didn\u2019t go through the Depression. He said, &#8216;Son, I know you didn\u2019t, but there might be one someday, and you gotta know how to handle it.\u2019 He said, &#8216;Once something\u2019s happened once, the odds are it\u2019s going to happen again,\u2019 and it was so horrible, they didn\u2019t want their kids going through it. So, yeah, he was big on the &#8216;don\u2019t go into debt,\u2019 and all kinds of things. It\u2019s different today, but the society is structured differently. <\/p>\n<p>You know, speaking of debt, I am glad you mentioned this. I\u2019ve got this story here. Get this. This is in the New York Times today: &#8216;Until the boom in subprime mortgages turned into a national nightmare this summer, the few people who tried to warn federal banking officials might as well have been talking to themselves. Edward M. Gramlich, a Federal Reserve governor who died in September, warned nearly seven years ago that a fast-growing new breed of lenders was luring many people into risky mortgages they could not afford. But when Mr. Gramlich privately urged Fed examiners to investigate mortgage lenders affiliated with national banks, he was rebuffed by Alan Greenspan, the Fed chairman.\u2019 So, they were warned. The Federal Reserve was warned about the market, the mortgage market mess seven years ago and didn\u2019t want to do anything about it. Now, a caveat. This story appears in the New York Times, and the New York Times is the house organ of the Democrat Party, and the Democrat Party is targeting the lenders in this subprime mortgage debacle because they can\u2019t wait for their constituents, the trial lawyers, to be able to take aim at \u2019em. Even though the lenders have already gotten soaked, it\u2019s not enough. <\/p>\n<p>They\u2019re going to be fair game. If the Democrats get this legislation passed, they\u2019re going to be fair game for the plaintiffs to be heading right for them in their back pockets after they\u2019ve already been emptied &#8212; and, of course, we\u2019re going to bail out some on both sides of this, quote, unquote, bailout. The lenders are going to be the bad guys here as far as the Democrats disproportionate New York Times is concerned, because it fits the narrative. &#8216;Lenders are big, agreed, rich capitalists on Wall Street and they have the poor and the middle class and the people barely hanging on! They have them at their beck and call, and they can cut them off and ruin their lives. They\u2019re one paycheck away from being homeless,\u2019 and, of course, class envy being what it is, the Democrats love to portray the lenders as being in that predatory category. So you have to read this in the New York Times with a jaundiced eye and seek some confirmation of it elsewhere. The dirty little secret in this is: Who created the lenders? I mean, these lenders just didn\u2019t come out of the woodwork and say, &#8216;You know what? We want to loan money to people that can\u2019t pay it back.\u2019 Guess who made \u2019em do it? Congress! <\/p>\n<p>&#8216;Oh, yeah. The American dream. Red lining. Why, there are too many Americans out there being denied their fair and equal opportunity for a loan. There must be discrimination because capitalism is unfair.\u2019 So, guess what? People that were bad risks, and very unlikely to be able to handle adjustable rate mortgage were lured in under the notion it was unfair they were being denied access to the housing market, and now here\u2019s where we are. And the people who lured them in and created these subprime lenders, in part, are now acting like spectators! Members of Congress were innocent bystanders. &#8216;Why, look what happened here! Why, we need hearings; we need meetings, and we need lawsuits.\u2019 It\u2019s just like after Hurricane Katrina. These guys acted like they had nothing to do with the levees that didn\u2019t get fixed, the aid that didn\u2019t get there. Members of Congress, the guys who write the laws were acting as spectators, and they\u2019re doing the same thing here. But keep in mind, Congress\u2019 approval numbers have reached an all-time low in practically every poll that there is. Anybody who thinks that they have a lock on any result in any election coming up &#8212; well, other than these uncontested races. But if you think you know what\u2019s going to happen in the Senate and the House, you think the Democrats are going to walk away with it, think they\u2019re going to walk away with the White House, don\u2019t be so hasty.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>RUSH: Here\u2019s Ron in Sterling, Virginia. You\u2019re next, sir. Welcome to the EIB Network. CALLER: Hello, Rush. RUSH: Yes, sir. CALLER: Earlier you had said that you were an esteemed observer of culture? RUSH: Yes, sir. CALLER: Tom Brokaw has a new book out about the sixties generation &#8212; RUSH: Yeah? CALLER: &#8212; and his [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":25,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","ngg_post_thumbnail":0},"categories":[],"tags":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v17.6 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>How Baby Boomers Were Spoiled - The Rush Limbaugh Show<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/admin.rushlimbaugh.com\/daily\/2007\/12\/18\/how_baby_boomers_were_spoiled\/\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:title\" content=\"How Baby Boomers Were Spoiled - The Rush Limbaugh Show\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:description\" content=\"RUSH: Here\u2019s Ron in Sterling, Virginia. You\u2019re next, sir. Welcome to the EIB Network. CALLER: Hello, Rush. RUSH: Yes, sir. CALLER: Earlier you had said that you were an esteemed observer of culture? RUSH: Yes, sir. CALLER: Tom Brokaw has a new book out about the sixties generation &#8212; RUSH: Yeah? 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You\u2019re next, sir. Welcome to the EIB Network. CALLER: Hello, Rush. RUSH: Yes, sir. CALLER: Earlier you had said that you were an esteemed observer of culture? RUSH: Yes, sir. CALLER: Tom Brokaw has a new book out about the sixties generation &#8212; RUSH: Yeah? 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