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March 14, 200685 Years Ago, Chesterton nailed the Boomers“A generation is now growing old, which never had anything to say for itself except that it was young. It was the first progressive generation - the first generation that believed in progress and nothing else…. [They believed] simply that the new thing is always better than the old thing; that the young man is always right and the old wrong. And now that they are old men themselves, they have naturally nothing whatever to say or do. Their only business in life was to be the rising generation knocking at the door. Now that they have got into the house, and have been accorded the seat of honour by the hearth, they have completely forgotten why they wanted to come in. The aged younger generation never knew why it knocked at the door; and the truth is that it only knocked at the door because it was shut. It had nothing to say; it had no message; it had no convictions to impart to anybody…. The old generation of rebels was purely negative in its rebellion, and cannot give the new generation of rebels anything positive against which it should not rebel. It is not that the old man cannot convince young people that he is right; it is that he cannot even convince them that he is convinced. And he is not convinced; for he never had any conviction except that he was young, and that is not a conviction that strengthens with years.” Co-incidentally, Gerald is also thinking about boomers, tonight. He’s meaner than Chesterton was, though. http://theanchoressonline.com/2006/03/14/85-years-ago-chesterton-nailed-the-boomers/trackback/ 3 Responses to “85 Years Ago, Chesterton nailed the Boomers” |
March 15th, 2006 at 1:26 am
Running In Place
Over at the American Enterprise’s daily blog, Kate Campaigne reviews a new book by leftwing professor (and orginal SDS member) Todd Gitlin:Gitlin illustrates, purposefully or not, that since the 1960s the Left paradoxically moved away from attempting …
March 18th, 2006 at 5:44 am
[...] Hat-tip: The Anchoress and The Closed Cafeteria. [...]
March 20th, 2006 at 7:48 pm
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