Baby Boomers are not all Alike

I was born in 1957 so that means I’m a baby boomer. But what does being a baby boomer really mean? By all accounts, we are the children of the Post World War II era, which began in 1946.

In May, 1951, Sylvia F. Porter, a columnist for the New York Post, used the term “Boom” to refer to the phenomenon of increased births in post war America. She said “Take the 3,548,000 babies born in 1950. Bundle them into a batch, bounce them all over the bountiful land that is America. What do you get? Boom. The biggest, boomiest boom ever known in history.” That boom she referred to continued until 1964.

Much attention is being paid to baby boomers these days as the first wave of us moves towards retirement and social security. Yes, we were the first generation to grow up with television; many of us lived through the civil rights era and the Vietnam War. But the real image of a baby boomer is now in question.  We are not all white kids who grew up in the suburbs watching the Mickey Mouse Club.  We have been referred to as the most diverse generation but the fact of the matter is some of us actually grew up in a separate and  unequal society.

According to a study conducted by two Duke University sociologists diversity has not led to equality:  Baby boomers are the first generation to come of age after the Civil Rights era, however, the study revealed differences of income according to race, ethnicity and country of birth so entrenched that, in effect, there are ethnic classes.  Blacks in the boomer generation, for example are no better off relative to whites than their parents and grandparents. Many older southern baby boomers can still tell you stories about the Jim Crow laws and the impact it had on their lives.

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