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Culture War Roundup for the week of January 2, 2023

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Huh, I would have put the Millennial generation at 1980-2000, but whatever. So their ages are (very early) 20s to 40s. The older ones, yeah, I'd expect to swing more conservative as they age, but then again extended adolescence seems to be the new thing, so perhaps the Millennials don't really feel like they're adults until they hit 30ish, and they still haven't shifted much by the time they're 40.

See how the voting patterns shift when that generation starts to hit their 50s. Just by simple movement of the Overton Window, they could 'correct' to being more 'conservative' even if their views haven't changed that greatly.

Good point. Millennials are also inheriting later, like everyone else.

On the other hand, there is a growing mismatch between the average age of inheritance (I think it's up around 60 now, very roughly?) and the average age of fertility. This could mess with the "classic" process of wealth + parenthood = greater probability of conservativism, since parenthood might come at a different period of life from wealth, if parenthood happens at all...

I'm convinced that the shift towards Conservativism is more about accumulation of wealth than anything else. I'm a young millenial/elder zoomer and finding myself more and more resentful of landlords, the Government and the elderly. Partially as a result of working retail, but also taking a dislike to the Elderly who insult me and my generation. And they all vote Tory. The Tories in the UK are the party of the elderly.

I work in a well-paid job (albeit itinerant and lacking the job security enjoyed by past people at my stage) but I feel the same way, even though I have voted Tory in the past, though not since the Cameron years. I thought that Theresa May was too illiberal, Brexity, and grey-vote for me. You can imagine how subsequent events have not changed my mind.