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Culture War Roundup for the week of May 18, 2026

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I think it's worth noting that the idea that selfish old people are hoarding all the goodies and thereby screwing over the young is one that's been around for a while. When I graduated college into a weak job market (30 or 40 years ago) that was a very popular idea. (Allegedly) old people weren't retiring and making room for young people; old people were preventing new housing from being built in order to enhance the value of houses they had bought for a song many years ago; old people insisting on fat social security payouts they didn't really need which would result in an insolvent system; old people pushing the government to take on lots and lots of debt which would have to be paid by future generations. etc. etc.

I kind of believed it at the time, but the fact that it's so persistent makes me a little skeptical.

That being said, assuming AI doesn't destroy us but instead generates a lot of new wealth, it's pretty obvious that the benefits of that wealth won't be distributed equally. And I could easily see a situation where people who happen to own equities, real estate, and other capital goods end up being the big winners while everyone else licks the street. (Ok, that's an exaggeration, but if a utopia emerges where everyone gets UBI and can live the life of their dreams, such people might still be pretty unhappy if there is a sort of permanent aristocracy in place.) And it would make sense that this aristocracy would be disproportionately old people.

I could also see it happening that medical advances allow this aristocracy (and everyone else) to dramatically extend their lifespans, which would arguably exacerbate this problem. From an abstract perspective I would rather be a peasant in a world where everyone gets UBI and a super-long (healthy) lifespan than a fat cat businessman in that world's past. But I can see how people might get upset at being consigned to a permanent lower class.

It's pretty hard to avoid the elderly stickiness effect when the vast majority of jobs are stuff you can just sit at from 60 onwards as a soft sinecure if your industry isn't particularly proactive in running the purge.

When I graduated college into a weak job market (30 or 40 years ago) that was a very popular idea. (Allegedly) old people weren't retiring and making room for young people; old people were preventing new housing from being built in order to enhance the value of houses they had bought for a song many years ago; old people insisting on fat social security payouts they didn't really need which would result in an insolvent system; old people pushing the government to take on lots and lots of debt which would have to be paid by future generations. etc. etc.

Except for not retiring, these all seem true both now and when you (and I) were young, but not true 100 years ago. I'd argue that the alienation of youth could easily be responding to a real change.

The alienation has persisted for over a half century, because the complaints have been true over that period.

I'd argue that the alienation of youth could easily be responding to a real change.

Exactly. Most Elderly welfare programs were designed under fundamentally different conditions. 65 as a retirement age made more sense when a considerably-smaller chunk of the population made it there with way less years in the tank after working a lot more physically arduous jobs and their end of life care options were a lot less numerous and expensive. By the time that today's youth get to that age the programs will likely be drastically reshaped and cut to accommodate for this new reality and/or luxury robot communism for all since human labor is no longer useful. Since the elderly have enormous voting clout in democracies there's also no particularly good way around this, and any changes will likely involve large degrees of grandfathering.

Except for not retiring, these all seem true both now and when you (and I) were young, but not true 100 years ago.

What's your basis for believing this? In 1926, roughly a third of Americans worked in agriculture. I can easily imagine young people complaining at that time that old people owned and controlled all the best land in the United States.

Of course, I don't know one way or another. But I do know that in a free market economy, there are always capital goods and other resources in short supply. And that, logically, older people frequently have had a better chance than young people to acquire and accumulate those resources.

In 1926 the median American was around 26 years old. Thanks to the baby boom, the median wasn't much older in 1970, 28, and was 30 in 1980. Today, it's 39, and will likely be over 40 by 2030. The old have never been so proportionately numerous.

This is aggravated by the fact that economic growth has been declining since the 1980s, and especially since the end of the 90s. Barring 2021, all but the oldest Millennials ever experienced 4% GDP growth as a member of the labor force. All but the youngest of Gen Z have never experienced 3% GDP growth in the workforce, again barring 2021.

In 1926 the median American was around 26 years old. Thanks to the baby boom, the median wasn't much older in 1970, 28, and was 30 in 1980. Today, it's 39, and will likely be over 40 by 2030. The old have never been so proportionately numerous.

I agree, but why does this matter? I mean, there were certainly a lot of rich and powerful old people in 1926 in the United States. Enough for young people to form a belief that old people were hoarding the goodies.

This is aggravated by the fact that economic growth has been declining since the 1980s, and especially since the end of the 90s. Barring 2021, all but the oldest Millennials ever experienced 4% GDP growth as a member of the labor force. All but the youngest of Gen Z have never experienced 3% GDP growth in the workforce, again barring 2021.

I did a random search, and the graph I found indicated that in the 1970s and 1980s, there were a lot of years with GDP growth well under 4% and sometimes under 0%.

There really weren't a lot of old people around in 1926 period, let alone a government subsidized upper-middle class of retirees. In 1920 less than 1/20 Americans were over the age of 65. Now it's 1/6.

That there were bad years in the 70s and early 80s doesn't change the fact that no one under the age of 40 has experienced anything like the sustained economic growth we had from 1985-2005. The 1970s sucked compared to the 50s and 60s but still had faster growth than the 2000s, 2010s, or 2020s so far.

Elderly didn't have the benefit of the modern medical infrastructure where you have a great chance of toddling around in pretty solid health at 70 compared to where you were. Look at the recent presidential stock.

Inheritances are coming later and increasingly past the ages that facilitate real meaningful innovation from the recipients. The laptop jobification of the economy means there's way more scope to just hold on to roles into dotage years.

A lot of the paths that made money in the older generation got institutionalized. For sales and trading type roles or even Ibanking you read a lot of old stories of a guy just met someone then is at major bank. (Epstein, Michael Lewis. High profile on this path. Many others). Now it’s institutionalized and still pays well but there are 5-10 highly profitable firms and to get in you need to be “math Olympiad winner” and the competition is against a global population. Plus you have to a great degree lost the ability to get equity in form because the competitive moats have increased a lot.

It does feel like the current career paths offer less stability and your career can end quickly even with fairly strong credentials. The exception is a huge explosion in government work which I would include health care in.

Probably some new routes are emerging and in 25 years we will see a bunch of rich people who just started doing something.

Lot of this is hindsighting the previous generation's wealth accumulation methods. Stuff like Medicine is pretty evergreen but each decade or two the dominant forms of finance earning will shift violently. I used to work with a bunch of old Floor traders and that is a totally different skillset than modern trading.

There's also generally a hindsight effect where people assume the big trades of the past were bleedingly obvious since the people who hit them now have the biggest pulpit

You can still see in that industry the skillset change.
1970’s - some even no college made it. Still some truly smart people 2000’s - Big Ten Schools and above 2020’s - what was your placement on the IMO

Another way to look at it - 1970’s the best local talent in Chicago or NYC who just wandered into trading. 2000’s The best in recruited from the top schools in the region. 2020’s the best recruited Internationally. So yes it’s much harder today. Finance in general has gotten much more selective. PE is likely very similar.

Ownership seats are also basically non-existent now in PE or trading. If you started in PE in the 1980’s you have your name on the door. If you started post 2010 you work for a listed PE firm and only get a split of the fees. Which is a lot of money.

Ownership seats are also basically non-existent now in PE or trading.

Tell me about it. Biggest BS ever: even very very good people often don't make it beyond being desk head where the partners siphon off their share. Even the places that say "share of the profits if you come to us!" usually don't offer you more than 2-3% of the returns (before tax, mind you) which you generate for them and you still have to deal with a lot of bureaucracy of the stuff above the pod structure (and pay for it of course). Starting up your own place is also now becoming effectively impossible unless you have mid double digit millions lying around because of all the rules and regulations and partnerships you need.

The money is very very good regardless but there's a difference between having real autonomy vs being a cog in the machine, which is what a lot of modern trading is becoming (remember, the models etc. you develop don't belong to you, they're company property so you can't just up and take them to a competitor firm without getting sued, and nobody (other than the aforementioned pod shops above with their own issues) is hiring you unless you agree that ownership of models isn't yours.

Yeah but like I'm sure there's a relatively niche employment spot right now that will turn out to be the big hindsight winner circa 20 years from now. AI researcher was a skilled profession 15 years ago but you weren't paid Lebron James money for the bleeding edge and there's now way more of a glitch of people entering the field.

But yeah there's a reason there's a meme with talking to 50 year olds in elite jobs now and getting 'I started my career at 27 after spending 3 years backpacking and getting turned onto this field by a newspaper ad after junior college' versus the new graduates being the absolute bleeding edge of filtering.

Hell my dad managed to get to a very senior offshore oil platform design electrical engineering position with 2 years before dropping out of a third-tier undergrad and a trade electrician cert. These things happen when you're born in 1949 and get in early on a field that ends up exploding in relevance

AI researcher was a skilled profession 15 years ago

Lmao, AI research was an extremely niche profession 15 years ago. AlexNet came out in 2012 and pioneered deep learning which lead to transformers/LLMs. The only people who were AI researchers were college professors and the occasional industry researcher. You had a number of folks doing data science/ML engineering but it was pretty much just a sub-domain of statistics as thats what boosting/SVMs/Random Forests are.

The only person I can think of who just lucked into their position without heavy filtering today feels like JD Vance. Sure he got into Yale Law, but he sort of just wrote a book that was ok professionally. Then met a billionaire who turned him into the VP. US politics might be the only place I can think of where some of it just feels lucky.

US Politics you're gonna be way more aware of people who end up in the top jobs. There's still plenty of right time, right place hugely-successful people but the traditional UMC path has become exponentially more arduous as a result of striver optimization.