>>214366009
Nonsense, you're describing age brackets, not generations
Boomers are retired, hence conservative
Gen X is running the show, hence suits
Millennials are coping and seething at not yet being successful, hence deconstruction
Zoomers are still young, hence sensitive (although I don't know that that well describes the generation)
Generations do have distinct flavours that persist as they age, though circumstance leads to different expression
e.g. Boomers are reckless, so in their teens and twenties they were rioters and terrorists, and in middle age they did hostile takeovers and sold all the factories to China, and in old age they're reversing mortgaging the ancestral home to finance a round-the-world cruise
at no point do they moderate their behaviour or maintain a diplomatic silence about their ghastliness
a boomer will rob you openly and then be confused that you're upset that he robbed you
Different behaviour, same cause
>inb4 NABALT: no, but the tendency is more pronounced in that generation
Gen X are priggish, so in youth it was "well actually..." and now in middle age, approaching retirement, they're the unassailable "experts"; once they retire they'll slip seamlessly into "back in my day" with more enthusiasm than Boomers do - Boomer grandparents are off playing golf instead of seeing their grandkids; Gen X grandparents will be around all the time, umm, excuse me, is that... Nestle-brand formula? Don't you know Nestle's history of exploitation in Africa? Hmm?
Millennials are divorced from reality, in youth it was videogames, internet; in adulthood it's SSRIs, fictitious diseases, hence millennials have the most troons
I don't know about zoomers