Open Season On Baby Boomers: The highly topical second episode of the multi-media talk-show Waatea Fifth Estate covered the controversy surrounding housing intensification and the Auckland Unitary Plan. The otherwise excellent show was marred only by the casting of the Baby Boom Generation as the guilty party. Ageism can no more supply a progressive answer to Auckland's housing problems than racism or sexism.
NO, NO, NO, BOMBER!* This ageism has got to stop – now. You
wouldn’t permit anyone writing for The Daily Blog to discriminate
against people on the grounds of race, gender or sexuality. So what, in the
name of Progressive Politics, are you hoping to achieve by blaming everyone
born between 1946 and 1965 for Auckland’s housing crisis?
The Baby Boom generation didn’t choose their parents,
Comrade! Any more than a black man chooses his ethnicity, or a woman chooses to
be born female. Scapegoating people on the basis of their date-of-birth makes
no more sense than scapegoating them because of their genetic make-up, or
because their sex chromosomes are XX and not XY.
I’m genuinely affronted by all this Baby-Boomer-bashing, old
friend. And if you want to know why, then I’d invite you to sit down and watch
Episode 2 of Waatea Fifth Estate, and every time the word “Baby-Boomer”
or “Boomer” is used, to mentally over-dub the word “Jew”.
Can you imagine the firestorm of criticism that would erupt
if Jews were accused of preventing young Kiwis getting into their first home?
Or if Jews were accused of taking all the good things that were on offer in the
1960s and 70s, and then denying them deliberately to succeeding generations?
Any broadcaster disseminating such ideas would immediately
fall foul of both the Race Relations Act and the Human Rights Act. Because it
is a criminal offence to incite racial hatred, and/or, to discriminate against
one’s fellow citizens on the basis of their ethnicity or religious belief.
And while we’re on the subject of the Human Rights Act
(1993) perhaps it would be helpful to point out that Section 21 of the
legislation includes, among a long list of “prohibited grounds of
discrimination”, the ground of “age”.
Also worth considering is the prohibition contained in the
Fourth Geneva Convention against the imposition of collective punishment.
Article 33 clearly states that: “No persons may be punished for an offense he
or she has not personally committed. Collective penalties and likewise all
measures of intimidation or of terrorism are prohibited.”
Progressive people are rightly outraged when the Israeli
authorities inflict massive material and human damage on Palestinian
communities in retaliation for the hostile actions of a few Hamas fighters. I
would, therefore, like to hear the explanation for why we shouldn’t be just a
teeny-wee bit upset when an entire generation of human-beings is blamed for societal
ills they did not create and which a great many of them – myself included –
wholeheartedly deplore.
Because, to be honest, Bomber, your eagerness, in Episode 2
of W5E, to see the planting of Generation X and Y settlements in the Baby
Boomer occupied territories of Auckland’s leafy suburbs would have done the
average West Bank Israeli settler-developer, and his IDF-protected construction
teams, proud.
Forgive me, Comrade, but fomenting inter-generational
warfare (which, ultimately, entails turning children against their parents or
grandparents) is not, and can never be, a progressive cause. Indeed, it strikes
at the most primal forms of human solidarity, and at the most essential drivers
of human co-operation. Worst of all, Bomber, it misdirects the legitimate rage
of those denied the social goods their parents were able to enjoy away from the
social class which bears the actual responsibility for their destruction.
Just ask yourself, Bomber: Was it the Maori New Zealanders
born between 1946 and 1965 who deliberately destroyed their own employment
opportunities? Are they the ones responsible for gutting their rural
communities? Did they set out to create urban breeding grounds for crime,
domestic violence and drug abuse? And was it the Pasifika Baby Boomers who
deliberately ran down their local schools and health services? Are they the
ones responsible for the decay of social housing in New Zealand? Did Pakeha
Boomers demand the destruction of their own unions? Must they be held
responsible for the political marginalisation of the entire working class? And
did all of these groups really conspire to thwart the aspirations of their own
children and grandchildren?
Those responsible for the hollowed-out shell that is 21st
Century New Zealand society are Baby Boomers only in the sense that they are
also human-beings. They changed this country for the worse, not out of some
mysterious generational impulse precipitated by listening to the Beatles or
eating Eskimo Pies, but because it was in their interests to destroy the
social-democratic beliefs and institutions that had so successfully limited
their ability to enrich themselves, and which, if left in place, would have
further undermined their political and cultural power.
The truly outrageous aspect of Auckland’s housing crisis is
how effectively Auckland’s citizens have been excluded from playing any role in
fixing it. The Auckland Super City is democratic in name only. It’s true
purpose is to create opportunities for property developers (and all of the other
businesses their activities sustain) to go on making profits. The power of
Auckland’s ruling class will not be broken by setting one short-changed
generation against another, but by creating a movement in which old and young
join forces to determine what needs to be done, and out of whose pockets the
money to pay for it should be taken.
* “Bomber” is the nom de guerre of Martyn Bradbury, Editor
of The Daily Blog. Martyn and the author, Chris Trotter, have been friends and comrades since the mid-1990s.
This essay was
originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Saturday, 27 February 2016.