Maggers Wrote:We're of the same generation. You'll reach old age when I do. Let the drooling begin.
That may be so for you, but has never been so for me.
NewYorkjoe Wrote:I was born on the late edge of the baby boomer generation..According to your RJ board profile, you were born on January 13, 1953. The definition of baby boomer years runs from 1946 to 1964. So, unless the information on your profile is inaccurate, you qualify as a boomer, closer to the beginning of the run than the end.
Maggers Wrote:According to your RJ board profile, you were born on January 13, 1953. The definition of baby boomer years runs from 1946 to 1964. So, unless the information on your profile is inaccurate, you qualify as a boomer, closer to the beginning of the run than the end.
Doesn't matter either way. Age is a state of mind.
KRW Wrote:If age is a state of mind, then do you mind stating your age?
KRW- a zen question M!
Maggers Wrote:According to your RJ board profile, you were born on January 13, 1953. The definition of baby boomer years runs from 1946 to 1964. So, unless the information on your profile is inaccurate, you qualify as a boomer, closer to the beginning of the run than the end.
Doesn't matter either way. Age is a state of mind.
NewYorkjoe Wrote:I'm unclear as to where you derive your definition of "baby boomer years." Perhaps you are referring to the years from when the Baby Boom commenced to when Baby Boomers reached their teens and were no longer babies?From where are you getting your "standard and accepted definitions"? It seems to me that you are attaching the terms standard and accepted to ideas that aren't standard or accepted.
No one born in the late '50s, much less the early '60s, can be considered a baby boomer. Webster's defines the Baby Boom as occurring during the "next few years following the end of WWII." There was a minor boom in the early '50s following the end of the Korean War. Since the major baby boom of the late '40s and the minor boom of the early '50s occurred so close together, most sociologists have combined them into one baby boom. However, no one of any standing has ever suggested that the baby boom stretched beyond 1953; hence my remark that I was born on the near edge of the boom.
You are entitled to your individual viewpoint, but standard and accepted definitions of common terms have to be used. Otherwise, I'm likely to lose interest and I'm not interested in tutoring you.
NewYorkjoe
jimbow8 Wrote:From where are you getting your "standard and accepted definitions"? It seems to me that you are attaching the terms standard and accepted to ideas that aren't standard or accepted.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baby_boomer
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-WW2_baby_boom
A baby boomer is someone who is born in a period of increased birth rates, such as those during the economic prosperity that in many countries followed World War II. In the United States, the term is commonly used to refer to the generation which demographers have identified with birth years between 1946 to 1964, despite the fact that the U.S. birth rate actually began to decline after 1957.
...
William Strauss and Neil Howe, in their book Generations, include those conceived by soldiers on leave during the war, putting the generation's birth years at 1943 to 1960.
There are several age ranges listed on that site. ALL of them include 1953.
http://www.itseemslikeyesterday.com/Baby...ctoids.asp
How did the birthrate rise and fall during the baby boom years in the US?
1940 - 2,559,000 births per year
1946 - 3,311,000 births per year
1955 - 4,097,000 births per year
1957 - 4,300,000 births per year
1964 - 4,027,000 births per year
1974 - 3,160,000 births per year
Seeing as the PEAK year on that chart is 1957, I would be inclined to presume that 1953 was included.
(Just doing my part to keep the thread derailed)
AsMoral Wrote:All in favor of killing this thread raise your hand. (My apologies to the thalidomide babies.)