Okay, I am sorry to quote myself but this a topic I've picked over and embodied for years, both personally and professionally.

When I shot off a bird thread about it in the grocery store parking lot in October of 2021, it resonated with a lot of people so I'm going to reproduce my words here, where there may be a different or more nuanced discussion about it.

Here goes: getting older does not make people conservative, that's a myth made by conservatives. (1/5)

(begin quote)

"Let's get something straight. Growing old doesn't make people #conservative. In fact the more marginalized identity statuses a person has, the LESS conservative they grow over time.
The reason we equate "old" with "conservative" is that #marginalization kills people off younger.

Some of the most radical people you know are old.

It's just a lot of others died before they could get there, so there's a diminishing proportion. (2/5)

There is a TON of research on this, I'm not just spitballing.

I've been in this field for decades. And I've watched the statistics I studied play out IRL over and over and over for myself and everyone I've known. (Including hundreds of clients.)

This is one of the reasons I'm so annoyed with the intergenerational divisiveness being pushed down all our throats. It's bullsht.

We have allies and enemies across every generation.

(3/5)

This is also related to the myth that "racism will die out" or "homophobia will die out" as older people die.

No, bigotry and fascistic attitudes *don't* just die out, they must be actively fought and defeated on an ongoing basis.

Because sometimes we make the mistake of thinking "Oh, the youth must not be bigoted like their forebears" but guess what.

If that were true we wouldn't have had the tiki torches or the terf explosion.

Allies and enemies in every generation.

(4/5)

(end quote of myself!)

Just as #privilege accrues the older you get, ALSO #marginalization and deprivation accrue. If you start out on the downside, you can end up much much worse off as you age.

Thank you to @mattalhonte for the following related link:

[Title: "Seniors Are More #Conservative Because the #Poor Don’t Survive to Become #Seniors, By Ed Kilgore"]

https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2018/05/poor-people-often-dont-survive-to-become-seniors-who-vote.html
(5/5)

@_L1vY_ @mattalhonte

I have not gotten even a little more conservative as I've aged. And many of us ARE alive. We spent our lives working on equality. Why would we abandon those values now?

BUT as we age and get more and more marginalized. You are right about that. And that makes everything more difficult. Especially if you don't have a community any longer. I lost my people over the years. It's odd to the the repository of memory for all your friends, with them gone. But sometimes it's you.

@tamsen @_L1vY_ @mattalhonte same here. In many ways I’ve become less conservative. (Added after I thought a bit. I think it’s important that we define what we mean by conservative).
@drooling_fan_girl @tamsen @_L1vY_ @mattalhonte I'm more left-wing than I used to be but that's only in a relative sense: I don't think I've moved to the left, but I'm sure the world around me has moved to the right. (edited to fix typo)
@irina @drooling_fan_girl @tamsen @_L1vY_
What's your time scale?
As a Gen Xer, a lot of the political issues in dispute today weren't on our radar 20 years ago.
Exactly on 2003-06-27, I heard about Lawrence vs Texas (banning "morality" laws).
Justice Scalia wrote:
"If moral disapprobation of homosexual conduct is 'no legitimate state interest' for purposes of proscribing that conduct ... what justification could there possibly be for denying the benefits of marriage to homosexual couples?"
1/

@frankie @drooling_fan_girl @tamsen @_L1vY_ I first became politically aware in my mid-teens, late 1970s. (And I'm in Europe; different issues affect us here)

(note: I'm not trying to elicit discussion, let alone debate, and I'll probably mute this conversation soonish)