by William S. Becker
In the Olympics of living, there
used to be a moment when an older generation “passed the torch” to the next
generation in line.
In his inaugural speech a
half-century ago, John Kennedy declared, “The Torch has been passed to a new generation."
Washington Post columnist David
Broder used the same phrase when Bill Clinton became the first baby-boomer to
be elected President of the United States, shaped by influences far different than his predecessors experienced during World War II.
After the disenchanted class
pitched their tents in the streets last year, journalist Gregory Stanford
wrote: “The nation’s Occupy movement has picked up the torch that Martin Luther
King Jr. once carried to light the path to justice.” National Review blogger Mark Steyn used the
same phrase last December in an analysis of events in Egypt.
But today, as the leading edge of
the baby boom generation reaches the traditional torch-passing age, the tradition
is obsolete. The mores, norms, policies and behaviors of past generations have
left the torch in far too poor a condition to pass in good conscience. Insofar
as we can fix it, we all need to get a grip:
Baby Boomers as well as Generations X, Y and Z.
I was born in 1946. At my age, my
parents and their parents were retired, or waiting impatiently for the day they
could. They could be confident that they world they were passing to their
children would offer more opportunity, better quality of life, more economic
security and better health than the elders had enjoyed.
That is not the case today. The intergenerational torch has been dimmed
by problems such as global climate change, dysfunctional institutions, growing
economic disparity, poor diets, intense political polarity, the lack of common
cause among us, the influence of money on public policy, the radical fringe
groups that have attained prominence despite their obvious intellectual
deficiencies, and the well-funded defense of business as usual by industries
whose sociopathic greed drives several of the problems I just mentioned.
There will come a time when my
contemporaries and I will begin to lose our health, our stamina, and the fire
in our bellies. With every aching joint, fading brain cell and sleepy
afternoon, we will want to retire not only from our careers but also from
worrying any more about the world and its problems.
However, there is an ethical as
well as a physical dimension to when that moment comes. We should not pass the torch until
we make it much brighter, or until we die trying and our children have to pry
it from our cold dead hands.