It's clear enough that the particular form of society we're used to follows the demographics of its largest generations. For the US, that means the Boomers have defined the conversation since the 70's when they started to vote and have careers, and a lot of foundational sociocultural premises about "how the world works" were set back then and remained untouched until just now.<p>I can see it in my parents: they're increasingly upset and blame a so-in-so in government for being "an idiot", but it's not over the same things that my generation is, and it's not wholly defined by party politics or culture wars either, though they are drawn to the messaging and engage with the soap operas of the news cycle. It's a much bigger affront for them when something new is being tried that "obviously doesn't work", because their opinion was set back when the options were different and fewer - and the people who thought differently back then didn't survive: surviving sets norms.<p>Combine that with the looming pains and fears of age and now they are just axiomatically conservative. No change, change doesn't work, change is a grift. Invest in winners. Faced with a broad reinvention of the world that ignores their opinions and shuffles around policy and value chains pragmatically with the available constraints, they are terrified.