Michael Byron

Daily Stormer

June 10, 2017

There is a group of people on this planet whose optimal survival strategy is to live in a developed nation for a substantial period of time, plunder its resources and siphon its wealth, then relocate elsewhere and enjoy the fruits of their parasitism while the former nation collapses from within.

No, not the Jews. Jews operate in a similar manner, but with one difference: they look after their own tribe. This group has allegiance to no one but themselves.

I’m talking, of course, about Baby Boomers. Specifically, American Boomers.

Yeah, these guys. You might have seen them dumping their parents into old people’s homes and laughing on the way out.

I despise at least 80 percent of these people with every fiber of my being.

Here we have a generation who was gifted with a prosperous nation and an established infrastructure through which that prosperity could be maintained indefinitely. Yet, like Eve in the Garden of Eden parable, they chose the path of subversion.

The hippie movement: about as rebellious as government-funded movements get.

Given the characteristic selfishness and entitlement of the Boomer generation, I’m not surprised to learn that they’re adopting a similar pattern of behavior in the countries to which they relocate.

Breitbart:

The small city of Cuenca, Ecuador is struggling to address a growing wave of American “Baby Boomers” who have decided to retire there to take advantage of a socialist welfare state designed for its locals. U.S. retirees, a recent city study revealed, are also causing conflict in the city, raising real estate prices, demanding English-language service, and threatening to sue locals accustomed to more “casual” business contracts. In a report this week, the Miami Herald highlights the blissful existence of upper-class white American migrants who have flocked to Cuenca, attracted by retiree blogs and news sites that emphasize the appeal of its temperate weather and inexpensive healthcare and real estate.

So, while their children rot in the ruins of the America they created, where basic needs like a house, a secure job or a long-lasting relationship are unobtainable for an alarming majority, these Boomers flee to another nation on another continent and start transforming it into America 2.0.

Wow, just wow.

Cuenca, Ecuador.

I wouldn’t care so much if these expats just admitted, “Yeah, our generation fucked up and we condemned our children to a lifetime of debt, failed relationships and Jewish rule. We feel bad about it but we cannot make systemic changes as individuals, so we just got up and left.”

But nope. You won’t hear a Boomer acknowledge wrong-doing for anything. They still believe now what they believed back then.

Cuenca’s “boomers” are more likely to have been professors before retirement than any other occupations, with “executives” coming in second place. The study delicately notes that many of these individuals “are not interested in being part of a new culture, and are more interested in that the city and its people respond to their needs and demands.” …

In addition to cultural tensions, the study notes that 65 percent of the native Cuencan population is under 35, and many are frustrated that they must pay taxes and invest in the welfare state that foreign retiree migrants are now abusing.

Sound familiar, Millennials of the West?

The government has nonetheless continued to express concern over American migrants overrunning the city. New International Relations Director Ana Paulina Crespo told the Herald in this week’s column that “Cuencanos are feeling like strangers in their own city” and emphasized, “Cuenca never wanted to attract retirees… we’re facing lots of problems over how to deal with a phenomenon that we aren’t responsible for creating.”

Well… whatever. I don’t actually care about Ecuador.

However, I do care that many Boomers have abandoned the ship they sank to live the rest of their lives in comfort. Of course, it’s possible that these particular Boomers weren’t complicit in the subversion that defined their generation, but since the report notes that most expats to Cuenca are professors, it’s highly improbable.

We all know what should be done about the Jewish problem. But what should be done about the Boomer problem?