Remember the campus unrest in the 1960s? Whether you agreed with the students or not, they were protesting about things of great consequence — like civil rights, the military draft, the Vietnam War.

Those were the good old days. Now we’re witnessing whiney college kids marching in the streets screaming obscenities or taking over the university president’s office for what?

Feeling slighted? Having their feelings hurt?

Talk about rebels without a cause.

I’ve traveled to many campuses in recent weeks and experienced the ‎melodrama of student grievances firsthand. To be fair, I should note that many of the students are impressive, with open and inquiring minds. It’s only a loud-mouthed minority whose mission is to shut out and shut down views they find a way to be offended by.

These leftist kids are agitated. Angry. This the hangover effect, I suspect, from the shattered utopian dreams of Hope and Change. I’ve noticed that these students attend my lectures not to learn anything — they know everything already — but hoping that I’ll slip up or say something they can label as offensive or that violates their eight-volume campus speech code.

When I ask them what they want, a typical response is a “radical transformation of the economy” to reduce income inequality, racism, sexism and, of course, to end climate change. Government will command these changes to achieve this transformation. These are young Stalinists willing to suspend almost every basic freedom and civil liberty for “the greater good.”

At one recent visit to the University of Massachusetts, I asked a few kids what their plans were for Thanksgiving. They practically spat at me for even mentioning this white-supremacy holiday that only trivializes and glorifies the genocide of Native Americans. If they had their way, I would be sentenced to six months of sensitivity training.

I can’t help contrasting these campus attitudes with a recent meeting I had with a group of soldiers who had returned from Afghanistan. These brave ‎men and women risked their lives every day. They had real bullets shot at them, not the verbal ones that the campus leftists find so offensive. They have genuine and, in some cases, life-changing injuries — ringing in the ear, post-traumatic stress syndrome and broken limbs.

They served so that the leftists on college campuses can remain sheltered in their cocoons and protest the wounds to their fragile psyches of having to listen to a point of view they disagree with.

Can you imagine the tyranny you would bring upon yourself by actually hiring one of these self-righteous complainers? Within a month they’d be slapping you with a lawsuit for not having a transgender bathroom. Employers tell me despondently that millennials are by far the highest-maintenance generation they’ve ever seen. One recruiter recently told me: “They need their hands held, they demand affirmation, they are forever whining about their feelings. We really don’t have time to deal with their petty grievances.”

Who’s to blame for all of this? Alas, we are. The parents who caved in to every instant-gratification demand, showered them daily with nothing but positive affirmation and gave them time-outs rather than spankings.

Our schools are to blame for labeling them “gifted and talented,” and awarding them towering trophies for finishing in 6th place to protect their self-esteem. The college professors who corrupt their minds with hate-America ideology and now the administrators who cave in to their every petty demand.

Worst of all are the successful Americans who think they’re being charitable by giving their money to the very universities that are indoctrinating these kids with nonsensical ideas. Burning your money would make it go farther.

Yes, I admit that these complaints are made of every generation. But this one seems seriously off — and we made them this way. A generation that has grown up in more affluence and personal freedom than any other in history has been taught to hate the free-enterprise, wealth-creation process that gave them what they want in the first place.

A generation that has been told since pre-kindergarten that the highest virtue in life is tolerance has suddenly become the most intolerant in history. And the rest of us are far from blameless.

Stephen Moore is ‎an economic consultant at Freedom Works and a Fox News contributor.