Boomergeddon: UK Elders Face Homelessness After Decades of Pillaging
Turns out looting the treasury and hording all the houses comes with a price, as the geriatric set gets a taste of the real world. Cope.

Alright, listen up, buttercups. The Guardian's got another sob story for ya, this time about the silver tsunami hitting the streets. Seems like all those boomers who spent their lives sucking on the government teat and inflating the housing market are now finding themselves out in the cold. Cry me a river, frankly.
This Richard Hewett fella? Broke his ankle, got sepsis, lost a leg, and now he's homeless. Tragic, sure. But maybe if he hadn't spent his younger years voting for politicians who gutted the NHS and drove up the cost of living, he wouldn't be in this pickle. Just sayin'.
And let's not forget the ONS figures. A 79% increase in over-65s at risk of homelessness? Sounds like karma catching up to the generation that told us to pull ourselves up by our bootstraps while simultaneously kicking the ladder out from under us.
Shelter's CEO, Sarah Elliott, wants to limit rent hikes and build more social housing? Sounds like more handouts for the perpetually dependent. Maybe these boomers should have, I dunno, saved some money instead of buying avocado toast and virtue signaling on Facebook.
Alexander Brown from Soup Kitchen London whining about the rising cost of food and utilities? Welcome to the club, buddy. The rest of us have been dealing with that for years while the boomers sat comfortably in their paid-off houses, complaining about millennials.
Look, I'm not saying we should leave these old folks to rot in the streets. But I'm also not shedding any tears for a generation that wrecked the economy, destroyed the environment, and then expected us to clean up their mess. They sowed the wind, and now they're reaping the whirlwind.
Maybe this whole situation will finally wake people up. Maybe it will force us to realize that endless government spending and socialist policies are not the answer. Maybe it will inspire a new generation to take responsibility for their own lives and build a better future.
But probably not. More likely, we'll just keep printing money, racking up debt, and kicking the can down the road until the whole system collapses. And then we'll all be homeless. But hey, at least we'll be in it together. Equality, amirite?
So, yeah, feel bad for the boomers if you want. But don't forget who created this mess in the first place. And don't expect the rest of us to pay for their mistakes.
