Surely there are better ways to spend your final years. Sarah Reingewirtz/MediaNews Group/Los Angeles Daily News/Getty Images
When I moved to Moscow in early 1997, Russia was still in the high days of gangster capitalism. The country had been pillaged by a corrupt elite, living standards had collapsed, and Boris Yeltsin, the buffoon president, regularly drank himself into a coma in the Kremlin.
Russians had plenty of reasons to protest, yet very few of them did. This was not because of repression; as flawed and corrupt as he was, Yeltsin was no authoritarian. You were free to mock and deride the head of state, and many did. The issue was that hardly anyone saw the point of protesting as they were too busy struggling to survive. Half a decade into Russia’s experiment with democracy, the state had effectively disintegrated. Thieves and “violent entrepreneurs” rushed in to take advantage of the chaos, and most people accepted there was nothing they could do about it.
Yet one group of Russians refused to accept this national humiliation: the elderly. It was common in those days to see pensioners demonstrating, especially if you worked in central Moscow. I regularly passed by groups of communist babushkas standing in front of the statue of Marshal Zhukov just off Red Square (men were a less common sight; I attributed this to the drastic decline in male life expectancy). In their shawls and overcoats, these old women looked just like the ones you saw lighting candles in churches, except they read Lenin instead of the Bible and held aloft banners featuring the hammer and sickle instead of icons.
At the time, this struck me as a strange and exotic spectacle. My own grandparents, born during the First World War and raised in “Red Clydeside”, the epicenter of radical Scottish leftism, were not political at all. Whether they had been in their youth I did not know. The only activist pensioner I knew of was an old lady from the village of Lumphinnans, who had dictated a memoir of her life as a communist activist; my mother had typed it up for her. We regarded her as “a character”.
In Russia, the radicalism of the old was just as futile, but much more depressing. The Communist Party was led by a mediocrity called Gennady Zyuganov, who had inherited leadership of the proletariat when everybody with talent quit to get rich. In 1996, he ran against Yeltsin for the presidency, who at the time had a 6% approval rating. Zyuganov came within a whisker of winning the first round, but then Yeltsin staged a remarkable comeback, supported by state- and oligarch-controlled media, which blacked out all coverage of the communists. Yet this did not bring out the masses in revolt, only the elderly, and the regime knew it could ignore them. It saw the sea of gray hair and knew that the frail opposition had no place in the future being built.
[su_unherd_related fttitle=”More from this author” author=”Daniel Kalder”]https://unherd-wpml-test.go-vip.net/2024/12/american-politics-will-be-born-again/[/su_unherd_related]
And so, powerless as they were, the pensioners performed ritual acts. Banners were waved, speeches were given, rallies attended, and holidays celebrated (I remember picking up a flyer for an event commemorating Stalin’s birthday at my local cinema). These protesters had spent their entire lives under communism and endured war and hardship — but they also remembered moments of triumph, like the Red Army raising the Soviet flag over the Reichstag, or Yuri Gagarin beating the Americans in the space race. Now they were being told that their sacrifices were in vain and all that meant nothing. I did not blame them for taking to the streets. To do nothing, to say nothing, would be to admit defeat and acquiesce to their own humiliation.
Around a decade later, I moved to Texas and stopped thinking about elderly protesters. That is, until the second Trump administration got underway. The American variety first came onto my radar when Elon Musk’s DOGE laid siege to USAID, and congressional Democrats, some of whom were considerably older than the Soviet gerontocrats the Western media had once mocked, turned up at the head office to try to gain access. Out of power, these ancient politicians suddenly looked incredibly frail: I couldn’t help but notice their implausible wigs, their halting speech, the tremble in their voices as they attempted to lead a chant that quickly faltered. I saw how easy it was for a security guard to ignore them.
Since then, anti-Trump protests have been held across the nation, and, as many have observed, they are a lot grayer than they were the first time around. At first, I ignored the online snark about “boomer liberals”. But when I reported on a protest against redistricting at the Capitol in Austin in August, it was impossible to ignore the abundance of white hair, the tie-dye t-shirts and occasional wheelchairs. The energy levels were low. Like the wizened Democrats outside the USAID building, the protesters attempted to start up a chant, but it was hesitant and unenergetic and soon died down.
I hadn’t seen so many angry pensioners since Russia. But whereas the babushkas were performing rituals that dated back to the dawn of communism, these elderly Texans were following a script that was written during the heyday of their youth in the Sixties — those heady days of sex, drugs and protests against LBJ and Nixon. Their homemade signs bore profane messages like “GOP Guarding Old Pedophiles”, “Abort Greg Abbott”, and “Fuck ICE, Fuck Trump”.
[su_pullquote]”I hadn’t seen so many angry pensioners since Russia.”[/su_pullquote]
The aesthetics of it all were very poor. When the rock band Country Joe and the Fish led the crowd in a chant of “FUCK” at Woodstock, it was about youth and sticking it to the man. More than five decades later, the same generation was still in rebellion mode, but the swearing had a crotchety, yelling-at-the-TV energy. When I stumbled upon a No Kings protest in a small town in the Texas Hill Country several weeks later, the atmosphere was more congenial. It ended in time for lunch, and some of the retiree protesters went to get barbecue. It was a nice day out, I suppose, but it wasn’t the future. Like the old communists in Russia, these pensioners had assumed the world they had built would last forever, but now they could feel it receding into history. And just as the regime in Moscow ignored OAP protesters, so Trump was not remotely threatened. He responded by posting an AI video of himself wearing a crown, flying a plane over a crowd and dumping shit on the protesters.
Where have the young people gone? It’s not that Gen Z doesn’t like a good protest: two years of marches against the war in Gaza demonstrated that. Nor is it true that they have lost faith in politics; the recent triumph of Zohran Mamdani in New York demonstrates that they are as easily gulled by charismatic charlatans as every generation that came before them. Perhaps it’s that, rather like the music of Country Joe and the Fish, the story that’s being told just doesn’t resonate in 2025. Trump as tyrant/Hitler/existential threat to democracy etc is a boring, rebooted narrative that didn’t work the first time around, and which doesn’t actually address any of their concerns. And so, as the second Trump administration proceeds, we can expect the median age of the protesters to creep steadily upwards.
On the one hand, I understand the desire to join together and express disapproval, even if it changes nothing — just as those babushkas in Moscow did. There’s something existential about it. But I also wonder whether the best way to spend your final years is in a fit of rage, shaking your fist at a man who will himself very soon exit the stage of history.
For me, the bleakest aspect of today’s geriatric protests is not the ease with which they are ignored, but rather that they reveal the impossibility of escaping from the corrosive effects of American politics. When I see videos of protesters piling unsteadily out of assisted-living facilities, handmade placards in hand, I don’t think “fight the power!” Instead, I imagine retirement homes across the country where the TV is permanently tuned to MSNBC and CNN, and the residents are in a permanent state of febrile rage and terror, fulminating about Trump all day.
Anything — knitting, bridge, chair yoga — would be better than that. I remember a story a friend in Moscow told me about his wife’s 95-year-old grandmother. She had lived through everything from Stalin’s terror to the Second World War to the collapse of the USSR. However, unlike the impoverished babushkas I saw on the street, she lived with her family, was well looked after, and enjoyed good health. She could have rested in those final years, satisfied that she had made it safely to the end, surrounded by her great-grandchildren. Instead, she watched the news obsessively and fretted about the future of Russia.
Given that she was not going to live to see any of the apocalyptic scenarios she was concerned about come to pass, my friend thought that she was upsetting herself needlessly. “Why are you so worried?”, he would ask. But she couldn’t help herself. And so she kept fretting until one day she suffered a fall, dying a week or two later. History rolled on regardless.
There’s a lesson in there, I think. I prefer the way my own grandparents spent their last years — watching game shows on TV, reading books, gardening on their allotment. Dylan Thomas was wrong: given the chance, you absolutely should go gentle into that good night.




Nice article.
Of course there’s another possible explanation for all those ancient protesters: they’re bored. They’re desperate for any reason to get out of the house, engage with other people and, perhaps most important of all, believe they once again have a purpose in life.
Ah yes – purpose. Confession: i’m technically a “pensioner” but have never been more ambitious, having now the time and financial wherewithal to pursue my interests. Actually, not just “interests” but serious work in the artworld, as an individual and not part of a “collective”.
The point is, the minute you stop pursuing something is the minute you start to die quicker. Perhaps that’s what the author would like to see: those no longer engaged in the normative workforce shuffle off, to ease the financial burden on younger generations. Apologies if i’ve got his intentions wrong, and all he’d like to see is gran/grandad lose it less visibly.
I suspect he thinks he’s “just being kind” but anyone with kids and grandkids will worry about their family’s future. And as you suggest, having a purpose and being busy keeps us going. I do pity those of any age whose sole animating purpose is political activism, though.
I think you should make your own path.
I look at my English dad, age 77 and committed TDS sufferer. Sitting in a nice house with garden, all paid off, in the kind of comfortable retirement since 2008 that younger generations probably won’t have. He hasn’t had to deal with any of the progressive nuttiness of the last 10 years and probably doesn’t understand how crazy or vicious or irrational it can be and how a pushback on it was essential. He watches CNN and BBC and fully believes that they are truthful and reliable and that their factchecks are real and can be referred to in writing without inverted commas for ironic effect.
If you’re in that world all day then of course you get crazy and stirred up and think Trump is Hitler’s 2nd coming. Have tried to gently suggest some independent media as a counterweight to that but who knows if my suggestions landed.
At first, I was a bit frustrated and surprised at how easy he was to manipulate. Then I just thought oh well, what does it matter. It’s his life. And the Boomers are a spent force.
Some independent media may not be enough. I am reading Unherd, and you can see how much that has helped 😉 I do not think there is a smooth path between TDS and MAGA. Being in favour of Trump is not about knowing a bit more – it is about embracing MAGA and abjuring your former beliefs.
BTW – how do you prove that it is he and not you who is manipulated?
The list of anti Trump claims that later imploded is long and well catalogued. If that does not address your point on manipulation, nothing can.
As a trump supporter, I have no issue with criticizing missteps, whether it’s the ongoing Ukraine war he claimed would end or the saber rattling with Venezuela, a country that is NOT the chief purveyor of drugs to the US.
I could not tell you what that long list is, but in a way it does not matter. What makes the difference is not specific policies or missteps, but his general way of working. Volatile, driven by pique and revenge (increasing tariffs on Canada because he took offense at a political ad), deciding on gut feelings, systematically refusing to accept any legal or constitutional limits, pardoning friendly crooks and harassing anyone who has opposed him, shameless corruption from himself and his lieutenants (from Crypto to 747s), systematically filling the federal administration with toadies and yes-men because the only thing he accepts is personal loyalty to the great Trump, … If you do not accept that way of working, evaluating him on individual policies is a waste of time – short of divine intervention his reign can only end in disaster. If you do accept that as a reasonable way of running a government, you must have some reason to expect that his behaviour will lead to positive results. Unfortunately my imagination is unable to come up with one.
Try dealing in facts rather than lazily surrendering to imagination. Begin with the steep drop in illegal aliens.
AFAIAC my account of his methods is factual. But I admit that I had ignored a few more facts. Trump can be relied on for a couple of policies: he will keep the foreigners out, and he will stick it to the woke. Whether that is worth the cost of living in a country run by corrupt, unpredictable strongmen is a legitimate question of priorities.
He didn’t make more tariffs on Canada because of pique. He did it because it was the right thing to do and because Canada gave him the opportunity when Canada messed around with us politics using tds to win an election and added tariffs on usmca goods when the us hadn’t done that.
Maybe somebody else needs better sources of information.
As to the people around him being yes men. Democrats are much worse. In comparison he is a paragon of open dialogue.
I like it that he surrounds himself with people who will argue with him. Sometimes he has to get rid of them. That’s all good, I think the vast majority of politicians are replaceable. When they serve to push an agenda and are deposed they have done their job. It s a great form of policy ballon, and the blood is real.
Those Canadians, really. How dare they fight back? Just think about it – interfering in the politics of other countries, setting up tariffs on other countries when the other countries had not done it first. Good thing the honest, upright Americans would never do anything like that.
That it is. Gladiatorial games – WWE – Trump’s government. Circuses for the plebs.
Trump hurt Canada less than Biden when he came in.
And no I don’t think trump cares one way or the other but antagonizing your biggest customer, does that sound smart to you?
Is maga Trump delusional syndrome or Trump dystopian syndrome?
I am just a bit older than your dad and in comfortable retirement with nice house and garden all paid for but don’t share his outlook at all. Perhaps because I don’t look at the BBC let alone CNN I can’t work my self into a lather over the faults of Trump (or even Starmer).
One of the things I do to keep my mind active is to invest my pension pots. This teaches you that you can’t foresee the future and that investment success often goes with disregarding consensus predictions but trend following can also be profitable.
I post here not because I think it will make an iota of difference but because continuing to engage with the world and give expression to my opinions is good for my mental health. But I don’t take the value of those opinions too seriously. I do, however, enjoy your posts as well as those of some other contributors and writers here. It is one of my few indulgences in the online world.
I certainly don’t intend on going on any protest with a placard. There are more enjoyable ways of getting exercise.
You should try going to a protest and talking with people. It’s good exercise.
I disagree that Boomers are a spent force!
It is the worst generation in modern history. America will be glad to see the last of them and their pampered and selfish reign.
Over 30% of US boomer are already dead, so they are spending very quickly.
I am a UK Boomer! We obviously were a better bunch!
It’s a thing with old people some times. My granddad got to the point he was obsessively watching Fox news, and had become a caricature of his former thoughtful self as he got older.
Then my dad, on the left most of his life did the same thing only it was MSNBC for him.
I could say my mom did the same but she was always reading to many “Armageddon” conspiracies, well before she got old. She didn’t so much change as just got more.
As a Boomer I don’t share your father’s opinion but know several folks who do. Honestly, I think much of elder TDS is due in no small part to their refusal to accept the destruction wrought by the progressives in our public institutions, especially the anchors of civilized society: education, media and justice. The stories of Kafkaesque dystopian excess must be far-Right conspiracy nonsense because the truth just doesn’t bear considering.
Old Fools can be traced back to earliest antiquity.
Young fools render themselves visible in real time!
It will interesting to see what happens to the US when their national debt hits 50 trillion in about 5 years and when inflation increases after he puts his cronies in charge of the federal reserve to artificially stimulate growth by printing more money. The US is on a slippery slope to hell under Trump and will pay very dearly sometime in the not too distant future with an inevitable debt crisis. It won’t be the boomers who will pay the price, because their time will be past, I agree they are no longer relevant, but you are seriously delusional if you believe that Trump and his cronies will make life better in the long term. Enjoy your short term speculation while it lasts, watch out when the crony corrupt ponzi scheme ends.
I guess that’s your prediction. We’ll see how accurate it is.
In the mean time you should make an end is near sign and get a corner to preach on.
Thanks so much, Daniel. Nostalgia definitely ain’t what it used to be. I recall an old Communist ex-president of my union receiving his Distinguished Life Membership or something at Annual Conference in 1990. He did a long acceptance speech, hailing the glories of the Soviet space program, saying how he would treasure his Soviet peace medals and winding up with the stirring cry “Let’s us never forget the economic achievements of East Germany!”
I would not be so worried about the futile elderly protestors against Trump. It is the geriatric section still in positions of alleged power that are troubling. There was obviously Dementia Joe himself. Anyone admitted who was going to work the nuclear football in his last years? And there was Dianne Feinstein in California. Great place to retire, but not if you are 90 and visibly gaga and still in the US Senate.
It is not just the Democrats. We are all waiting for the Donald to start forgetting something truely embarrassing, like his wife’s name. And there was Strom Thurmond who was still hanging on in the Senate when he was over 100. As his Wiki entry notes:
“Retrospectively, a Senate aide stated that “for his last ten years, Thurmond didn’t know if he was on foot or on horseback”, while a 2020 New Yorker article stated that he was “widely known” by the end of his career to be non compos mentis.”
They are living Neil Young’s exhortation: better to Bernie out than to fade away.
First, vanishingly few of the seniors protesting in America can accurately be described as pensioners. They are affluent people, lifelong liberals whose social standing has shielded them from the consequences of their votes. Illegals are not invading their neighborhoods; they don’t feel the pinch of growing crime and absent punishment; their kids were not impacted by failing public schools.
Second, the protests are performative. They are no more serious that the Wednesday gardening club meeting. They have lived comfortably, yet feel some strange guilt over it. As with many others, Trump gives them an imaginary windmill to tilt against.
I don’t have TDS. I’m English, living in England and
I have Texan friends who confessed to being in ‘the basket of deplorables’ when Trump was elected to his first term. Frankly, I was with them.
But to the point – there seems to be scope for taking different things from this article. What it said to me was : if you are old, why worry about what will happen to your country when you’re dead? Why not just live your life from day to day enjoying what you are able to do now? As it happens, we do a lot to fill our retirement – hold a big art exhibition (husband’s retirement hobby is sculpting) and are involved in various ‘well being’ activities which take place on our premises. (Showborough.com)
Yet … in spite of the year round physical effort/organisational involvement required to ensure that what we do actually happens, neither of us can stifle a significant level of emotional pain at what is actually happening to the country at large. Including the fact that, apparently, ‘we’ could be a minority in this land within a few decades.
Possibly our personal histories have made us unjustifiably proprietorial about it. In our own lives, we have been heavily involved in its agriculture and its military. Our ‘recent’ (100yrs or so) ancestors prominently feature farmers (husband ) and coal miners (me). We have strong feelings about who built Britain.
We don’t go on protests but we have joined Reform and we send financial support here and there. My husband is president of the local branch of The British Legion – big commitments last Sunday. I don’t understand why old people are expected to check out of caring.
‘You have not done enough, you have never done enough, so long as it is still possible that you have something to contribute.’
Dag Hammarskjold.
Very reasonable arguments. I just hope that you are not among those allying with Musk and Trump and their efforts to rebuild Britain in their image. If you are I, for one, would put you in the same basket as Oswald Mosley or Kim Philby.
LOL…After reading your comments for a long while now, I’d be pretty confident that I’d be complimented by anyone that you chose to liken me to.
Thanks for your vote of confidence in my judgement 😉
knitting, bridge, chair yoga
Women. Men build.
how anti establishment can these people actually be, they have their 401k, paid off mortage for a house most will never be able to afford, they consume the lies of CNN, the BBC and they are happy with it.
They don’t want disruption to a system that gave them privilage, that will give their childen privilage.
They don’t care about Black on Black inner city crime, the opiod epidemic in somewhere like georgia. They want to go to a dinner party and pretend that they are good people to other people pretending to be good people
They consider themselves elites, yet they posses none of the skills or attributes that are worthwhile in the modern world, elite means good at something, better than the rest, what are these people better at, turning a blind eye, having no empathy
They need this world to survive, because they have no ability to survive in any other world
They saw themselves on TV sixty years ago protesting the Vietnam war and have been emotionally stuck in that moment ever since.
Those Golden Oldies
Are all on
The Highway to Heaven.
Am 49 and would like to go there sooner than that mob
But it is a difficult process.
How true this is! When my generation was young and radical it had no idea now nuclear plants worked, but inveighed against them anyway, because we trusted Peter, Paul & Mary as nuclear physicists. Now that we are old and conservative we are rising from our wheelchairs, red-faced and trembling, to shake our canes against vaccination, yet another technology we know nothing about.
Technological progress will take place one Boomer funeral at a time.