this is literally a cake walk compared to even what the boomer had to go through growing up.
In certain ways, the Boomers had it easier than the Millennials did growing up and inside their young adulthoods. The Boomers were less economically affected by globalization than the Millennials. The US government deficit was lower for Boomers in the 1960s-early 1970s. The overall mating environment was healthier for Boomers than Millennials, even in the years after the Sexual Revolution started to take hold (1965-1980). Recall that the Sexual Revolution started in 1960 with the birth control pill.
The Boomers were not the initial users of birth control pills. That was the Silent Generation (late 1920s-1945 births). That's the generation that is dying off right now. Most Boomers were too young to be on birth control until the 1970s. Additionally, no fault divorce arrived in most US states in the early 1970s, before most Boomers needed to file for divorce because they were either too young to be married then or had just gotten married and their marriages had yet to go downhill. The people who filed for no fault divorces between 1969-1975 were members of the Silent Generation.
If you consider the attendees at Woodstock in 1969, a good portion of them were members of the Silent Generation. The oldest Boomers were 23 in 1969. While there were some 18-23 year old Boomers at Woodstock, I'd say that there were plenty of 24-30 year old Silent Generation people at Woodstock.
The Boomers didn't have a choice when they were forcefully sent to some Jungle hell in Vietnam.
A lot of Boomers were draft dodgers and didn't embrace Vietnam in the same way that the GI Generation (1910s-early 1920s births) embraced World War II. In defense of the Boomers, the circumstances surrounding the Vietnam War were much different than the circumstances surrounding World War II. The real reason for the conflicts in Korea and Vietnam was ending World War II too soon. General MacArthur believed that the USA needed stay in Asia longer in the 1940s would have left Asia less prone to the conditions that created conflicts in Korea, Vietnam, and led to the rise of communism in China.
This point I do agree with you and if millennials do not get the same assistance from the government like our previous generations then this country will be screwed later down the road.
Millennials will never see a dime from Social Security when they go to retire.
The biggest kicker is that the world you are complaining about today is backlash/negative reaction from failures of the parents of the Boomers.
Let's talk about the parents of the Boomer generation. Those would be the GI Generation (mainly the 1910s-early 1920s births). That generation did a lot for the USA. As young adults, they were the soldiers that won World War II. Once they got home from Europe and Asia, they married women who were not penis carousel riders and had children. Those children were the Baby Boomers. Most were people of high character and a larger percentage were practitioners of organized religion. They were civic minded and responsible. They often lived with dignity and respected others.
The Boomers did rebel against the authority of the GI Generation. There were consequences for that. However, history often credits the Boomers for creating some negative social changes that they didn't create. They were the first large generation to propel the pre-existing changes forward. A lot of the changes started with the Silent Generation. As mentioned earlier, it was the Silent Generation that started using birth control pills first. The Silent Generation were the initial wave of divorcees.
Some fictional Silent Generation men can be seen on Mad Men. Don Draper was late GI Generation and borderline Silent. Pete Campbell's character was born in 1934 and a typical Silent. Peggy Olson, the most revolutionary character of the story, was born in 1939 and a Silent. She got a prescription for birth control in the first episode.