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Angry old men

With the aging of the boomers, we can expect more violent incidents from the elderly.

June 15, 2009|GREGORY RODRIGUEZ

What's going on? All along I thought hordes of angry young men posed the greatest threat to society. Experts are always telling us to worry about the social menace from brooding young Turks with too much energy and time on their hands. They commit the lion's share of crimes and terrorist acts. They generally have the least to lose.

But in the last two weeks, we've witnessed an 88-year-old white supremacist allegedly kill a security guard at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and a 51-year-old religious zealot allegedly assassinate a doctor who performed abortions in Wichita, Kan. Have we entered the era of the angry old -- or at least middle-aged -- man?


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That's certainly the impression we got during last year's presidential election. The snarling John McCain versus the unflappable Barack Obama is the cartoon sketch of the campaign that remains in my head. On election day, the only age demographic that the at-times apoplectically angry Republican candidate won was voters over 60. Are older Americans mad as hell and not going to take it anymore?

On the contrary, most surveys find that the older you are, the more contented you become. Sure, older folks might miss the good old days and grouse about their health, but by and large they tend to be more pleased with their lot than the young.

A recent study found that although older people reported a larger number of health problems, they tend to report far fewer difficulties -- particularly financial, interpersonal or crime problems -- overall. (For all our glorification of youth, young adults actually have more troubles with money, relationships and careers than their elders.) And it's a truism that people who've survived life for several decades also tend to gain perspective on things, which creates less stress. The years tend to mellow us.

Up to a point, it's a fact that as individuals age, rates of violence of fall. One study of psychiatric patients found that the proportion of patients over 40 who committed violent acts was one-third the rate of patients between the ages of 25 and 40. But, later in life, the risk of violence increases again, and older people actually are more violent than the contentment and stress data would suggest. People over 65 "commit more assaultive behavior" than middle-aged individuals, although not as much as young people.

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