Should i kill the boomers




















The boomers are like little children with no clear conscience that have been armed to the teeth. Their dream is to blow up savages in their b A good character would spend his time trying to rehabilitate the boomers and free them from such a dangerous mentality and perhaps try to harness their destructive nature to less evil actions.

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Even before winding up at Nellis, they killed a lot of "savages. They Boomers just say that they killed everyone they saw Mother Pearl is no better. She claims that she's been waiting for an outsider to make it to their camp, but if they were so interested in the outside world, they could have sent out a couple diplomats.

Anything is better than killing anyone who happened to come by, even people who didn't know they were inside the base! They assume that all outsiders are savage, but hell, it could have been some harmless prospectors who wandered too close All that said User Info: reyan reyan Topic Creator 10 years ago 13 He'd definitely get pissed not sure to what extent since I didn't do that.

User Info: HolyGigo HolyGigo 10 years ago 14 They treat you like scum and call you a savage before you do anything to them User Info: SmokeMassTree SmokeMassTree 10 years ago 15 I wish you could take over the base and make each member of the boomers walk across the path, one bye one, while you rain death upon them.

User Info: duffmukchaw duffmukchaw 10 years ago 17 In a world with so many Fiends, Legionaries and other gangs of raiders do you wait til they kill you for you weapons and food or do you kill first and ask questions later. User Info: reyan reyan Topic Creator 10 years ago 20 You guys are missing the point. John Schumacher, the Hanover music teacher, had the means and motivation to step aside after the virus severed in-person contact with his middle school students. Schumacher is a classic boomer.

He enrolled in Berklee College of Music in the s, played drums, bass, and guitar in three bands, and was a fixture at the Boston club scene. But over the course of teaching music at Hanover Middle School for 40 years, while also producing and directing school musicals, he came to delight in his job. During the pandemic, about 2. Those with pensions, such as teachers and other public employees, were better able to exit early.

Retirements in the Massachusetts State Retirement System climbed to 3, in , up 21 percent from a year earlier. Schumacher was among those older workers who had no immediate plans to retire. But when it became clear that in-person teaching would no longer be possible in the school year that started last fall, he began reassessing his plans. He and his wife, Martha Lowry, had talked over the years about eventually returning to Michigan where they both grew up.

At outdoor dinners at a local pub, their talks grew more serious. Their two kids were grown, and Schumacher had worked enough years to qualify for a full pension. So in August , he notified the school system that he was done.

On Dec. They closed on the sale of their Brookline condo in April, and Lowry, also 65, retired from her insurance job later that month. Both collect pensions and Social Security. Lowry planted a garden. Schumacher is working on home projects and hanging out with his old friends. Ginnie and Frank Curcio were among the restless millions who left secure jobs to launch businesses, an entrepreneurial corps that refreshed American life in the s and s.

Ginnie, a social worker, and her husband, Frank, a Boston University professor whose passion was cooking, wanted to start an Italian restaurant. Even after Frank died suddenly in , the eatery continued under the guidance of Ginnie, who treated her staff and longtime customers like members of her family. She was 72 when Frank died, and returning to work at Stellina got her back into the flow of life. The flow continued, as patrons celebrated parties, wedding rehearsals, christenings, and anniversaries with antipasti, risotto, and tiramisu, until the coronavirus forced her to shut her doors on March 14, Most were folks content to work for themselves.

But longtime proprietors like Curcio — a boomer in spirit, though slightly older — faced a painful choice as the grueling pandemic wore on, and many decided to close up shop. Nationwide, the owners of about , businesses serving food did exactly that, shutting their kitchens permanently in the first nine months of the lockdown, a late survey by the National Restaurant Association estimated.

Curcio initially thought Stellina might be a survivor. She was able to secure a federal loan under the Paycheck Protection Program, but the funds ran out by the summer.

Stellina reopened for takeout in mid-June and soon added outdoor dining, but coronavirus jitters kept many of the regulars away.

It was soon plain that not enough money was coming in to cover expenses. Curcio dreaded telling her employees, but ultimately called a staff meeting to convey the news. We just jumped in feet first and learned along the way. Curcio said she has no regrets — except for the event that triggered the closing of Stellina and her retirement, which was beyond her control.

Though the pandemic cut short the working lives of countless contemporaries, a class of mainly white-collar boomers saw their careers extended thanks to the virus — and remote work.

Hine had been eyeing retirement. Yet the workplace culture required him to be in the office, so he kept commuting each day from his South Hadley home. When their projects resumed, they were able to manage them without going into the office. There was no shortage of work, and he could do it 10 to 15 hours a week from his home. At the height of the pandemic, more than four in 10 employees worked full time from home, Stanford economics professor Nicholas Bloom estimated.

Some have since returned to the office or adopted a hybrid model of working at home and the office on different days.

The pandemic forced employers across the nation to speed up a transition to remote work that, in many cases, had already begun.

Hine has set himself up at a wooden desk, with two large-screen monitors and a dedicated work phone. He can look through sliding glass doors at his backyard pool. Bansheebot View Profile View Posts. What do you think you should do?

Make them go boom. Originally posted by MakeBanterNotWar :. Yautja View Profile View Posts. Keep them as friends they may return the favor later. Yeah, their motives are something to worry about, but I like to think that you keep them in check after the Independent quest line. They do have a reputation of being hostile towards outsiders, so few people would die to them. And when New Vegas becomes anarchic, you don't want just anyone running around with a rocket launcher.

More positives to keeping them alive than negatives, and they make good allies. It's up to you. If you don't feel like they're gonna help contribute to Vegas after the war, then maybe wiping them out now before they become a threat later is a better idea.

I don't really care if they help me or not, my character's pretty OP, I just wondering what's the best for the wasteland, as I am playing a very good karma character. If I had it my way, they'd be wiped out. Too many dead on their isolationist hands.



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