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Monday, July 13, 2026

OLDER THAN DIRT: A SATIRICAL FIELD GUIDE TO AMERICA'S GERONTOCRACY


OLDER THAN DIRT

A SATIRICAL FIELD GUIDE TO AMERICA'S GERONTOCRACY

How Washington Became the World's Most Expensive Assisted Living Facility

By a Concerned Citizen Who Is Also Somehow Younger Than the Average U.S. Senator's Tenure

"Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason."Mark Twain, who has been dead since 1910 and is still more relevant than half of Congress

WELCOME TO THE UNITED STATES OF GERONTOCRACY

Let's begin with a simple, clarifying fact that should appear on every ballot in America like a surgeon general's warning:

The median age of a U.S. Senator is 64.7 years old. The median age of the American citizen they represent is 38.9 years old.

That is a gap of twenty-six years. A gap so wide you could park the entire Millennial generation inside it — student loans, avocado toast, and all — and still have room left over for their therapy bills.

Welcome, friends, to the United States of Gerontocracy: a nation where we have sent people to the moon, invented the internet, and decoded the human genome — yet somehow cannot manage to elect a Congress that remembers what it was like to pay rent.

The Senate, in particular, has achieved something genuinely remarkable. It has managed to make the British House of Lords look like a TED Talk. At its historic peak in the 118th Congress, the median Senate age hit 65.3 years — which means the average senator was, statistically speaking, already eligible for Medicare while writing your healthcare policy. You truly cannot make this up. Or rather, you could, but reality keeps beating you to it.

DROPPING LIKE FLIES: THE ACTUARIAL REALITY OF MODERN GOVERNANCE

Here is a sentence that would have been considered dark satire twenty years ago and is now simply a Reuters headline:

American governance increasingly requires a succession plan.

We have watched senators freeze mid-sentence at press conferences. We have watched colleagues lean over and whisper "just say aye" to a senator who appeared to have briefly left the building — spiritually, if not yet physically. We have watched the leader of the free world navigate a flight of stairs with the white-knuckled concentration of a man defusing a bomb.

And each time, the official response from Washington has been a variation of: "He's fine. She's fine. Everyone is fine. Please stop asking questions and look at this infrastructure bill."

Will Rogers — a man who died in 1935 and is still funnier than most sitting members of Congress — put it best: "Ancient Rome declined because it had a Senate; now what's going to happen to us with both a Senate and a House?"

The answer, Will, appears to be: a lot of very expensive funerals and very awkward special elections.

The 118th Congress alone saw a remarkable number of members who were, to use the clinical term, not finishing their terms under their own power. Dianne Feinstein served until she was 90 years old, a tenure so long that she was first elected when the Berlin Wall was still standing and "the cloud" was just weather. Mitch McConnell — a man who has the energy of a man who has already accepted his fate — froze at a podium so completely that C-SPAN briefly became a nature documentary about turtles.

This is not a knock on any individual's dignity. This is a knock on a system that has no mechanism — zero, none, not a single one — for gracefully transitioning power before a member needs to be carried out.

 I ALREADY BOUGHT THAT GUY ONCE: THE BILLIONAIRE'S PORTFOLIO THEORY OF DEMOCRACY

Now, you may be asking yourself the obvious question: Why does this keep happening? Why does no one fix this? Why does the system perpetuate itself like a self-licking ice cream cone made entirely of dark money?

Excellent question. Pull up a chair. This will take a moment, and also possibly ruin your faith in representative democracy, but you probably already lost that somewhere around 2010.

The answer is elegantly simple, and it goes like this:

To a billionaire megadonor, a politician is not a public servant. A politician is a depreciating asset with a proven track record.

Think of it as portfolio management, but instead of stocks, you are buying voting records. An incumbent senator who has spent thirty years reliably killing antitrust legislation in committee, inserting tax loopholes into 2,000-page omnibus bills that no one reads, and blocking regulatory reforms that might inconvenience a specific industry — that senator is not a person to a corporate PAC. That senator is a blue-chip investment with consistent dividends.

Why would you sell a blue-chip stock? Why would you take the risk of a volatile IPO — some fresh-faced 34-year-old with student debt and opinions about income inequality — when you already own the reliable, predictable, time-tested instrument that has been delivering returns for three decades?

As the old blues hook goes: cheaper to keep her.

It costs a fraction of the capital to dump a few million dollars into a Super PAC to crush a primary challenger than it does to build a brand-new political asset from scratch. And a new asset is terrifying — they might develop a conscience, or worse, an independent streak. The horror.

H.L. Mencken, the Sage of Baltimore and a man who despised politicians with the focused intensity of a laser beam, diagnosed this perfectly: "The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule." He would look at the modern Super PAC landscape and feel not surprise, but the grim satisfaction of a man whose worst predictions came true on schedule.

THE NUMBERS DON'T LIE (CONGRESS DOES, BUT THE NUMBERS DON'T)

Let's pause for a moment of cold, clarifying data, because sometimes the most savage satire is just arithmetic:

CongressYearsHouse Median AgeSenate Median Age
119th2025–202657.564.7
118th2023–202457.965.3 (all-time peak)
117th2021–202258.964.8
115th2017–201858.462.4
110th2007–200855.961.7
U.S. Median Citizen202638.938.9

The trend line here is not subtle. Over the last twenty years, the Senate has aged at roughly twice the rate of the general population. The House has held more steady — but only because Generation X finally muscled in and took the Boomers' lunch money in the 119th Congress, which is progress the way a glacier moving three inches is progress.

Meanwhile, in the entire 435-member House of Representatives, there is one — count it, one — Generation Z member. Rep. Maxwell Frost of Florida, who is doing the Lord's work and presumably spends most of his time explaining to colleagues what a "meme" is.

In the Senate? Zero Gen Z members. The Constitution requires senators to be at least 30 years old, which means the document written by men in powdered wigs has inadvertently become the most effective youth suppression mechanism in American history.

WHY YOUR 28-YEAR-OLD NEIGHBOR CAN'T RUN FOR CONGRESS (EVEN IF SHE SHOULD)

Here is the part where the satire gets a little darker, because the barriers keeping young Americans out of politics aren't funny — they're structural, which is Washington's favorite word for "intentional but deniable."

The Cost of Entry: A competitive House race now routinely costs $2–5 million. Your average 29-year-old is carrying $37,000 in student loan debt and paying $2,200 a month for a one-bedroom apartment. The math does not math.

The Rolodex Problem: Fundraising is a social sport. An incumbent in their late 60s has spent four decades building a network of lawyers, lobbyists, and corporate executives who write maximum checks the way normal people write birthday cards. A young challenger's network consists primarily of people who are also broke.

The Party Gatekeeping: National party committees — the DCCC, the NRCC — exist, in practice, to protect incumbents. When a young challenger enters a primary against a senior member, the party machine does not say "may the best candidate win." The party machine says "how do we make this go away?" and then deploys independent expenditures accordingly.

The State Legislature Trap: The traditional path to Congress runs through state legislatures. Many state legislative jobs pay between $10,000 and $20,000 a year — part-time stipends designed for retirees and the independently wealthy. They are structurally inaccessible to anyone who needs to, say, eat.

The result is a perfectly calibrated machine for producing the exact government we have: old, expensive, and deeply resistant to replacement.

šŸŽ° WHY BUY THE FREE MARKET WHEN YOU CAN OWN THE MONOPOLY?

This brings us to the fundamental question at the heart of American gerontocracy, the one that ties the billionaire donor class, the aging incumbency, and the exclusion of young voices into one neat, depressing bow:

Why risk a free market of ideas when you can just buy the monopoly?

In a genuine free market of political ideas, popular policies would gain traction on merit. Sweeping antitrust enforcement — which roughly 70% of Americans support — would pass. Meaningful tax reform would happen. Housing policy would reflect the reality that a generation of Americans cannot afford to live near where they work.

But a free market is volatile. It produces surprises. It occasionally elects someone who hasn't been pre-vetted by a $50,000-a-plate fundraising dinner.

So instead, the architecture of modern campaign finance functions as a political monopoly. Dark money floods the zone. Incumbents carry million-dollar war chests that deter challengers before a single vote is cast. Party committees vertically integrate the pipeline from primary to general election. And the whole system crowns the winner before the first ballot is dropped, because the financial architecture literally cannot afford the alternative.

As Will Rogers observed — and Rogers had the gift of making devastating observations sound like he was just chatting on a porch — "There is no more independence in politics than there is in a grocery store."

The grocery store, at least, occasionally gets new products.

THE EPITAPH WE DESERVE (BUT HAVEN'T EARNED YET)

Here is where we land, in the summer of 2026, surveying the landscape:

  • A Senate where over a third of members are in their 70s or 80s
  • A House where the exciting generational news is that Gen X — people born up to 1980 — has finally taken over
  • A campaign finance system that functions as a billionaire asset-management portfolio
  • A structural pipeline that ensures young Americans cannot afford to run for the offices that will determine their futures
  • And a political class making 30-year decisions about climate, debt, and technology — decisions whose consequences they will not live to see — funded by a younger workforce that feels increasingly like a captive audience at a show they didn't buy tickets to

Mark Twain, who understood both aging and politicians with the clarity of a man who had survived both, offered the most useful framework: "Age is an issue of mind over matter. If you don't mind, it doesn't matter."

The trouble is, we do mind. We mind quite a lot. We mind that the median senator is 64.7 years old while the median American is 38.9. We mind that the system is designed to keep it that way. We mind that the billionaire class has turned democracy into a vending machine where the flavors change but the parent company never does.

The old gray mare, as the song goes, ain't what she used to be.

The question — the one that Twain, Mencken, Rogers, and every frustrated voter under 40 has been asking in one form or another — is whether we're going to keep feeding her quarters.



The Big Education Ape has been chronicling the United States of Gerontocracy since before it was fashionable to be outraged about it. Visit Big Education Ape for more dispatches from the intersection of dark money, old power, and the stubborn, ongoing project of public education advocacy.

Disclaimer: No actual senators were harmed in the writing of this article. Several, however, may have frozen mid-sentence during the time it took you to read it.


THE OLD GRAY MARE AIN'T WHAT SHE USED TO BE OR IS SHE