Juliet27
^I agree Doodledog in the idea of mandatory community service, perhaps on leaving school and at age 70, ages when many of us need a reminder of our obligations to society^
What did you have in mind Winterwhite for age 70?
I'm not Winterwhite, obviously, and she may have her own ideas, but why not ask 70+ year olds to go into primary schools to read stories or talk to children about life in their own childhoods, when everything was in black and white and we had to use encyclopaedias? Obviously under supervision, and with requisite police checks. Or things like reading for talking newspapers, visiting hospitals, or yes - knitting socks, and teaching others to do so. How often do we hear older people complaining that they managed so much better than young people - why not run community kitchens where people can learn to make soup or lentil pies?
Those with specialist qualifications could use those in a voluntary capacity if they felt better suited to doing so - many already do, in CABs or in other voluntary roles. It need only be fitness and/or mobility that gets in the way of older people doing the same as younger ones, and that can be overcome by getting volunteers to drive taxis or minibuses. Actually, that's something else that community service could provide - public transport in areas currently ill-served by it.
My mum volunteers in a charity shop and a library, and she is 88 - not everyone is so lucky health wise, but my point is that age need not be a barrier.
I'm not saying that we should have 88 year old conscripts, but that instead of assuming that older people can't do much, we could look at what they (as individuals) might like to do. There could be less loneliness, and more understanding between generations if all age groups were included in some sort of national service.