Does this movie ever mention how long the Purge has been a tradition?
The second movie takes place during the 6th Annual Purge but that doesn't sit right for me. The way people act and feel about the Purge, especially the rich folk with their Purge-Prayer, seems more like it has been a thing for decades that was taught to them growing up. I was also surprised to meet one of the New Founding Fathers in the sequel as I assumed they belonged to an earlier generation. I can imagine a few old-timers discussing how things used to be less than a decade just doesn't seem enough for it to become so established and normalised. I know the film-makers probably wanted to ground their story by setting it in our near future but it would have worked just as well as an "alternate present" story, maybe where the New Founding Fathers took over after the Great Depression?
www.amazon.co.uk/Adam-Greenwood/e/B00A681FH8
www.amazon.com/Adam-Greenwood/e/B00A681FH8