What Will Happen to the Youth Vote After The Millenial Generation? (user search)
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  What Will Happen to the Youth Vote After The Millenial Generation? (search mode)
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Author Topic: What Will Happen to the Youth Vote After The Millenial Generation?  (Read 2512 times)
Person Man
Angry_Weasel
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« on: April 30, 2014, 10:32:21 AM »

I was born in 1995 and I would consider myself on the front-end of the new adaptive generation.  I don't have substantive memories of the pre-9/11 world and my views on society have been largely shaped by events that have happened since the global financial crisis.  To me, the world of today is not "in crisis" as it is the world that I have always known and to which I have accustomed.

I think that's a good place to end the definition for Generation Y. I personally do feel that the world is in a crisis and I think a lot of the alleged pathos afflicting people born in the '80s stems from the fact that the world our parents prepared us to live in and inherit did not materialize at all and instead we got something completely different.

I still remember how in eighth grade, my history teacher more or less gloated about how the Cold War was over and we won and the world had discovered that liberal democratic capitalism was what "worked" and we were just going to live in this boring world of an all-powerful America, a super-integrated Europe and a Russia that was an irrelevant joke. And he said we would probably never experience a prolonged war in our lifetimes. This was less than a month before September 11, 2001.

When you combine that with the bursting of the Dot Com bubble and then the bursting of the Real Estate bubble, which more or less put nails in the coffin of hoping to have the sort of middle class stability that our parents had been able to give us with not much more than a high school education, the result is a sense that we were told to attend a lavish dinner party that was going to be wonderful and by the time we got there, all the lobster and steak had been eaten, a fight had broken out, the police had been called and all that was left was warm beer and chips.

I don't take for granted that tomorrow is automatically going to be "better" than today.

I understand that poor people can be poor through no fault of their own.

I know what it's like to be afraid in a way I'm not sure an American child of any other generation in the history of this country has had to be afraid. I'd have to travel to Britain and find someone old enough to remember World War II and fearing the Germans burning them up in their sleep (or a German who feared the British doing likewise) to be able to talk to someone who actually knows how that feels.

And I manage expectations. There is something rather defeatist inherent in the fact that when I buy a cup of coffee at McDonald's in the morning, there are many other countries in the world today where the man or woman serving it would have better opportunities and more security and dignity in their life than they do here. A century ago, it would have been safe to say they were likely better off in America than anyplace else and today that is no longer the case.


"the result is a sense that we were told to attend a lavish dinner party that was going to be wonderful and by the time we got there, all the lobster and steak had been eaten, a fight had broken out, the police had been called and all that was left was warm beer and chips. "

Quoteworthy.

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Person Man
Angry_Weasel
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Posts: 36,667
United States


« Reply #1 on: May 01, 2014, 12:33:20 AM »

I think the bottom line is that the Republican Party has to hope that people about my age are finally getting into the Middle Class and that more young Hispanic and Asian men and women will start to stop thinking of themselves as Hispanic or Asian.

43 won because he was able to campaign on letting youngs and minorities "in on the action" with "Compassionate Conservatism" and "The Ownership Society". The foundation of this was laid with the repeal of Glass-Steagall  and Clinton's general acquiescence to the right following the Republican Revolution. However, this was washed away with the crash of '08. The key for the Republicans to neutralize this coalition against them is to build a new Rovian coalition.

 Basically, the Republicans can just campaign on what 43 originally offered (a much more dovish version of what he actually gave) once people get fatigued of the Democrats (which they might already be doing). The only problem is that because of the centralization of wealth that has happen since 2008, in order to get the same growth and inclusiveness they need to be elected, they will have to have a more aggressive borrowing scheme in place.

Eventually, this will lead to a situation where it historians will argue why this period of far-right politics ended. The argument will be because whether demographics created an indefensible position or whether to the pot had to be sweetened to sell a more and more radical agenda to the point that it became unworkable.
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