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Abel Guillen: the rise of the Millennials

Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 04:08:18 PM PDT

I talked politics at Lanesplitters pizzeria on Telegraph Avenue in Oakland last night with two young progressive Democrats who, in my view, epitomize the future of politics in America.

My two compatriots were Abel Guillen, recently elected member of Peralta Community College Board, and Matt Lockshin, his '06 campaign manager (and a dailykos author you may know as Emetbloom, the founder of the local blog SayNotoPombo.)

If you care about the direction this country is taking and how the millenial generation is going to shape the American political landscape for the next twenty-five years, I'd like to invite you to read a bit about our conversation and what it means for American politics below.

Abel Guillen is a young, forward-looking, progressive Democrat, but the overwhelming sense you get in talking to him...the "takeaway"...is his zeal for good government and reform.

Listening to Abel discuss local politics and the Peralta Community College System, to which he was recently elected as its newest board member, you get the impression that Abel is like a mountaineer at the base of some massive Everest-like climb. Reform politics, netroots/grassroots energy, technological savvy and a rock-solid commitment to good government are his tools...and the slog of overcoming entrenched mindsets and the political morass of the status quo are the glaciers and crevasses he navigates.  Above all, what you get from Abel is a sense that he is committed to being a responsive and responsible civic servant. Abel takes a sincere pride in public service.

Viewing his career in terms of public service means Abel takes the long view. He addresses his Oakland district's problems both in terms of short and long term solutions. Now, in this regard, Abel thinks in terms of years because he has to, the challenges he faces are steep, but Abel also takes the long view because he can afford to: Abel is 32 years old.

::

the millennials: a force to be reckoned with

Whether it's the welcome fundraising efforts of Skyline PublicWorks, the grassroots political organizing of the Young Democrats or the nascent political voice of organizations like the New Organizing Institute or Voto Latino, the millenial generation is an emerging force to be reckoned with in American politics.

As Lisa Seitz Gruwell noted in the excellent the Skyline Public Works presentation (pdf, but well worth it.) at last year's Yearlykos:

Democrats have been given a gift. Despite years of neglect by our Party, this new generation of young voters actually likes us. In fact, they are more progressive than any other age group. Yet, most Democratic campaigns spend next to nothing reaching out to young people. They pass over this receptive voting block because outdated conventional wisdom says that young people don’t vote and it’s a waste of time and money to try to target them.

In 2004, several outside groups bucked conventional wisdom and made young voters a priority. The results: 18 to 30-year-olds were the only age group to vote for John Kerry and turned out in the largest numbers since 1992. It seems conventional wisdom needs a revision...

More than 20.1 million voters under 30 participated in the 2004 Presidential election, 4.3 million more than in 2000. According to the U.S. Census, voter tunout for 18-to-24 year olds was 11% higher in 2004 than in 2000. That is the largtest increase in voter participation of any age groupp. And voter turnout for 25-29 year  olds was 8% higher in 2004 than 2000. Young voters turned out in even higher numbers in the ten most contnested battleground states, at a rate of 13% higher than in 2000.  Not only did young people vote in record numbers, they also voted for Democrats. In fact, 54% of 18-29 year olds voted for John Kerry, while the majority of every other age group voted for Bush.

Millennials, those Americans born between 1977 and 1998, are, indeed, a demographic gold mine for the Democratic party. I would caution, however, viewing millennials simply as a source of votes. In fact, the reality is that in many ways this young generation is the embodiment of the Spirit of '06: these young Democratic activists understand the task at hand and the tools needed to master the challenge of winning lasting majorities. Millennials are idealistic and engaged, and critically, they are networked like no generation before them. When millenials get organized, they stay organized.

The future of the Democratic party, in many ways, belongs to them.

::

a new generation of leaders

I can hear some with reservations already; talking about the power of millennials is fine when you're sitting in some youth-oriented pizzeria on Telegraph Avenue in Oakland California, but what does this mean when the rubber hits the road in "red" parts of America?

I can tell you this, when I do organizing for Blogs United and Yearlykos, I talk to folks all over the country, and in state after state including places like Utah, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Mississippi, some of the most energized, forward-looking and invested activists are the folks under 30. It's not just that these young Americans are skilled at using powerful networking tools like Facebook and Myspace or internet communication software like Soapblox, AIM and Youtube to organize and link up, it's also that they are, like Matt Lockshin and Abel Guillen, deeply invested in taking on the issues that face America over the long haul.

The millennial generation understands implicitly that the solutions to the political crises this country faces are not simple or immediate. The problems millennials face...from the health care crisis to global warming...weren't created in one day; they won't be solved in one day either. Having grown up with this reality, millennials understand implicitly that the sooner we dig in and get practical, the sooner we make an impact. The reality is that millenials are pragmatic because they have to be; we've left them little choice.

In my recent and direct experience, millennials are engaged, groundedly idealistic and willing to make careers that will change their nation and world over the long haul. I see this every day. Even among the youngest of this consort, the strains of progressive politics run deep and wide. That counts for something. These young Americans may have grown up with Madison Avenue and Hollywood cliches of political activism, but their own actions are no less idealistic even if they go on under the cover of less flamboyant and more conventional attire. Coordinating with likeminded allies through Facebook may have replaced "levitating the Pentagon", but it's a trend-of-the-times that should by no means be underestimated.

::


millennials: the medium is the message

If there's one overarching impression I'd like to leave you with it would be the experience I had working on Abel Guillen's campaign. As the weeks leading up to election day wore on and I met more and more of the activist, engaged young people who poured out to power Abel to victory, I began to see, firsthand, what the power of millennials could do.

It wasn't just that a diverse team of folks, young and old, came out of the woodwork to help Abel run an insurgent campaign. It wasn't just that his fundraisers brought home locally the powerful national reality that over 50,000 Latino citizens turn 18 every month in this country. It was more what I saw on election day, when Matt Lockshin's strategy of tabling and leafleting as many critical polling places as possible came to fruition.

Young people don't just make good arguments for change when we are debating our nation's future; young people are our best argument for change. Young Americans embody, in their activism and ideals, the fact that this nation faces challenges that decades of work on public policy and civil service will be required to address. When millennials get active, their activism is itself is a powerful argument for change and reform. You could say about Democratic politics in 2008 and not be far off the mark: the millennials are the message.

Don't underestimate this trend. It is no small matter. I run into fellow volunteers from Abel's campaign routinely in my daily life here in Oakland. I just ran into one young activist walking pushing a stroller with his wife. We talked about the campaign, we talked about the neighborhood we share and his young family, we pledged to stay in touch.

And we will do just that...if Abel Guillen and Matt Lockshin have anything to say about it...for decades of political activism to come.

The Millennials...their IMs, text messages, email blasts and networking sites...are here to stay; in so many ways, all puns intended, they are the message.

Tags: millennials (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 48 comments

  •  My Millennial catchphrase (12+ / 0-)

    Vote! Because apathy is sooo Gen X

    The Republican Party is neither pro-republic nor pro-party. Discuss!

    by Nathaniel Ament Stone on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 04:07:55 PM PDT

  •  Woo! (7+ / 0-)

    Thanks for this diary. :-)

    Would you be so kind as to pass info on to your two new friends about Kossacks Under 35? We're every Thursday at 9 EST here on DailyKos. They can email kossacksunder35 at gmail dot com for more info and/or diary announcements. This link will bring up all of the diaries in our 7 months of existence so far.

    As always, Kossacks of all Ages are welcome to join in, though the focus will be predominantly on young people.

    "Not just with words, but with deeds." -- Barack Obama

    by kath25 on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 04:09:02 PM PDT

  •  all ages are needed and welcome, of course... (20+ / 0-)

    but, speaking as a 38 year old, I must say there is something amazing happening with those in this new generation.

    These folks are not just potentional votes or volunteers...these folks are, to use Malacandra's famous phrase...true fresh horses.

    We should embrace them...and learn from the them every chance we get.

    I know I do.

    (Oh, and if you're ever in North Oakland, stop in at Lanesplitters to say hello.)

    •  K/O (2+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      kid oakland, kath25

      We should embrace them...and learn from them every chance we get.

      Ohhh, you are wise in your years, grasshoppa.

    •  It's not new news! (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      kid oakland

      As I've said before, people can ignore us at their own peril. While sites like Facebook or MySpace probably overstate active political participation, there are definitely a hell of a lot more people who are aware of what's going on.

      "The perfect is the enemy of the good." -Voltaire

      by PsiFighter37 on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 06:22:26 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  Well (0+ / 0-)

        people are either ignoring millennials or trying to find a way to get in their pants (with mobile messaging, mind you).  That's the hot topic this go round, right?

        My broader point is that there are already great candidates emerging out of this generation...the millennials...and ANY politician or candidate who is looking to mobilize the vote should pay heed to the most networked generation going and the young leaders who are emerging from it.

        But, yes, not new, but new to me in some ways.  

        (Also new to me is the ability to stream your itunes titles into your ichat...but now that I know how to do it, I feel a lot less awed of those who've been doing it forever...hmmm...who might that be?)

    •  Now (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      kid oakland

      do as you're told :)

      Thanks for the diary...gold as always.

    •  Nothing like a war... (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      kid oakland

      ...to sharpen the senses.  Even without The Draft.  

      And, even though we've been beaten over the head with it entirely too much, it's still true that 9/11 will remain a generation-defining experience for those who came of age around that time, or in the years since.

      John McCain voted against health care for kids.

      by Land of Enchantment on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 06:51:58 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

    •  38? (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      kid oakland

      Damn, I still think of you as being one of the amazing things from your new generation.

      Millennials is a weird term to me.  I was just getting used to the letter designations.  btw, are you X or are they younger than you?  If not X, then what... W?

      Who are the Y's?  I didn't hear much from them.  They must be 30 or so by now.

      I came along too early and missed out on a letter designation but if they'd been around back then I'd guess I'm about a 'P' for Postwar (II, that is -- I'm not THAT old!) or 'K' for Korea.

      .... And whatever happened to the Z's?  I completely lost track of them.  Did we skip from Y to 'Millenials'?

      I think you're all EOA's:  End of Alphabetters!

  •  By the way -- (9+ / 0-)

    I'm just going to steal these stats wholesale from some Kossacks Under 35 diaries, as I tend to repeat them incessantly....

    In a February Q-poll, young voters (here aged 18-29) demonstrated their willingness to elect ANY of the three Democratic frontrunners over their Republican counterparts. As you can see from the chart below, voters of all ages chose the Republicans every time.

    Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

    Young Voter Strategies (warning – PDF)

    The data shows that the increase in voter turnout for 18-29 year olds in 2006 significantly outpaced the overall population turnout increase. (snip) CNN’s national exit polls show young voters favored Democrats by a 22-point margin, nearly three times the margin that Democrats earned among other age groups. Rock The Vote

    US Senate Races, 2006
    Voters aged 18-29 yrs
    DemocratRepublican
    Virginia52%48%
    Rhode Island65%35%
    Pennsylvania68%32%
    Ohio57%43%
    Missouri49%48%
    Montana56%44%

    Rock The Vote

    Yeah.We created the Senate majority. Good work, young voters!

    "Not just with words, but with deeds." -- Barack Obama

    by kath25 on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 04:10:46 PM PDT

  •  this is very cool... the future looks bright (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    shayera

    It is horrifying that we have to fight our own government to save the environment. Ansel Adams -6.5 -6.75

    by Statusquomustgo on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 04:21:58 PM PDT

  •  How does this new generation look at politics? (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    shayera, buhdydharma, kath25

    I'm 51, and came of political age in the spirit of the 60's.  I still pine for the second coming of Bobby Kennedy, and remember the trauma of the Chicago police riots at the 1968 convention.  I watched Watergate and its denouement.  I lived through stagflation and tucked in my political interest with the rise of Reagan.

    This generation grew up with stale Reagan-Bush I baloney, the golden age of Clinton and the feces-flinging fracas of Monicagate, and they've watched their country all but dismantled by the current Chimp-in-Chief.  Which of these experiences most informs their political sensibility, and how?

    I am dimly aware, old fogy that I am, that kids today are on odd sites like Facebook and MySpace, and they text each other all the time -- God only knows why.  They seem much more socially engaged with each other using these tools than my generation ever was.  I'm hoping this provides a new medium for activism to grow, and social consciousness will turn political with similar engagement.

    How does this new social engagement meet political sensibility?  Practicality is nice to hear, but what lens does this generation see its country through?  It will be fascinating to see how this generation enters the political conversation. I hope we have a new cadre of committed citizens coming up; our democracy may not survive without such a transfusion.

    Hanoi didn't break John McCain, but Washington did.

    by Dallasdoc on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 04:22:33 PM PDT

    •  well (5+ / 0-)

      if you believe the generational theory identified by Bill Strauss and Neil Howe, there are four generational types - the Prophet generation, the Nomad generation, the Hero generation, the Artist generation - that repeat again and again throughout history in the same order.

      According to them, Millennials are a Hero type, the first since the GI Generation who were coming of age with the Depression and WWII. Hero generations supposedly become known as optimistic, team-oriented, civically engaged (not just in politics but in community and institution-building), materialistic, and seem to be incredibly oriented to science, technology, and government throughout their lives.

      The Republican Party is neither pro-republic nor pro-party. Discuss!

      by Nathaniel Ament Stone on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 04:27:36 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  I hope they're right (2+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        shayera, kath25

        This country is in sad need of public heroes, as they've been in short supply in recent decades.  I'm suspicious of such formulaic looks at history, but can't comment on their theory per se.

        Hanoi didn't break John McCain, but Washington did.

        by Dallasdoc on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 04:31:01 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

        •  well (3+ / 0-)

          Recommended by:
          eugene, shayera, kath25

          just look at it from a common-sense perspective. History doesn't follow a linear course. While there are long-term trends in history such as secularization and loosening of social norms, short-term everything is two steps forward and one step back. The Hays Code tightened restrictions on film so that movies in the 1930s and '40s were significantly more "wholesome" than movies in the 1920s. Likewise (this is a little-known fact), religious participation was actually higher in the 1960s than in the 1950s - possibly because society was becoming more "inner-driven" and preoccupied with values - even though we tend to see secularization as a long-term historical trend happening worldwide at least since the Renaissance.

          Thus does it not make sense that the successor to Generation X would be less apathetic, less cynical, less averse to the Democratic Party and to the ideals of civic engagement generally?

          The Republican Party is neither pro-republic nor pro-party. Discuss!

          by Nathaniel Ament Stone on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 04:37:56 PM PDT

          [ Parent ]

          •  Perhaps (5+ / 0-)

            One can get lost in trains of Hegelian hypotheticals, depending upon where we put the magnifying glass.

            I think the big secular tremds the new generation will have to confront will be:

            1. Global climate change and the decline of the oil economy.
            1. The end of American hegemony, the End of Empire.

            Our nation is a hollow shell of a superpower, in debt up to our eyeballs witn little or no industrial base.  Our scientific and educational superiority are gone; our multinational companies are dissolving or denationalizing; our world is warming and shrinking with sea level rises.

            These young adults see their elders playing endless kabuki games with each other, addressing none of these issues because they won't ultimately affect our lives.  I wouldn't blame them for being impatient and pissed with us, and wanting to seize power to fix things before they go irretrievably wrong.  If they do, I'll be there to help them.  I'm ashamed of my generation, and disappointed in the one just behind it.  These new folks better save the country; if not they're the ones who will have to live in the squalor that results.

            Hanoi didn't break John McCain, but Washington did.

            by Dallasdoc on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 04:45:49 PM PDT

            [ Parent ]

            •  this generation (3+ / 0-)

              Recommended by:
              kid oakland, Dallasdoc, cville townie

              is engaged in a struggle between those who see a greater purpose besides themselves, and those who want to continue the me-first triumphalism of their parents in the baby boom generation.

              Generation X "earned" the right to be apathetic by coming of age (young adulthood) in the Clinton years, when job prospects were good and college and housing weren't completely ridiculous.

              I'm on the older cusp of the Millennial Generation, and we have to deal with coming of age in the Bush economy, when you can't afford higher education, you can't afford a house anywhere you'd like to live, job prospects suck, and the world is in serious jeopardy with regard to climate change and peak oil.  These prospects force the creation of a tighter-knit, more aware generation that whose cohesion and intercommunication has been aided by the progress of Web 2.0 and other communication technology.

              oops. I hope the gate wasn't too expensive.

              My blog. Come visit.

              by hekebolos on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 06:10:12 PM PDT

              [ Parent ]

              •  Thanks for the response (0+ / 0-)

                Adversity has always brought out the best in Americans.  In prosperous times we have tended to be a smug, self-satisfied, fundamentally stupid people.  Only in hard times do we remember the angels of our better natures.  

                Maybe your generation, living through the detritus of imperial overreach and short-sighted materialism, will reinvent the American spirit.  If you don't, I fear for this country going forward.

                Hanoi didn't break John McCain, but Washington did.

                by Dallasdoc on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 06:21:11 PM PDT

                [ Parent ]

          •  I always hear about how cynical (1+ / 0-)

            Recommended by:
            shayera

            and apathetic Gen X-ers are. Personally, I haven't seen this generation to be substantially different from any others. Is this actually documented or is it a gimmick used by Hollywood and repeated by conservatives in order to blast so-called liberalism?

            Blessed are the cheesemakers.

            by Light Emitting Pickle on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 04:49:19 PM PDT

            [ Parent ]

            •  no, not a gimmick (2+ / 0-)

              Recommended by:
              kid oakland, Land of Enchantment

              Generation X has been the least likely to vote in our time. Some studies say the voter registration rate is already higher among those in their 20s than it is among those in their 30s (a first in modern memory). Also most opinion polls have shown Gen Xers to be:

              • more cynical about institutions and government than their elders or juniors
              • more likely to vote Republican than Democratic
              • more likely to not vote than either
              • more split on the Iraq War
              • more likely to be atheists or agnostics, yet a lot less likely to identify themselves as liberals

              It doesn't matter that the grungers, valley girls, and mosh-pitters of yesterday are adults now. To most of today's 35-year-olds, reality still bites.

              The Republican Party is neither pro-republic nor pro-party. Discuss!

              by Nathaniel Ament Stone on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 05:54:35 PM PDT

              [ Parent ]

              •  Well, from your list (1+ / 0-)

                Recommended by:
                kid oakland

                only voter registration and actual voting are relevant to apathy. Just because someone votes for a Republican, supports the Iraq War and doesn't identify as a Liberal does not mean they're apathetic. Pathetic, perhaps, but not apathetic.

                My point is that it's easy to paint with a very broad brush. My experience, perhaps fortunately, does not support the conventional wisdom. The most politically involved people I know are Gen Xers. Yes this is my personal experience, but this does make me question the so-called conventional wisdom.

                A final point, and one I intend to look into but don't have the time this week, is that just because voter participation is higher amongst 20-somethings than 30-somethings, the people in their 30s are not necessarily the aberration. It could be that those in their 20s are participating in unusually high numbers. Like I said, I don't know if that is the case, but it is a point worth considering.

                Blessed are the cheesemakers.

                by Light Emitting Pickle on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 10:37:58 PM PDT

                [ Parent ]

        •  Baby boomers. (2+ / 0-)

          Recommended by:
          kid oakland, Dallasdoc

          Unfortunately we seem perennially engaged in re-playing divisions about Vietnam.  Or, more specifically, the Right swiftboating the Dems over it.  I wouldn't care that Dubya/Rove/Cheney et al. found a way to avoid getting shipped off to Vietnam either.  Except for the chickenhawk aspect.

          I'm about ready to look to those young enough not to have been players in that time.  Because I'm getting tired of it getting endlessly rehashed.  Must be even more tiresome for those too young to remember it themselves.

          John McCain voted against health care for kids.

          by Land of Enchantment on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 06:57:47 PM PDT

          [ Parent ]

          •  Those who don't remember the past.... (1+ / 0-)

            Recommended by:
            Land of Enchantment

            I completely agree with you about how tiresome it is for the right-wingers to keep replaying their favorite old lies about Vietnam.  This morning listening to C-Span I heard a caller who identified himself as a Vietnam vet swear he was spit on when he came home.  Pardon my skepticism.

            But as Iraq seems hell-bent on replaying all Vietnam's tragedies in spades, I fully expect another round of bashing those Americans who were right about the Iraq war all along.  It's already started, and the knuckle-draggers will become even more vituperative when it's clear even to them that we've lost that war.  Since they will never admit they were wrong, they will twist their pea-brains around the propaganda line that anti-war progressives were responsible for the loss.  Despite our having no power through all the years Bush made sure it was lost.

            Young whipper-snappers should be aware of this inevitable repetition of history, so they'll be ready for it.

            Hanoi didn't break John McCain, but Washington did.

            by Dallasdoc on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 07:54:39 PM PDT

            [ Parent ]

            •  Hillary getting something right about Iraq (2+ / 0-)

              Recommended by:
              Dallasdoc, Sam I Am
              • No weapons of mass destruction
              • Saddam Hussein removed from power

              The troops have already done everything they were originally sent in to do.  What's the point of keeping them there when there's no point to keeping them there?

              As usual, you make good points in your comment.

              John McCain voted against health care for kids.

              by Land of Enchantment on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 08:21:11 PM PDT

              [ Parent ]

    •  my experience is that a no nonsense transfusion (8+ / 0-)

      is on the way.

      Most of the folks that I am interacting with in this new generation have very little time for distractions.

      They do things. Ideology is there but it is not foregrounded.

      Cool and useful trumps the Mario Savio moment.

      At the close of election day '06 my job was to drive to different polling places and get the poll counts.  Trust me, there were just so many of these young folks doing their jobs and making it happen for Abel and Matt.

      How did they all organize and coordinate and make it work?

      Cell phones, texts, networking sites. All that "stuff."

      And of course, leadership from Abel and Matt.

      •  We need some Out of the Box thinking (3+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        shayera, buhdydharma, kath25

        There are so many issues that today's political process just can't touch:  public campaign financing, universal health care, reducing the military-industrial complex and weaning ourselves from our imperialist addiction.  A new generation might just be able to sweep away the cobwebs of conventional wisdom and call bullshit on the shibboleths of the past.

        But then, I've been waiting for that since my own generation made a feeble stab at it.

        Hanoi didn't break John McCain, but Washington did.

        by Dallasdoc on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 04:34:37 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

      •  I hope so too (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        kid oakland

        and it might just work because "good government" is coming to mean something different than it used to. Historically, the term often distinguished high-minded citizenry from those they did not think worthy of enfranchisement. Even in its better moments, advocates of "good government" were often far removed from retail politics and spouted slogans and plans which were disconnected from reality. The irony of exclusive clubs and foundations campaigning for government which was supposed to serve all its citizens was not always ignored, and the epithet "goo-goo" has often been well earned. This is still evident in places; the campaign in Pittsburgh a couple years ago to remove elected row offices and replace them with nearly unaccountable appointees was couched as a goo-goo initiative, and supported by the usual suspects, including a "study group" acting as a cover for the local chamber of commerce.

        If the apathy of Gen X caused great damage to political participation, I would hope the distrust of institutions may have made up for it in its instructive value. When self-proclaimed advocates of "good government" have often made it worse, it is difficult to suppress cynicism. Similarly, I don't see many of our established educational and health-care institutions actually improving access to education or health care, especially when you throw in the for-profit lenders and insurance industry. These ironies, once peripheral, have become much more central to what is wrong with America today.

        The difference now is that there is a growing consensus on what good government is, at least at the national and state level, and an expectation that it be backed up with transparency. I think to many younger people (I'm right on the line between Gen X and younger), it is self evident or at least can be understood after some study, not something that is mysterious and opaque and only comprehensible to experts with 5 degrees. Transparency and public participation will hopefully become hallmarks of this generation's politics, just as the organizing model is once again becoming a stronger force within the labor movement.

        John McCain: Untested, untried, unreasonable, and unpresidential. Thank you General Clark!

        by cville townie on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 06:46:13 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

      •  Generally less prejudiced. (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        kid oakland

        Gay marriage not much of a controversy compared to amongst older people; as the number of people who are mixed race increases, racial prejudice is becoming less common, too.

        Good demographic traits.

        John McCain voted against health care for kids.

        by Land of Enchantment on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 07:00:40 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

      •  I think that's a reasonable expectation (0+ / 0-)

        I'm 24, born in '82.  I spent last summer and fall working for one of the Red to Blue campaigns, doing everything from volunteer coordinating and field planning to fundraising and candidate staffing (not to mention blogosphere outreach).  And I think you're absolutely right about what's coming.  Come to think of it, I think our campaign had a grand total of three people over the age of 35 on a staff of dozens.  One of our field team is now running a Congressional office, and some of the rest of us are starting our own political efforts.  I've already founded a non-profit antiwar group, organized bus trips to DC, and worked in some capacity on five federal campaigns.

        Our generation is rather pissed at how big the mess awaiting us in 30 years is going to be, and we're looking to fix what we can, while we can.  And if we can hold the idiots who've done such a piss-poor job accountable for their immesurable screw-ups, so much the better.  Unfortunately, there are at least two "Simpsons" reruns on every night, and we're working two jobs to pay rent, so some are still waiting for a way to do the activism thing with less of an opportunity cost.  When they get up and walk into the fray, this will be a different country.

        One more Justice and John McCain gets his wish.

        by JR on Thu Jun 21, 2007 at 08:59:43 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

  •  I think you nailed it here (8+ / 0-)

    The reality is that millenials are pragmatic because they have to be; we've left them little choice.

    As a millenial (born in 1979) I think you've hit the nail on the head here. Someone above noted that we grew up with Reagan-Bush, Clinton, and now have begun our lives under the second, worse Bush.

    That experience has proved to us how hollow the political rhetoric of the last 30 years have been. All my life I and my classmates were told that if we just worked hard and played by the rules we would find prosperity. Instead we discover that this is wrong, and that many (though not all) older voters have helped rig the system against us thanks to their starvation of education, their complicity with the offshoring of good jobs, and their low-tax mantra that sacrifices our future for their present.

    We come of age, then, seeing a whole lot of stuff that needs to be done, and nobody being willing to do it. The cynicism of the past doesn't appeal to us because it sounds like an excuse for doing nothing. We know that to fix our situation, we have to undertake common, social action.

    Of course our activism will not look like that which came before us, just as the activism of the 1960s looked hardly anything like the activism of the 1930s. We're going to find our own way forward, because of a sense that we have to step up and tackle the problems that have been left unresolved for the last 30 years.

    I would also add that the social conservatism of Republicans has backfired BADLY amongst we who are under 30. When Republicans bash gays, for many (though, again, by no means all) folks over say 45 see it as an attack on some alien unknown group. To us, though, it's an attack on some of our best friends.

    I'm not part of a redneck agenda - Green Day
    Neither is California High Speed Rail

    by eugene on Wed Jun 20, 2007 at 05:23:56 PM PDT

  •  interesting data links from a GenX'er (0+ / 0-)

    Showing the transition from Gen X to Millennial via Facebook use

    -I am the only member of my inner city High School Graduating class of 440 on Facebook, and claiming so (<.25%) <br>-There are 102 from the Class of 2000 (24%)
    -There are 228 from the Class of 2006 (53%)

    -I am one of 57 members of my College Class out of 700 members on Facebook (8%)
    -There are 321 from the Class of 2000 (40%)
    -There are 500 from the Class of 2006 (62.5%)

    The "killer aps" of tomorrow's mobile infocom industry won't be hardware devices or software programs but social practices.  The most far-reaching changes will come, as they often do, from the kinds of relationships, enterprises, communities and markets that the infrastructure makes possible.

    -Howard Rheingold, Smart Mobs

  •  Voto Latino (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    kid oakland, Land of Enchantment

    Thanks for the shout out Kid! As an FYI I will be one of the hosts for a Voto Latino event on July 11th in San Francisco. Money raised will go to the organization with a special emphasis on money for the Bay Area voter registration pilot project. I'll make sure to do a blog post about it. We are expecting Rosario Dawson & Mayor
    Gavin Newsom. Tickets start at $100. If you'd like to attend feel free to email me at nicthebrick at gmail.

  •  hand the keys to the kids (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Land of Enchantment

    My old ass is totally ready to hand over control. You all have game, get it on!

    If there is anything I can do, let me know. I'm thinking about moving to one of those ghost towns that everyone is fleeing, trying out for disability, and just sitting on the front porch every day waiting for some kid to cross my overgrown yard and then yelling at him to get a dkos account.

    I know the millenials have game.

    And good luck fighting the baby boomer consultants who didn't think youth would vote in 2004. And good luck fighting the same ones who didn't realize youth did vote in 2004 and assumed they wouldn't in 2006. And good luck fighting Hillary, cause she thinks you're all lazy.

    But get it on, I'm getting too old for this shit. You kids rock, don't learn the dogma, learn the principles.

    •  or (0+ / 0-)

      maybe you should run for office...

      •  I was too Brown in MT and I'm too white for SF (2+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        kid oakland, Eddie Haskell

        Identity politics sucks for half-breeds...

        But over the years, I've literally had a ton of interns and I've always tried to have the patience to answer the questions in a way that actually explains the "why" behind the answer. Because when I was young I was surrounded by people who did the same that is why I can do what I can do with something that wasn't around back then.

        Sure it is frustrating that political organizations try to use the square peg/round hole idea of forcing millennials into outdated election plans, but every time somebody tells an intern the "why" behind a concept brings us closer to the day when we can integrate their natural talents. And every time a millennial is hired to achieve a goal (however) instead of execute a plan, we will see the payoffs.

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