The Death Of Obamania As Young Fools Face Reality

September 23rd, 2009 (21) Posted By Pat Dollard.

Obama Youth Hangover

CHICAGO – Young Americans showed their collective power when they helped vote President Obama into office. Inspired by his message of “change,” they knocked on doors, spread flyers, voted for him by a 2-1 margin, and partied like rock-the-vote stars when he won.

Since the election, though, that fervor has died down — noticeably. And while young people remain the president’s most loyal supporters in opinion polls, a lot of people are wondering why that age group isn’t doing more to build upon their newfound reputation as political influencers.

“It’s one thing to get excited about a presidential candidate. It’s another thing to become a responsible citizen,” says Jennifer Donahue, political director for the New Hampshire Institute Of Politics. She and other political analysts thinks they have yet to prove themselves.

Professors and students themselves also are noticing the quiet on college campuses, which were hotbeds for “Obamamania” during the campaign.

“They’re supportive, but in a bystander kind of way,” says Laura Katz Olson, a political science professor at Lehigh University in Pennsylvania.

Erin Carroll, a 19-year-old sophomore at LaSalle University in Philadelphia, blames the lack of engagement on her generation’s short attention span. They want change — right now, she says — and haven’t gotten it.

“I feel like everybody walks around with their cell phone and their laptops. We feel like we need everything immediately. So that’s what we’ve become accustomed to,” Carroll says. “We’re the ‘me-me-me’ generation.”

It’s not just on college campuses.

Russ Marshalek, a 27-year-old professional in Astoria, N.Y., observes his 20-something peers sitting back and letting the president do the work for them. “Rather than allow him to speak FOR us, we need to be inspired BY him, and volunteer in our communities, speak our minds, write, read, think, act,” says Marshalek, a social media director who works with small businesses.

Such is the fate of Generation Y, as they’re known, both praised for their willingness to volunteer but also maligned as the “entitlement generation” — eager to help but unsure how to deal with tumultuous times that are a first for many of them.

On top of that, many of their parents are baby boomers who witnessed, and participated in, the civil rights movement and Vietnam War protests that followed John F. Kennedy’s death. That’s a lot to live up to.

But to be fair, says political scientist Mike Wagner says, it’s tough for young people — or any American, for that matter — to know how to get involved in issues with solutions that aren’t always so clear-cut.

Volunteering for a candidate? Fairly easy to do. Helping solve some of the toughest issues to face our nation, from health care reform to a deep-seated financial crisis? Not so much.

“These aren’t easy issues for young people. It’s not ‘Should we go to war in Iraq?’ or ‘Should gay marriage be legalized?’” says Wagner, an assistant professor at the University of Nebraska.

He sees a lot of young people getting lost in the details, or bored by them. Or like a lot of us, they’re more focused on their own worries, such as getting a job or paying off mountains of student loans.

Some say the president also could be doing more to engage this demographic that was so key to his early success.

“I think young people do have clout, and I think it’s a mistake if he doesn’t use them,” says Mary Ellen Balchunis, a political science professor at LaSalle University, who counts Carroll among her students. Balchunis witnessed the fervor on campus during the campaign — the “dorm storming,” when students persuaded their peers to go to rallies and eventually to the polls. She also recalls how students danced in the streets with nearby neighborhood residents after Obama won.

Certainly, health care was on their priority list then, and remains so. An AP-GfK poll conducted earlier this month found that two-thirds of 18- to 29-year-olds rated such reform as “very” or “extremely” important. So far, though, the proposed health care overhauls have failed win the support of a good number of them. Only about half of them said they approved of the way the president was handling health care and only 38 percent said they supported health care plans being discussed in Congress.

Balchunis thinks the president could boost youth support on these and other issues — and get them influencing their parents, as they did in the election — if he mobilized and spoke directly to them, the way he did during the campaign. He could for instance, make use of the well-organized student groups that campaigned for him to push the issues of the day.

If he doesn’t, Balchunis thinks that also could have negative ramifications for Democrats in the upcoming midterm elections, because those young voters will lose interest and won’t bother to show up at the polls. That’s what happened, she says, after her own young generation was initially excited about Bill Clinton when he was first elected president in 1992. Then, just two years later, Democrats lost control of Congress.

Letdown is inevitable to a point, says James Emmett, an unemployed recent college graduate.

“Of course I’m not as hopeful because everyone’s been exhausted, absorbed by the economic realities, from man on the street to Congressman,” says the 23-year-old artist who’s living with his parents on Long Island, N.Y., while he looks for work. But, he adds, the president needs to “trust that we’re still with him, build upon his community of support.”

Certainly, the ugliness of the political process has turned off some young people, and made even some of the president’s most ardent supporters antsy.

“The only thing that has changed in my mind is the sense of urgency I feel for the president to do what he came to Washington to do,” says Sam An, a 20-year-old student and president of the Young Democrats group at the St. Louis College of Pharmacy. “I feel that if he got some substantial things accomplished, it might quell the heated political discourse.”

That’s tough to do in a system that was set up to encourage legislative gridlock, even if it doesn’t fit well with young people’s hunger for change, says Joshua Dyck an assistant professor of political science at the University at Buffalo.

“Gridlock is as American as apple pie,” Dyck says. “The question is whether getting excited about an election and then being exposed to the letdown, the gridlock and compromise, whether that will lead to an erosion of the voter turnout gains we saw in 2008.”

For her part, Jessica Sullivan, a senior at Elmhurst College in suburban Chicago, remains hopeful about the president, about her generation, and about her own ability to stay inspired and give back.

“I have to be,” says the 22-year-old who’s doing her student teaching this fall. “I’m about to walk out of college in February with a degree in education.”

And if it wasn’t so in college, the real world — health care, economy, all of it — is about to get very real.

(AP)

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  • guamleo

    The sheeple have served thier purpose as useful idiots and cease to be necessary for Obama except when the obamabots will be reboted for the 2010 election and suddenly realize how much they hate American and thier fellow citizens again. Give them something to be prowd of now, see thier monkey get taken down and impeached!

  • Independent

    “Gridlock is as Americans as Apple Pie” so says Josh Dyck. I beg to differ. It shows a failed process and poor National Leadersip is what that shows.

    I have been working non-stop in injecting a sense of American Nationalism to all those I meet under 30.

    I have awakened quite a few to this imposter in the White House. We must get these kids mad at what has been done to them and have them realize this America is not the real America of yesteryear. These kids have no clue on what is being done to them.

    We who are 40 and over must rise to this challenge of the battle for the minds of the youth.

    Mr Dollard you have said many times this is a war at home and indeed it is. One that is more important than any other since the Civil War

    I have found that the youth enjoy Clarity and Strength when they are talked to about the old America and its glory. Forget the longwinded mumbogumbo.

    Clarity and Strength

    • Lock and Load

      It is tragic for America, but it seems that practically an entire generation of Americans, this “Generation Y”, has been brain washed. :roll: They have no historical perspective/context other than what they have been indoctrinated with by the mostly radical left education system. They have no idea how America came to be, what kind of people built it, and what kind of economic system (capitalism) made it great. They have no idea what good America has done in the world, how in fact the prosperity of America has fueled the economic engine of the rest of the world.
      Instead, radical teachers and professors (like Barry Obummer) have filled their minds with anti-American, marxist/communist nonsense, to the point that they don’t even realize that all the freedoms and materialistic consumption that they enjoy, they condemn at the same time with their idiot ideology. :roll: How lost is a generation that condemns that which made it rise to its position of greatness :?: :?: :!: :!: They damn themselves to a life of tyranny and enslavement to the state.
      Now perhaps they are realizing that Obambi and his wrecking crew are the embodiment of their ideology, and they are being scared shitless by the prospect. :shock:
      Independent, I applaud your efforts to “awaken” these lost souls from their stupor. Perhaps a concerted effort to enlighten generation Y by all of us who know better is necessary to save America from certain doom at their hands :???:

    • JJIrons

      Independent, not sure by what you mean as “gridlock.” Do you mean Partisanship or simply being uncooperative just because someone is in a different party? I would agree, to a point, with the latter description. Just not sure what you mean by “gridlock.” Yes, I know what the word means, but Partisanship is a very good thing. Partisanship is what can force one side or the other to be a bit more honest and come to the table to truly negotiate. Currently the GOP is being *very* partisan in NOT supporting Ho!BamaCare so the DemonCraps have to OWN it. That’s a really good thing. Again, I’m not necessarily disagreeing with you, just asking for clarification.

      Also, I too have young nephews and nieces (my own kids are thankfully VERY conservative) who voted for Ho!Bama and they just spew out liberal talking points without even an ounce of understanding them. I have been able to reason with them and show them some of the faults of their non-thought through ideals. It’s like when the lights finally come on, they just have a vacant stare for several seconds and then basically say “Crap! THAT’S not what I wanted!” I have to then tell them to stop being an ignorant sponge and THINK for once. Carry out the Libs agendas to their natural end. what would that look like? What would it lead to? Is that what you really want to happen? Usually, if they are being honest they say “no, I don’t want that.”

      I third the motion for Clarity and Strength.

    • Independent

      JJIrons

      The Gridlock line was a quote from the fellow in the artickle above.

      A so called Associate Professor named Josh Dyck.

    • JJIrons

      Yup, so it is! Thanks.

  • MinneSoCold

    They’re realizing that there will be no unicorns and rainbows, just taxes and enslavement.

  • vincenzo4

    I have no sympathy for any of them. I said on some blogs during the campaign that I hope they choke on him, and choke they have. We have what we deserve. Cowardice in the face of a blood thirsty enemy that makes the third reich look like ATM bandits, a reluctance to fight despite the scores of their own countrymen slaughtered during the 1990s.

    A President whose only resounding successes is fulfilling enemy objectives by systematically targetting and neutralizing intelligence community advantages gained during the last administration.

    A President who has a past of decisions that he made of his own volition to align with groups and individuals who hate this country and want it neuttered, I donlt give a damn what his mouth says his life and decpetion indicators are huge.

    A President who brough a crew of ideologically compromised, anti-American idealists who have never, ever lived under the tyrannies they fetish for.

    I hope they choke on him and he causes us by his treachery to go right back to the basics of 1776 and forces us by his treachery to embrace and cherish what it took to become America-and stand and fight for it until the last breath.

    Do NOT firget the political party who cleared him to advance to the head of the line. That should speak loudly to all of you. They knew more about him, and still know more abut him than any of us, and yet they let him advance and now he runs the free world. he has complete and unfettered access to classified crown jewels and he continues to compromise the war on terror. Ask yourself why.

    This is our fault

  • jsc0311

    I was indoctrinated into the liberal way of thinking in high school and college. However, this damage was undone by the Marines and by the reality I saw in Iraq. The ‘teachers’ and ‘educators’ will certainly get what they deserve for misleading the young: “… but woe to that person through whom they come. It would be better for him to be thrown into the sea with a millstone tied around his neck than for him to cause one of these little ones to sin.”

  • prestonsbrooks

    :neutral: Bring back the Draft.

    • Xparatwoopa

      Don’t do that, then they’ll come back even more whiney and liberal. Let the real men beat the shit out of our enemies. :gun: :gun:

  • solomonpal

    Unfortunately my daughter will have to pay the price…even though she was an honor student, worked all her high school years, was a grocery supervisor at the tender age of 17, finished 2 years of pre-nursing now in nursing school and never cost me a dime for her education. Did it all herself. Thank you God for this articulate, hard working conservative beauty…But she will succeed and out wit and beat these hope and change twits to the punch no doubt, hands down. :smile:

  • Chuck O

    If you can’t learn from pain, you can’t learn from anything.

  • Ranger

    Hehehe everyday i end my u.s. history powerpoints with a section titled “Yesterday in Afghanistan”, which is just a series of kickass pictures of different sorts. I then simultaneously inform them of the nature of the enemy, of the battles, and of how lucky their stupid asses should be to getting their education from me and not Qari Hussein!! :lol: :lol: :beer: :gun:

  • Ranger

    “should feel to be”

  • buzz bannister

    Just for what it is worth both my kids are conservative and our son will soon make a second tour to the Mid East. Not all young people are idiots but sadly, plenty of them are.

    • solomonpal

      I’d love to see a group pic of about 100 conservative kids next to a group one of a bunch of hope and changers. Draw your own conclusion.

  • http://alcove-one.blogspot.com/ Rob

    Please let the draft begin so I can see the look on the faces of these smug brtas when they get their induction notice.

  • NICK

    SAME THING AS THE 60S GEN, AND THE SAME THING AS IN THE 90S WITH CLINTON. THEY WANT A FRESH FACE WITH FAKE PROMISES AND GET NOTHING. 70 PERCENT OF 18-24 YEAR OLDS ON AMERICA ARE GARBAGE.

  • Native American

    “Balchunis witnessed the fervor on campus during the campaign — the “dorm storming,” when students persuaded their peers to go to rallies and eventually to the polls. She also recalls how students danced in the streets with nearby neighborhood residents after Obama won.”

    Gee Ma!

    Look!

    Just like fascism!!!!